Of course I do. I'll even prove it:
EXAMPLE ONE: Sadie went to Tibet. There, she learned about Tibetan culture. Place: Tibet
EXAMPLE TWO: Kate and Lulu love their dogs. Possessive Noun: Their (Their being Kate and Lulu)
EXAMPLE THREE: The Cats are old. They're 14 and 12. They're being the cats.
EXAMPLE FOUR: That is your book. This indicates that the book belongs to you.
and
EXAMPLE FIVE: You're a human being. You are being the person I'm addressing.
Do you, ya YOU, know the difference?
← View full post
Of course I do. I'll even prove it:
EXAMPLE ONE: Sadie went to Tibet. There, she learned about Tibetan culture. Place: Tibet
EXAMPLE TWO: Kate and Lulu love their dogs. Possessive Noun: Their (Their being Kate and Lulu)
EXAMPLE THREE: The Cats are old. They're 14 and 12. They're being the cats.
EXAMPLE FOUR: That is your book. This indicates that the book belongs to you.
and
EXAMPLE FIVE: You're a human being. You are being the person I'm addressing.
--
thegypsysailor
9 years ago
|
pl
Comment Hidden (
show
)
Report
1
1
"EXAMPLE THREE: The Cats are old. They're 14 and 12. 'They're being the cats'." Whoops; kinda screwed the pooch on that one.