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Anonymous Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

A significant problem

Dear Sir/Madam


I am writing to ask you a significant question about a gap in English grammar. The bottom line is: "how is it possible to turn a sentence into an interrogative form in terms of an ordinal number? I mean I want to know if there is any equvalent for this in English. For example, Abraham Lincoln was the 16th president of the US. Supposed that I amnot aware of the fact he was the 16th, how can make an interrogative question for it? Acrually I 've heard the interrogative word could be "How manyth"! how credible is it? I'm hopefully looking forward to your response.


Yours Faithfully
  

Top answer

This tiresome question has been asked over and over at every grammar site on the Net. Start by reading [url=] THIS [/url] and [url=] THIS [/url] and then go on with the rest of your life.

  • This tiresome question has been asked over and over at every grammar site on the Net.
  • Start by reading [url=] THIS [/url] and [url=] THIS [/url] and then go on with the rest of your life.
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2 Answers
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This tiresome question has been asked over and over at every grammar site on the Net. Start by reading [url=] THIS[/url] and [url=] THIS[/url] and then go on with the rest of your life.
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Anonymous question about a gap in English grammar.
Yes. It's true. There is a gap in English grammar.

We English speakers are all so ashamed.

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