There are greeting, doing polite attitude, and using honorific language, etc.
1. They are not same meaning. / It's only called.
-> Are not this sentences correct?
2. Behind it are period and a comma.
-> Is behind written as a preposition in this sentence? And what is the difference when 'behind' is used as a preposition in a sentence and as an adverb?
3. whats = what is, what does, what has
-> Right?
4. Let me know what kind of prase it is.
what kind of prase - interrogative,
it - subject, is - verb
-> Right?
5. going to class - verb phrase
-> verb phase has a verb, right? What is a verb in this phrase?
6. holiday means only one day off, such as Christmas, or each of them represents a name(ex: christmas, childrens day), and holidays means two or more days off, like Lunar New Year or Chuseok, or two or more holidays combined(ex: christmas + childrens day). Right?
7. I don't have to start with a capital letter when I have this mark , right?
Hi, Minju! Thank you for the wonderful questions. I hope you have tme to review this, then you can ask me more clarifications next time. See you!
--Teacher Anji
1. They are not same meaning. / It's only called.
-> Are not this sentences correct?
>> They don't have the same meaning. / They don't mean the same. / It's only the name./It's only how it is called.
2. Behind it are period and a comma.
-> Is behind written as a preposition in this sentence? And what is the difference when 'behind' is used as a preposition in a sentence and as an adverb?
>> Behind in this sentence is a preposition because it indicates the location of period and comma which are nouns.
>> She walked behind during the entire race. ( Here, it modifies walked which is a verb so it is an adverb.)
3. whats = what is, what does, what has
-> Right?
>> What's = what is/ what has/what was (except what does)
4. Let me know what kind of prase it is.
what kind of prase - interrogative,
it - subject, is - verb
-> Right?
>> CORRECT
>> What kind of phrase IS it? - interrogative sentence
>> What kind of phrase IT is. - declarative sentence
>> Please tell me what kind of phrase it is. "What kind of phrase" = interrogative phrase which is also a noun phrase
5. going to class - verb phrase
-> verb phase has a verb, right? What is a verb in this phrase?
>> 'going' is the main verb
>> is going to class (is = auxilliary verb, going=main verb. sorry about the confusion earlier)
6. holiday means only one day off, such as Christmas, or each of them represents a name(ex: christmas, childrens day), and holidays means two or more days off, like Lunar New Year or Chuseok, or two or more holidays combined(ex: christmas + childrens day). Right?
>> CORRECT
>> Also, 2 or more days like Lunar new year can be called holidays but just holiday is okay.
7. I don't have to start with a capital letter when I have this mark , right?
>> It depends on the sentence:
example:
1. She said, "I will be there at 5 p.m."
2. She called it "the best day ever." ( the phrase inside the quotation mark can not stand alone)