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Does This Sentence Make Any Since

Do these sentences make sense?

The first one is a bit strained, but it will work. The second you should probably change to BOUNTY.

Do these sentences make sense?

Do these sentences make sense? What's the subtle different between these sentences?

1. He has been watching tv all evening.
2. He has been watching tv this evening.
3. He has been watching tv.
4. He has watched tv all evening.
5. He has watched tv this evening.
6. He has watched tv.

7. I have been feeling ill since last week.
8. I have been feeling ill.
9. I have felt ill since last week.
10. I have felt ill.

Does this scentance make sense?

well, before you ask if sentences make sense you may want to learn how to spell sentence.

What are some adjectives that start with z and does this sentence make sense?

Xenodochial to strangers - This doesn't make sense as Xenodochial means, friendly to strangers'

All you have done is give the meaning.

Your sentence therefore reads 'friendly to strangers to strangers' !

Xenodochial is an adjective describing something, such as a person, place or software application, that is friendly to strangers.
Xenos is a Greek word for 'strangers'.
According to the Oxford English Dictionary, xenodochial means 'hospitable'.

TRY -
'Any project manager or architect must be xenodochial to be able to deal fairly and reasonably with many different stakeholders and customers.'

A site with adjectives starting with the letter Z.

http://grammar.yourdictionary.com/parts-...

Does this sentence make sense: “This might be helpful for you to understand the term 'rough'.”?

Original Question: Does this sentence make sense: “This might be helpful for you to understand the term 'rough'.”?Dear Hyung Woo,It’s a little awkward, so you might want to revise it to make it smoother:“This might be helpful for you to understand.”“It might be helpful for you to understand what the word ‘rough’ means.”Note: When you say, “This might be helful for you to understand,” adding anything else sounds awkward, which is why I deleted the last part of your sentence (“the term ‘rough’”) in my first revision.My second revision starts with “It” instead of “This” and uses “word” instead of “term” for “rough” since “term” is something that would be more technical or a phrase that includes more than one word. Merriam-Webster defines “term” as “a word or expression that has a precise meaning in some uses or is peculiar to a science, art, profession, or subject.”See Malcolm Goodson’s excellent edit that captures both parts of the sentence with some interesting tweaks.

Does the sentence ''He died young'' make sense?

Yes, it does make sense. "Young" is an adjective and it is correct, because it is not telling us how he died, but how he was when he died. We do not want to say: "He died in a young way." That would not make any sense. "Young" is a state, and as such it cannot be converted into an adverb, which would tell us about the manner (the way) somebody did something. We can say "He died peacefully" or "He died violently" because peaceful and violent can be qualities of dying. He died in a peaceful way, or he died in a violent way. However, young cannot be a quality or manner of dying, so we cannot use an adverb.In the sentence, the word "young" tells us about the state of the subject at the time of the action of the verb. Therefore, it has to be an adjective, since states of being are expressed through adjectives, not adverbs. "He died young" means: "He was young when he died." Here are some other examples that are similar to "He died young." He died alone. (= He was alone when he died.)He died poor. (= He was poor when he died.)He died friendless. (= He was friendless [he had no friends] when he died.)He died childless. (= He was childless when he died, that is, he did not have any children before he died.)This kind of sentence structure is quite common in English. It follows this pattern:Subject + Action Verb + Adjective (expressing the state of the subject at the time of the action of the verb) Here are some examples with other action verbs:She sat silent. (= She was silent when she was sitting.)The children slept naked. (= The children were naked when they were sleeping.)They ran away afraid. (= They were afraid when they ran away.)He wandered unrecognized through the town. (He was unrecognized when he wandered through the town.)

Is the sentence "What does it make sense?" correct?

The question, as written, is not a good sentence. Depending on how emphatic you wish to make the question and on whether you are suggesting that, to you, it doesn't seem to make sense (the second of the two following examples), you could try one of these:“Does it make sense?”“What sense does it make?”

Does the sentence 'She is working since 5 o' clock' make any sense?

No it doesn.make any sense. 'Since'  is mostly followed by  present perfect tense and here there is a time period mentioned which means it is stillcontinuing.so you have to use present perfect continuous tense or she has been working since 5 o'clock.

Does this sentence make any sense ? It's in Egyptian arabic ?

Hello EP

Qaddafi ya gamad, just joking; i think Qaddafi is a maniac who is hated by his country, all my Libyan friends telll me that he has no support what so ever, only the ones who benefit from him directly are making all the noise in Tripoli. Bas I am really sad that Nato is involved the Useless Arab League should have its own unified Arab army who gets rid of sick regimes like Qaddafi, Assad and who ever's next. What is happening in England is a complete embarrassment to the fundementals of Great Britan, to have their spoiled young ganging up to steal is quit shameful for British history, but that doesn't mean the majority condones it. Omal lew byaklo fool wa ta3maya? dal wad byasrak wa labes Nike wa ma3a Iphone hehe

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