0
Besthunter Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

Advanced grammar points

Hi folks, please help me with these questions, I can not find lessons about this grammar points in any books
  1. Should Mr. Ponce have been at the meeting this morning? Yes, ____ .
    a. he should have b. he should have been c. he could d. a and b are correct
    1. There are ____ beautiful roses in the park this year.
    a. any b. <> (no article) c. some

16. The supplier said the department ____ more stock in the future.

a. had been ordered b. order c. should d. ordered
  

Top answer

Besthunter Hi folks, please help me with these questions, I can not find lessons about this grammar points in any books Should Mr. Ponce have been at the meeting this morning? Yes, ____ .

  • Besthunter Hi folks, please help me with these questions, I can not find lessons about this grammar points in any books Should Mr.
  • Ponce have been at the meeting this morning?
  • Yes, ____ .
  • a.
  • he should have b.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

6 Answers
0
BesthunterHi folks, please help me with these questions, I can not find lessons about this grammar points in any books

  1. Should Mr. Ponce have been at the meeting this morning? Yes, ____ .
    a. he should have b. he should have been c. he could d. a and b are correct

    1. There are ____ beautiful roses in the park this y
0
Hi Besthunter,

I hear you're supposed to give a try first!

Since the last two examples don't look like a good answer is offered, I'll try to help.

For the last one, let's offer e. should order.

For the second one, how about d. b and c are correct ?

I believe there's a good answer available for the first one.
0
  1. Should Mr. Ponce have been at the meeting this morning? Yes, ____ .
    a. he should have b. he should have been c. he could d. a and b are correct
    1. There are ____ beautiful roses in the park this year.
    a. any b. <> (no article) c. som
0
Thank you all so much. There should be a mistake in the last question.

How about this one, which is correct?
- The police asked him how long he had known me for.
- The police asked him for how long he had known me.

By the way, I would like to ask you if you could tell me where I can look for explanations about advanced grammar rules like that. Somet
0
No bother. (Do you want to put the site out of business?)

Better someone else recommend sources to you.

" . . . . for how long he had known me" is correct. " . . . . . how long he had known me." (for) is also common. I guess the for is understood.

Related Questions