I was always taught that spelling the word 'practice' with a letter c before the e means it is a noun, whereas 'practise' with a letter s before the e means it is a verb, so the person should be writing on the blackboard "Let's practise some together". (They should have used the apostrophe in Let's, too, by the way!)
Maybe ILNesasta would find it helpful to know that the apostrophe in "the duck's webbed feet" is used as a contraction for "the duck, (its) webbed feet".
@IINesasta The duck's webbed feet means that the webbed feet belong to the duck. In this case, the apostrophe shows possession, not a missing letter. HTH!
She speaks too quickly-most ESL students wouldn't be able to understand this at all.
connienaka 2 months ago
@connienaka Just by that comment, you are insulting 90% of everybody on youtube!
YouLostAGame 4 weeks ago
guns n' roses. right or wrong?
porridgesilt 8 months ago
Lol... When she says "it's an apostrophe," the grammar is way off for two reasons.
First of all, the word "apostrophes" is not AN apostrophe. Second, the plural form of the word appears on the board, not the singular as she says.
Double fail.
SeanPerrin 10 months ago
I was always taught that spelling the word 'practice' with a letter c before the e means it is a noun, whereas 'practise' with a letter s before the e means it is a verb, so the person should be writing on the blackboard "Let's practise some together". (They should have used the apostrophe in Let's, too, by the way!)
Maybe ILNesasta would find it helpful to know that the apostrophe in "the duck's webbed feet" is used as a contraction for "the duck, (its) webbed feet".
laterisinglark 10 months ago
i feel like an idiot watching this -.-
and i still don't fully get it... the duck one really confused me :s
the duck's webbed feet? the duck is webbed feet? O_O GAH! D:
IINesasta 1 year ago
@IINesasta The duck's webbed feet means that the webbed feet belong to the duck. In this case, the apostrophe shows possession, not a missing letter. HTH!
itzforever 11 months ago