standard english in Vietnamese

@standard english /'stændəd'iɳgliʃ/
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- tiếng Anh phổ thông

Sentence patterns related to "standard english"

Below are sample sentences containing the word "standard english" from the English - Vietnamese Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "standard english", or refer to the context using the word "standard english" in the English - Vietnamese Dictionary.

1. Standard English Conventions: The Craft of Language

2. Most announcers on the BBC speak standard English.

3. At its best, it makes standard English seem pallid.

4. Anyways is a colloquial usage and is non-standard English.

5. We are making no recommendation that children should use Standard English.

6. Basically, it is not all right to use Alright in standard English

7. Award is a regular verb, and it follows the standard English conjugation rules

8. The use of Croon in standard English was probably popularized by Robert Burns.

9. Auk_country(): filter by country using the standard English names or ISO 2-letter country

10. The ODO allows that the passive uses is/are Comprised of are part of standard English

11. Anywheres May 17, 2016 yanira.vargas “Anywheres” is a dialectal variation on the standard English word “anywhere.”

12. Standard English Conventions questions relate to some of the basic elements of writing: sentence structure, usage, and punctuation

13. To represent the standard English language character set codes were defined for a set from 1 to 127.

14. The words Aural and oral have the same pronunciation in standard English, which is sometimes a source of confusion

15. 'Alright' is not a universally accepted version of 'all right,' and many dictionaries still record 'Alright' as non-standard English

16. Agglomeration may refer to: Urban Agglomeration, in standard English Megalopolis, in Chinese English, as defined in China's Standard for basic terminology of …

17. In some dialects the past tense of “bring” is “brang,” and “Brung” is the past participle; but in standard English both are “brought.”

18. The construction "is Comprised of" (it correctly includes the word "of") is considered by many to be non-standard English

19. The very name of the article, " vanavsos ", is incorrect-- the Greek term has a standard English equivalent, " Banausic " ( see OED )

20. Apparently "Cringey" is listed as a "new word suggestion" by Collins, but neither is officially in a standard English dictionary yet

21. Conventions The focus of this chapter is on Standard English Conventions, one of the two broad categories of questions on the SAT Writing and Language Test

22. The main difference between the two words is that “Afterwards” is standard English for the United Kingdom, while “Afterward” is more common for the United States.

23. The main difference between the two words is that “Afterwards” is standard English for the United Kingdom, while “afterward” is more common for the United States.

24. Capiche, Capeesh, capische, etc Capiche (ignore spell check) is the standard English spelling of the word, usually followed by a question mark, meaning do you understand? It comes from the Italian capisci

25. The Basilect is used very informally by those with limited proficiency and vocabulary in English, and it has features of an extended pidgin or creole with syntax that deviates substantially from Standard English

26. Abrogation refers to the rejection by post-colonial writers of a normative concept of ‘correct’ or ‘standard’ English used by certain classes or groups, and of the corresponding concepts of inferior ‘dialects’ or ‘marginal variants’

27. However, Averse to is entirely consistent with ordinary usage in modern English (on the analogy of hostile to, disinclined to, etc.) and is part of normal standard English, while Averse from is now very uncommon.

28. In grammar, zero Copula refers to the absence of an explicit auxiliary verb (usually a form of the verb be) in certain constructions where it is customarily found in standard English. Also called Copula deletion or understood Copula.

29. In a study by Lewandowski and Harrington (2006), participants read a student's email sent to a professor that either contained text-messaging abbreviations (gr8, How R U?) or parallel text in standard English (great, How are you?), and then provided impressions of the sender.

30. Students apply in the spring semester of their second year and declare a major in English, although the requirements for the Aplp differ from the requirements for a standard English major; students are encouraged to double-major or minor in another discipline that relates to

31. Students apply in the spring semester of their second year and declare a major in English, although the requirements for the Aplp differ from the requirements for a standard English major; students are encouraged to double-major or minor in another discipline that relates to