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Interruption In Conversation
Interruption, more surely than anything else, kills convers...

Ten Greatest American Poets
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Vocation And Avocation
Don't mistake these two words so nearly alike. Vocation is th...

Syllables And Words
A syllable is a distinct sound produced by a single effort of...

Address
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Purity
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Adjective
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Laylie
The transitive verb lay, and lay, the past tense of the neute...


AND WITH THE RELATIVE




Common Stumbling Blocks - Peculiar Constructions - Misused Forms.

Never use and with the relative in this manner: "That is the dog I
meant and which I know is of pure breed." This is an error quite
common. The use of and is permissible when there is a parallel relative
in the preceding sentence or clause. Thus: "There is the dog which I
meant and which I know is of pure breed" is quite correct.




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