jane Archives - Language at Work ..//category/jane/ Improving Communication with Customized Training Tue, 10 May 2016 17:46:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.1 Question Three ..//question-three/ Wed, 13 Apr 2016 18:03:01 +0000 ..//?p=16249 Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, pellentesque ipsum nec, elementum placerat diam lacus nec, pellentesque non sit et aenean mattis, elementum malesuada neque magna sed, laoreet etiam maecenas amet vel pellentesque euismod.

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Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, pellentesque ipsum nec, elementum placerat diam lacus nec, pellentesque non sit et aenean mattis, elementum malesuada neque magna sed, laoreet etiam maecenas amet vel pellentesque euismod.

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What is the difference between ‘who’ or ‘whom’? ..//question-two/ Wed, 13 Apr 2016 18:02:45 +0000 ..//?p=16247 If you can substitute him, use whom. If you can substitute he, use who. You want to give the job to whom? (to him?) Who would do the best job? (He would do the best job?) -Jane

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If you can substitute him, use whom. If you can substitute he, use who. You want to give the job to whom? (to him?) Who would do the best job? (He would do the best job?)

-Jane

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What is the difference between ‘may’ and ‘might’? –Undecided ..//may-and-might/ Wed, 13 Apr 2016 18:02:25 +0000 ..//?p=16245 Dear Undecided, The good news is that they mean almost the same! A purist would say that ‘might’ is used for something that is less likely to happen but either is really correct. For example: “I might get steak for dinner tonite, or I may get dog...

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Dear Undecided,

The good news is that they mean almost the same! A purist would say that ‘might’ is used for something that is less likely to happen but either is really correct.

For example:

“I might get steak for dinner tonite, or I may get dog food.”

Jane

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