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This Isnt Science Its An Arms Race A Hypersonic Spaceplane By 2031 You Wont Believe This - ijp5lyk
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This Isnt Science Its An Arms Race A Hypersonic Spaceplane By 2031 You Wont Believe This - 7uq92bb
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This Isnt Science Its An Arms Race A Hypersonic Spaceplane By 2031 You Wont Believe This - ldwqk0x
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This Isnt Science Its An Arms Race A Hypersonic Spaceplane By 2031 You Wont Believe This - 4zxrrqn


Are both sentences correct? · that is the woman who married tony, isnt it? Firstly, have a look at this (source): That is the woman who married tony, isnt she? You didnt wait, did you? there are quite a number of questions in elu about this sort of tag. Is not she a fine creature? = hasnt she parts? As a general-purpose tag question seems quite common in asian/indian english. I suspect its mostly idiomatic with no hard and fast rules, but your first example seems exceedingly rare. = isnt her beauty natural. Hence the single negation policy. Standard english makes the verb in the tag match the main verb: What you are trying to do here is make a statement and then try to look for someone to negate that statement. · good question. Has not she parts? It is, isnt it it is, is it not? i argue that the first is affirmative. According, to this usage, you would simply write isnt she as is not she, hasnt she as has not. I dont really have any solid reason for that though, it just sounds/feels that way to me. My girlfriend and i are having an argument about whether these two phrases mean the same thing: = isnt she a fine creature? · using isnt it? · each of these sentences - it looks like there isnt a free cam, is there? and there is no free cam, is there? are grammatically correct. · i wish to know the difference between aint and isnt and since im not a speaker of english as first language, i cant tell. You dont follow one negation with another. If they are, what is the difference in meaning? Windows, surface, bing, microsoft edge, windows insider, microsoft advertising, microsoft 365 and office, microsoft 365 insider, outlook and microsoft teams forums are available exclusively on microsoft q&a. This kind of usage is now archaic. I dont know an official rule but generally you can say i in statements (i like cake), but should use me to refer to your self in questions (is that cake for me?). This change will help us provide a more streamlined and efficient experience for all your questions. Meaning that it would. I cant think of any other cases where the is and not are split except questions of the form isnt . Now, if you were to make contractions in these line, you would write: · if the evidence changed… isnt that me, who’s dead? you similarly would say, were you talking about me? rather than were you talking about i?. Is not her beauty natural. · i tend to think it isnt sounds a little more formal than its not, which sounds a bit more colloquial.