0
User_gary Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

jumping-off point

Using your saying "Enlightenment is always preceded by a confusion" as a jumping-off point, I began to my learning English process and now I am really gained many things from it.

Is this sentence correct?

Please help me.
  

Top answer

"Enlightenment is always preceded by a confusion" as a jumping-off point, I began to my learning English process and now I am really gained many things from it. Look over te highlighted places.

  • "Enlightenment is always preceded by a confusion" as a jumping-off point, I began to my learning English process and now I am really gained many things from it.
  • Look over te highlighted places.
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.

5 Answers
0
Using your saying a better word is on the tip of my tongue but I can't find it."Enlightenment is always preceded by a confusion" as a jumping-off point, I began to my learning English process and now I am really gained many things from it.

Look over te highlighted places.
0
Thank you Doll.

Here is my tweak :

Considering your thought "Enlightenment is always preceded by a confuse" as a jumping-off point, I began to my learning process and now I am really achieved many things from it.
0
Considering your thought "Enlightenment is always preceded by a confuse" as a jumping-off point, I began to my learning process and now I am really achived many things from it thanks to it.

This is my try.
0
Thank you Doll.

What problem with, "I am really achieved". Here "achieved" is an adjective and "am" is a link verb, I guess.

And in the "I achieved", "achieved" is a past verb.
0
It just didn't sound good to my ear.

Related Questions