This book contains one hundred typical mistakes relating to papers, proposals, oral presentations, and correspondence with editors (e.g. journal submissions), reviewers (rebuttal letters), and editing agencies. The book is primarily intended for non-native English speaking researchers. However, it is also useful for editing agencies in order to help new or inexperienced editors spot the kinds of mistakes they need to correct in order to ensure their clients successfully have their papers published. Each section of a paper is covered separately: titles and abstracts; introduction and literature review; methods, results and tables; discussion and conclusions.
The Key Word Transformation is part 4 of the Reading and Use of English paper.
In this part , a wide range of different grammatical structures and vocabulary are tested.
You must show your ability to paraphrase using the key word and, most importantly, keeping the meaning the same.
The difficulty lies on the great variety of grammatical structures that you need to learn in order to do this part of the Use of English exam successfully.
This ebook contains a list of the 300 most common transformations that come up in this part of the exam.
How The Old World Ended: The Anglo-Dutch-American Revolution 1500-1800
Added by: Kahena | Karma: 11526.37 | Other | 9 November 2020
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How The Old World Ended: The Anglo-Dutch-American Revolution 1500-1800
A magisterial account of how the cultural and maritime relationships between the British, Dutch and American territories changed the existing world order – and made the Industrial Revolution possible.
The Least You Should Know about English: Writing Skills (13th edition)
Most English textbooks cover more than you need to know. This book will present the least you should know in order to write with clarity and confidence. Improving your writing skills doesn’t require memorizing complex grammatical terms like gerund, auxiliary verb, or demonstrative pronoun. You can write well without knowing such technical labels if you understand certain key concepts—what we call “the least you should know about English.” The concepts covered in the four parts of this book progress from smaller structures to larger ones but can be approached in any order.