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Alvin Paragon Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

Question

Hi guys, I'm planning to make a tagline for a website. May I know which one is correct - "Keep developing!" or "Keeps developing!"
  

Top answer

" is an instruction. Without more information it is impossible to say whether it makes sense in your context. " is unclear and seems like an incomplete thought.

  • " is an instruction.
  • Without more information it is impossible to say whether it makes sense in your context.
  • " is unclear and seems like an incomplete thought.
  • It might be possible in some special context where the subject of "keeps" is made apparent.
  • Again, more contextual information is needed.
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4 Answers
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"Keep developing!" is an instruction. Without more information it is impossible to say whether it makes sense in your context.

By itself, "Keeps developing!" is unclear and seems like an incomplete thought. It might be possible in some special context where the subject of "keeps" is made apparent. Again, more contextual information is needed.
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GPY"Keep developing!" is an instruction. Without more information it is impossible to say whether it makes sense in your context.By itself, "Keeps developing!" is unclear and seems like an incomplete thought. It might be possible in some special context where the subject of "keeps" is made apparent. Again, more contextual information is needed.
Thank you for y
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Alvin Paragon[Name of company] keeps developing![Name of company] keep developing![Name of company] keeps on developing!
Well, this looks rather different. There are two issues. The first is whether to use "keep" or "keep on". Both work, but personally I tend to prefer "keep on". The second is whether you want to treat the company name as singular, in which ca
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GPY Alvin Paragon[Name of company] keeps developing![Name of company] keep developing![Name of company] keeps on developing!Well, this looks rather different. There are two issues. The first is whether to use "keep" or "keep on". Both work, but personally I tend to prefer "keep on". The second is whether you want to treat the company name as singular, in which case you use

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