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Ye Thu Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

The use of the verb "cause" in an interrogative sentence.

In serious cases of viral encephalitis, what illnesses can they cause? I'd like to know the use of "cause" in the sentence is grammatically correct. Thanks in advance.
  

Top answer

Ye Thu 'd like to know the use of "cause" in the sentence is grammatically correct. Yes, it is fine. What causes you to doubt it?

  • Ye Thu 'd like to know the use of "cause" in the sentence is grammatically correct.
  • Yes, it is fine.
  • What causes you to doubt it?
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3 Answers
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Ye Thu'd like to know the use of "cause" in the sentence is grammatically correct.
Yes, it is fine. What causes you to doubt it?
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Mister Micawber Ye Thu'd like to know the use of "cause" in the sentence is grammatically correct.Yes, it is fine. What causes you to doubt it?
If I answer this question as " In serious cases of viral encephalitis, they can cause headaches, high fevers, lethargy, convulsions, delirium, coma, and even death," is the verb "cause" correctly used? Thank you again.
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Ye ThuIf I answer this question as " In serious cases of viral encephalitis, they can cause headaches, high fevers, lethargy, convulsions, delirium, coma, and even death," is the verb "cause" correctly used?
'Cause' is fine, but you might reconsider the structure:

Serious cases of viral encephalitis can cause headaches, high fever, le

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