Thank you for your quick response! I appreciate your kind and much detailed advices and I'll write down the examples of paraphrasing you've given me, in my notebook.
Thank you for your quick responce. I am taking about a machine gun. So I think one can fire all the bullets with one trigger. In the first sentence what I meant is that I have never fired the machinegun without getting stuck. I wonder whether "without getting stuck" and "without having to reload" are the same meaning.
Hello Thank you for the detailed explanation as always. I was able to understand your feedback quite well. Reading also helps my English studying. and enjoy it. Kind Regards, Kanako
Thank you for your quick responce. I am glad to know the phrase " got stuck." I knew this phrase but could not remember it as I did not get used to using this phrase.
Thank you for your quick reply. You are right. I talked about multiple applications, so it must be plural.
Thank you for your quick responce. I am glad you let me know "had" is better to use because it was a past event.
Thank you for your quick reply. I am happy to know "did the math" was better in this case as I did the specific math.
Thank you for your quick responce.I am glad to know blog means "web-log."
Thank you for your advice. Talking about the sentence you pointed me out, I wanted to express that I can't help laughing and worrying (about people who want to gain "like" and their future). Have a nice weekend. Thank you so much. mina053750
Thank you for your quick responce. You are right. She is "still" in my hospital. I am happy you corrected my mistake: "She has been in hospitalized." This sentence made me wonder which tense I should use, the past tence or the present tense. Now you let me know the correct tense: the present perfect. I am happy with it.
Thank you for your quick responce. I assume both" ...though of how rich..."and "..thought how rich..." are OK.
Thank you for your quick responce. I am glad to know " they tangle up" better than "they are tangled up."
Thank you for your quick response. I have learned "the past perfect" is better than the past tense in the second sentence like ...one that "had taken" one bite of...
Thank you for your quick responce. I am glad to know "reward " is better than "praise" in the second sentence. I myself wondered which was better, reward or praise. As I wanted to make sure whether "praise" was acceptable, I wrote "praise."
Thank you for your quick reply. I wanted to use "a verb for delusion," but I did not know the verb, so I used the noun "delusion" like I had a delusion.