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Rashi3278 Posted 16 years ago
Grammar

Difference

1 using somebody/someone one is one ane same thing or both have different meanings?

Same is the case with nobody and noone.

2 Can you explain that how do I define different types of rainfall, Say drizzel, heavy and what else?

3 I was reading a newspaper and came across with this name- Roman Abramovich and I didn't get how to pronounce this name. This happens so many times when I find it difficult to pronounce names and states correctly. Might be I am pronouncing it correctly but I don't know whom to ask. What to do in that situation.

4 Last but not the least I really want to improve my spoken and written skills. There are so many sites and I found this one the best but don't know from where to start. Say with tenses or vocab, articles or preposition. Is there a good timetable to divide my days into written and spoken parts and if so please suggest.

Thanks for the help
  

Top answer

rashi3278 1 using somebody/someone one is one ane same thing or both have different meanings? Same is the case with nobody and noone. Generally someone is interchangable with somebody.

  • rashi3278 1 using somebody/someone one is one ane same thing or both have different meanings?
  • Same is the case with nobody and noone.
  • Generally someone is interchangable with somebody.
  • The same is true for no one and nobody.
  • rashi3278 2 Can you explain that how do I define different types of rainfall, Say drizzel, heavy and what else?
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1 Answers
0
rashi32781 using somebody/someone one is one ane same thing or both have different meanings?
Same is the case with nobody and noone.
Generally someone is interchangable with somebody. The same is true for no one and nobody.
rashi32782 Can you explain that how do I define different types of rainfall, Say drizzel, heavy and what el

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