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  1. 16 de oct. de 2011 · Argentine: Adjetive for things like argentine music, argentine wine,argentine food, etc. Argentinean or Argentinian: Demonym for people, i.e. I am argentinean, argentinean are friendly people, Nationality: Argentinean. This means people "from" the country Argentina are argentinean. Share.

  2. In Portugal it seems "fatherland" is preferred when talking of one's homeland in general terms, but "a minha terra" - feminine - when placing oneself within the country. The difference may seem slight, but it is curious that "fatherland" tends to denote pride and a even a hint of militarism, whereas "motherland" as used in English invokes the ...

  3. 9 de jun. de 2012 · Your problem, basically, is the difference between "Be Going to + V" and the Present Continuous (Be + V+ing) with Future Meaning. But most of your examples are mixed up and confused so we need to clarify a few things. Here are some expressions you need to learn first: go golfing = X. go to golf = X. go to shopping = X.

  4. For the first two, this good places the song in the present or immediate past. Both verbs work: haven't works because it's referencing the time before you heard the current song, and hadn't works because it's referencing the last time you heard a song as good as this one. If you didn't hear the song you're talking about recently, you need to ...

  5. 8 de jun. de 2017 · Both of them are correct. But yes, they do mean different. I feel that 'have a dinner' refers to event and 'have dinner' refers to actual supper someone (maybe speaker) going to have. For example, "We have a dinner planned at Joe's, hurry up!" showed that speaker has 'event of dinner' and "Have dinner son, we are camping out in lawn."

  6. 21 de dic. de 2011 · Fred Jones". Outside of legal documents, "versus" is normally abbreviated "vs." As to when to spell it out and when to use the abbreviation, this is a matter of the level of formality of the document. Some "standard" abbreviations are accepted in contexts where most abbreviations would not be, like "etc." and "et al.".

  7. 7 de nov. de 2013 · From Wikipedia, . Columbus encountered the pineapple in 1493 on the Leeward island of Guadeloupe. He called it piña de Indes, meaning "pine of the Indians", and brought it back with him to Europe, thus making the pineapple the first bromeliad to leave the New World.

  8. 9 de ago. de 2012 · To is a preposition of motion and you are talking about movement towards, and arrival in, Florida. Been in connotes a stay in Florida (which may be short, or very long, or simply passing through). In denotes position, and you are talking about the state or condition of being located in Florida. It doesn't matter whether you took a trip there or ...

  9. 13 de oct. de 2010 · Today is Oct. 13, 2010. It can be argued that in the last 3 months would be intuitively understood as the time frame from 8/13/2010 to 10/12/2010, while in the past three months would mean July, August, and September.

  10. 1 de jul. de 2012 · Possible Duplicate: “Did it close” vs “Has it closed”? As a English non-native speaker it is difficult for me to understand when I must use present perfect or past simple

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