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SweetFreedom Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

How do they sound?

Does the information below sound (grammatically) natural in your native English speakers'ears?

The information offered online:

Are you confident that your ideas are consistent from the beginning of the discussion?

Let it be known: the purpose of understanding history is to better serve reality.

You've told us - "More than 200 years ago, the populations of both Great Britain and the United States were in the majority christians."

Yes.

But the question is why the population of christians in the United Stated has kept a steady growth after the Revolution, while the actual population of christians in Great Britain has declined since (as Contrex pointed out - "today nobody believes the national religion")?

Now, do you see the relevance?

As for whether you've defended Christianity or not, the guys who come here have witnessed how you, after I quoted Jefferson's famous remark - "Christianity is the most perverted system that ever shone on man", bombarded him with every possible weapon from your arsenal. Ipso facto, you did defend the religion.
  

Top answer

'Christian(s)' should be capitalized.

  • 'Christian(s)' should be capitalized.
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5 Answers
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'Christian(s)' should be capitalized.
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Supposed "Christians" having been capitalized, does the information (the short message) sounds native/natural in English?
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SweetFreedom Supposed "Christians" having been capitalized, does the information (the short message) sounds native/natural in English?
Is this a dialogue between two people? I cannot totally grasp the flow or continuity.
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Background information is quite long that it seems to be not suitable to post here.
Grammatically, does that information sound native?
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Purely in terms of English (ignoring the overall coherence), it is mostly fine.

Strictly speaking, in the third paragraph, I think one should say that the populations were "Christian", not "Christians".

I feel slightly unsure about the use of "since" in the fifth paragraph. Probably it would be better to delete the word. (However, if this is a verbatim transcription of dialogue t

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