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When to use succeed?
succeed verb (ACHIEVE SOMETHING) to achieve something that you have been aiming for, or (of a plan or piece of work) to have the desired results: She’s been trying to pass her driving test for years and she finally succeeded. He succeeded in building the business into one the leaders in its field.
Do he worked hard he could not succeed?
Answer: He did not succeed although he worked hard.
Is success a proper noun?
succeed is a verb, success is a noun, successful is an adjective, successfully is an adverb:She wants to succeed in business. She wants success in life.
Will to Succeed meaning?
1a : to come next after another in office or position or in possession of an estate especially : to inherit sovereignty, rank, or title. b : to follow after another in order. 2a : to turn out well. b : to attain a desired object or end students who succeed in college.
Is this my book or yours?
possessive pronouns (mine, theirs)a2
Whose book is this? (singular) | Whose books are these? (plural) | |
---|---|---|
Possessive adjective | Possessive pronoun | Possessive adjective |
It’s my book. | It’s mine. | They’re my books. |
It’s your book. | It’s yours. | They’re your books. |
It’s his book. | It’s his. | They’re his books. |
Is the sentence “unless you work hard you will not succeed” correct?
The sentence is incorrect in several ways. Let me correct it first. It should be: Unless you work hard, you will not succeed. Note that unless is a replacement for if…not. If you do not work hard, you will not succeed. You have to remove if and the negation when you use unless, because unless does the job of them both.
Is it correct to say unless you work hard you will not?
Let me correct it first. It should be: Unless you work hard, you will not succeed. Note that unless is a replacement for if…not. With the if…not formation, the sentence would be: If you do not work hard, you will not succeed. You have to remove if and the negation when you use unless, because unless does the job of them both.
Is “he works hard so he will pass” correct?
It is correct, though perhaps a comma might make it more easily understandable: “He works hard, so that he will pass.” He’s working hard in order to pass. He works hard sothat he may pass. Not correct at all, the correct ones are….He works hard therefore he will pass or He works hard so as to pass…. It is rare people working hard just to pass.
Is ‘he works hard to pass the exam’ grammatically correct?
‘He works hard so that he will pass the Tofel to enter an Ivey League university. ‘He works hard to pass the exam.’ ‘He is working hard to pass the exam’. These examples sound more natural. , former English Teacher. Yes, the sentence is grammatically correct. However the period/full stop should be inside the quotation marks: