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sorry for not writing with question marks but i dont have a clue where they are

2007-05-02 17:04:08 · 4 answers · asked by fconch 2 in Society & Culture Cultures & Groups Other - Cultures & Groups

anf was a typo sorry, the question is about the "s" at the end of present

2007-05-02 17:07:35 · update #1

can you explain why? i always thought it was "presents" but the doubt came up

2007-05-02 17:10:32 · update #2

thanks boos you got my best answer in a couple of hours.

2007-05-02 17:17:40 · update #3

4 answers

If you're talking about both columbia & fox then it's 'present.'
If the two of them together are one name, then it's 'presents'

The expanation is: If It's it's singular then the word is presents. If it's plural then the word is present. It all depends on whether 'columbia and fox' is one company name or two companies.

An example would be: Barnes & Noble presents. That's right because both names are a single company. But if you said 'Barnes & Noble present' it means they're two people or companies.

2007-05-02 17:06:23 · answer #1 · answered by the Boss 7 · 0 1

Columbia and fox presents

2007-05-02 17:07:58 · answer #2 · answered by Mika knows best 1 · 0 1

Present.

And to use a question mark, hold shift and press the '/' key.

2007-05-02 17:06:58 · answer #3 · answered by Kat Hopkins 3 · 0 1

present :)

2007-05-02 17:06:43 · answer #4 · answered by embryonicreject 3 · 0 1

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