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“what about windy day?”
“how about if I attach the headgear on the head?”
Because the headgear does not apart from the head.

there are 3sentences. i'm not English, or American who speaks English as their first language. so I don't know what's wrong, and i wanna know where is wrong. plz tell me.

2007-08-08 04:14:46 · 10 answers · asked by only you 1 in Society & Culture Languages

10 answers

All of these sentences i'm merely guessing what you meant by them and in what context they were spoken or written.

Sentence 1: "What do you think about the wind today?"
Sentence 2: "What if i attach the headgear to my head?"
Sentence 3: (i had a hard time with this one) "Because the headgear stays close to the head."

Again, i'm not sure in what context these sentences were made and the meaning of any of them could go in many different directions. Hope these answers help.

2007-08-08 04:22:14 · answer #1 · answered by Agnostic Front 6 · 0 0

What about windy day? <-doesn't make sense. Not sure what you're asking with this question. Maybe.... What do you think of all this wind today???

How about if I attach the headgear on the head? Also confusing. I'm guessing you mean to say: Is it okay if I put the headgear on?

Because the headgear does not apart from the head. - I have no idea what this means, or what you are trying to say in this sentence. Sorry!

2007-08-08 04:18:23 · answer #2 · answered by I, Sapient 7 · 0 0

You need an indefinite article before windy: What about that windy day!
You cannot attach the headgear to someone's head without screwing or nailing it in.
How about if I attach the headgear to the head.
Does not apart is not correct
Because the headgear does not come off of the head.

2007-08-08 04:23:28 · answer #3 · answered by TX Mom 7 · 0 0

What about a windy day? How about if I attach the headgear on the head, because the headgear does not apart from the head

2007-08-08 04:19:50 · answer #4 · answered by hecc24 2 · 0 1

the first one might be, "What about this windy day"
the second one might be "how about I attach the headgear on the head"
the third one might be "because the headgear does not come appart from the head"

2007-08-08 04:21:04 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

um- try: What about A windy day?
and i don't really understand the second sentence, because headgear is made for the head, so why is that a question?

2007-08-08 04:19:45 · answer #6 · answered by person 5 · 0 1

What about a windy day?

How about attaching the head gear to the head?

So the head gear will not come apart from the head.

Or

On a windy day, how about attaching the head gear to the head so that it doesn't blow away.

2007-08-08 04:22:59 · answer #7 · answered by Funny Girl 4 · 0 0

This one is subtle, so I can see why you missed it. The problem is parallelism. In a series, each item must have the same grammatical structure. Let's look at the items in the series above. Mountain biking: noun, name of an activity. Hiking: noun, name of an activity Jogging: noun, name of an activity Reading: verb, describing an activity As you can see from this list, "reading" is not the same part of speech as the other items. This makes the sentence un-parallel--and grammatically incorrect. Possible correction: She enjoys going mountain biking, hiking, and jogging, as well as reading long novels. [Now you are matching the verb "going" with the verb "reading." This makes the sentence parallel. The series of activity names follows the verb "going." We had to create a new phrase for "reading" so the reader wouldn't think that "reading" is part of the series following "going."]

2016-05-17 05:34:30 · answer #8 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

They should read.......

"What about the wind today?"

"What if I attach the headgear then?"

2007-08-08 04:17:42 · answer #9 · answered by scotslad60 4 · 0 1

I don't get it.

2007-08-08 04:18:08 · answer #10 · answered by worrywore123 2 · 0 1

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