I don’t agree with the first one as a native English speaker
2025-03-09 14:58:55
120
jasperthegoldengirl :
I’m a native speaker of 🇨🇦 English and I definitely put “a” in front of sunburn. “I got a sunburn yesterday out on the boat.”
2025-03-09 16:14:48
50
Raffael Pazmiño Rojas :
Can you please explain why you said “none of these answers IS correct” instead of “none of these answers ARE correct” ?
2025-03-09 15:52:52
4
7AMO🇬🇧❤️🔥 :
You said " none of those answers is correct" 💀
2025-03-09 21:01:39
0
Δ. ΑΝΑΣΤΑΣΙΑΔΗ :
so, what is the right answer instead of "wiping off the feet" at the last one??how is it called in english?? could somebody tell me please?
2025-03-09 19:57:44
3
Limiry :
what is with sound?
2025-03-09 19:21:38
7
Sherie 🇨🇦 :
I’m a lifelong communications professional. I disagree with the first one.
2025-03-09 18:52:19
4
ILearnedToBeAlone :
What about “won against” is that still correct?
2025-03-09 14:53:49
20
miguel 🇨🇦🇵🇹 :
“A sunburn,” whether you like it or not, is now proper English. Especially in places like Canada. You can be as prescriptive as you want, but that’s not how language works.
2025-03-10 02:54:53
30
marellik :
Pink Floyd say “wipe the slate clean”… with “off” maybe there is the wall 😂
2025-03-09 15:28:53
0
What You Say in English! :
While “This is a sunburn” isn’t the most natural phrasing in any dialect, the idea of using “a sunburn” isn’t wrong—it’s just a regional or personal preference. If you’re in the U.S., especially in casual speech, it wouldn’t sound completely out of place.
2025-03-09 17:23:44
3
Borjan Tilevski :
Finally some good content on this network.
2025-03-10 00:15:22
3
Bianca Strippoli :
I, too, don’t know where they get the confidence to actually put themselves out there 😅
2025-03-09 15:37:28
5
Avi the lab :
For the first one. Why there is no article? English is a nightmare:(
2025-03-09 15:07:51
1
Ibrar Inayat :
- ✅ *"She is wiping mud off her shoes."*
- ❌ *"She is wiping off her feet"* (if referring to shoes) is **semantically ambiguous** in formal contexts.
2025-03-10 00:04:40
1
JoseArcadioBuendiaIguarán :
This man should read Jennifer Jenkins's work about English in the world, international English and how English does not belong to native speakers anymore.
2025-03-09 21:23:46
0
Alinni Alves :
I have a question: Have you seen an English speaker making mistakes when they teach English?
2025-03-09 17:43:47
1
-AlFarabi- :
why omit the indefinite article in the first one, if I may ask?
2025-03-10 10:41:11
0
dieplalala :
Sunburn is an uncountable noun, according to dictionaries. You may see it used as a countable noun, but those people make videos to teach English, so they must give us grammatically correct word.
2025-03-10 05:55:58
0
danielc7517 :
So sunburn refers to something uncountable in English too much different than Spanish when it requires an article to make enough sense
2025-03-09 22:52:18
0
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