Possessive Adjectives Vs Possessive Pronouns Exercises Stories

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English 101: Parts of Speech

by lindiana on Sep 19, 2017
How To

English 101 is brought to you by Lindiana, who holds her Bachelor of Science Degree in Secondary Education/English. * * * * * In the English language, there are eight parts of speech: The Noun The noun is a word that is used to name a person, place, thing or idea. Nouns are classified as one of three types: proper/common, abstract/concrete or collective....

Parts of Speech Pt. 02

by velvetpie on Sep 17, 2017
How To

PRONOUNS A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun and there are eight types: personal, relative, interrogative, demonstrative, reflexive, intensive, reciprocal and indefinite. Personal pronouns refer to people or things. Examples are I, she, he, their and ours. They are going to the opera. Her hair color is horrible. A relative pronoun is usuall...

Punk-Chew-Ay-Shun

by Dreams of Desire on Sep 1, 2017
How To

Yes, I know its knott spellt that weigh, but sum people seem sew con-fused about simple gramma that I decided to post this humble guide and save them – and myself – some time in future. The Comma Comma usage is in some respects a question of personal writing style: some writers use commas liberally, while others prefer to use them sparingly. For instance...

"Encyclopedia Erotica."

by RicoLouis on Feb 8, 2017
Miscellaneous

The following is a guide to help writers like myself to improve and expanded our vocabularies or just find the right word when we get stumped or want to find out general information on sexual topics. Comments and collaborations are welcome. I will be expanding and moving things around as it grows. I am reorganizing things and trying to put things in proper a...

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The Fiendish Guide to Punctuation

by OmegaZone on Sep 1, 2017
How To

Fiendish Guide to Punctuation V1.3 This guide is intended to provide a basic but complete, or at least I hope to make it complete over time, guide to punctuation in the English language. It will be primarily targeted at authors who write fictional stories using the standard story style. It will include subsections pointing out the differences in US, UK and...

The Correct Use of Its/It's

by R. Richard on Sep 17, 2017
How To

Its is an adjective and the possessive form of the pronoun it. It's is a contraction (for it is or it has), that must always have an apostrophe. Its is used as adjective. "The cat chased Its tail." [The cat chased the tail belonging to the cat.] "The bank closed Its doors." [The bank closed the doors belonging to the bank.] The adjective Its never means 'i...

How to Punctuate Like a Pro

by KillerMuffin on Sep 13, 2017
How To

What's the point? Other than the dot at the end of the sentence. Believe it or not, you already know a lot about punctuation. You read it every day and your brain remembers it a little, even if you don't. Trust me on this, I'm a total grammar geek. You know when it looks right and when it doesn't, but you may not always know why it's not right. Perhaps...

Shards Ch. 04

by Leenysman on Oct 24, 2018
Sci-Fi & Fantasy

Over the next weeks, as 2015 gave way to 2016, the rate of Nova detections kept rising. Several other nations reported isolating the Nova retrovirus and indicated that it had infected 100% of their populations or was expected to do so. Yet, the U.S. government was remaining tight-lipped, even in the face of several nations claiming that the virus originated...

The Art of Writing Smut

by Boxlicker101 on Sep 14, 2017
How To

Writing smut, like any other kind of writing, takes a certain amount of skill and knowledge. Some writing skills are not required, such as establishing characters or plot development, because the only thing the dedicated readers of smut care about is graphic sex, and the more detailed it is, the better. Character is less important than the sizes of his cock...

Then vs Than

by Angel Love on Sep 14, 2017
How To

As a volunteer editor in the Literotica Editor's Program, one of my biggest pet peeves is the consistent misuse of the word then for the word than by many writers. There is a BIG difference my friends! Does anyone else's skin crawl when they see a sentence like this . . . His cock was bigger then most . . . or even this . . . We can talk it over than decide...