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Zeetec4 Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

mark or marked

1. You will be mark later.

2. You will be marked later.

What is difference in meaning of above two sentences? Thank you.
  

Top answer

1 is not grammatical. 2 is okay, but it probably means "Your paper" or "Your presentation" - people themselves are not generally marked. Maybe you mean "You will receive your marks later"?

  • 1 is not grammatical.
  • 2 is okay, but it probably means "Your paper" or "Your presentation" - people themselves are not generally marked.
  • Maybe you mean "You will receive your marks later"?
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3 Answers
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1 is not grammatical.
2 is okay, but it probably means "Your paper" or "Your presentation" - people themselves are not generally marked.

Maybe you mean "You will receive your marks later"?
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zeetec4You will be mark later.
After a form of be (be, am, is, are, was, were, ...), you cannot use the plain form of a verb (mark). It has to be a participle form.

So this is wrong.

CJ

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