This blog is for students taking English 140-189 at Athabasca University.
He showed a propensity for violence in his marriage, so he got into an irrevocably situation.
Propensity to lie can irrevocably damage the reputation.
Last week, George irrevocably had a propensity to drink too much alcohol.
A higher propensity to consume heroin will irrevocably changed someones' behaviour.
The propensity for laziness will irrevocably lead you to your destruction.
Good try, Yu Jin, but you can't use an adverb ("irrevocably") to modify a noun ("situation").Very nice, Liudmila. But be sure to include an article before a countable noun. In this case you want to say "a propensity to lie..."Audrey, "irrevocably had" sounds a little odd to me. Your second sentence is better -- but you made a verb error. Can you see it?Well done, Olena140!.
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He showed a propensity for violence in his marriage, so he got into an irrevocably situation.
Propensity to lie can irrevocably damage the reputation.
Last week, George irrevocably had a propensity to drink too much alcohol.
A higher propensity to consume heroin will irrevocably changed someones' behaviour.
The propensity for laziness will irrevocably lead you to your destruction.
Good try, Yu Jin, but you can't use an adverb ("irrevocably") to modify a noun ("situation").
Very nice, Liudmila. But be sure to include an article before a countable noun. In this case you want to say "a propensity to lie..."
Audrey, "irrevocably had" sounds a little odd to me. Your second sentence is better -- but you made a verb error. Can you see it?
Well done, Olena140!.
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