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  1. 1 déc. 2017 · I am from India and not a native English speaker. I do often hear people introducing themselves like "Hello everyone; This is James" Is it an acceptable form in native English?

  2. 5 déc. 2016 · You say “This is an apple.” while gestering with the hand to indicate what this refers to. Using it means you have already established a subject and can repeat it. E.g. you might continue with “It is good for you.”.

  3. 27 nov. 2016 · A phrase like "This is it" is very common, but I've also heard people use "This it is" mostly with a slight hesitation between This and it, perhaps purely for pronunciation reasons. I'm quite familiar with "This is it". It expresses conclusion of some kind like: the end of a thinking process. a (final) choice.

  4. 20 juin 2011 · 1. It is actually quite simple. This is it. " This ", as in this that you perceive and you are aware of, " is it ", where " it " is a third person pronoun, refers to some " it " that is already known to the writer and the reader or the talker and listener (something that was discussed or agreed upon earlier or something that is clear from context).

  5. 7 nov. 2013 · The question form becomes a statement and therefore, the clause must follow the subject + verb rule for a declarative sentence with no subject and verb inversion. 2) Please tell me why it is like that. [correct] Please tell me why [etc.]is not a question. Therefore, it would take no question mark. You can see that the first three examples above ...

  6. What is it? when pointing to her finger. I was surprised because I always learned to ask. What is this? when pointing something (or that is there is a need to differentiate the distance, or in general separate the items). Their rationale was that the answer will be " it is a finger ". Is the question "what is it?"

  7. @ColinFine Tother doesn’t actually show that, because the t doesn’t come from a th at all. It’s a mis-divided form of a much older þet oþer, where þet is the older form of that, used as a neuter definite article.

  8. 1 nov. 2017 · In your example. This is the first time I ate sushi. (This was the first time I had sushi). the past is used since it is something you have already done, even if only a few moments ago.

  9. 16 mars 2019 · 1. "what day it is today" is a noun clause in your sentence, the direct object of the verb tell, and thus cannot be in an interrogative form. so your second sentence is the way to go. I wouldn't go along with that. "what day it is today" is a subordinate content clause (embedded question) functioning as complement of "tell".

  10. 1. Um, the second statement is not "positive". It is a question. "It is" and "Is it?" are not the same type of statement. (And if that weren't enough already, they even threw in an or for good measure.) Exactly the same as in German, BTW. "Das ist richtig.

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