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Anonymous Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

Verb with or without "s"

Hello,

In this sentence: "Experienced Industrial Designer whose combination of technical and creative skills allow him to think in different ways and face up to problems from different perspectives"

Does the verb "allow" go with "s" or without??

Thanks for your help
  

Top answer

'Face up to' is the wrong choice, and it has other problems. Experienced industrial designer whose technical and creative skills allow him to think in different ways and address problems from different perspectives Anonymous Does the verb "allow" go with "s" or without?? No '-s'.

  • 'Face up to' is the wrong choice, and it has other problems.
  • Experienced industrial designer whose technical and creative skills allow him to think in different ways and address problems from different perspectives Anonymous Does the verb "allow" go with "s" or without??
  • No '-s'.
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1 Answers
0
'Face up to' is the wrong choice, and it has other problems.

Experienced industrial designer whose technical and creative skills allow him to think in different ways and address problems from different perspectives
AnonymousDoes the verb "allow" go with "s" or without??
No '-s'.

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