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Mosja Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

Is this explanation natural in spoken english?

Experts have to be quiet if their skills is better than their peers. For instance, you are really good at Physics and your classmates aren't. You have to let them answer questions. Do not interrupt them.

  

Top answer

"Skills are", and peers has to be possessive. The second sentence has to be conditional. You only capitalize names of school subjects when they are part of the name of the course.

  • "Skills are", and peers has to be possessive.
  • The second sentence has to be conditional.
  • You only capitalize names of school subjects when they are part of the name of the course.
  • Other than that, not bad, Experts have to be quiet if their skills are better than their peers'—if you are really good at physics, for instance, and your classmates aren't.
  • You have to let them answer questions.
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1 Answers
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"Skills are", and peers has to be possessive. The second sentence has to be conditional. You only capitalize names of school subjects when they are part of the name of the course. Other than that, not bad,

Experts have to be quiet if their skills are better than their peers'—if you are really good at physics, for instance, and your classmates aren't. You have to let them answer questions

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