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cchelina

June 5, 2025

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A woman in the park

There is a woman sitting on a bench in the park, she´s wearing a red jacket and hold a coffee cup on her hands. There are many yellow leafs on the floor and large trees. There is also a little dog lying down next to her. The sky is cloudy and it looks like fall.

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A woman in the park

There is also a little dog lying down next to her.

There is also a little dog lying down next to her.

Kindred Spirit

There is also a little dog lying down next to her.

The sky is cloudy and it looks like fall.

A woman in the park

There is also a little dog lying down next to her.

The sky is cloudy and it looks like fall.

A woman in the park

There is also a little dog lying down next to her.

There are many yellow leafs on the floor and large trees.


There are many yellow leafves on the floor and large trees. There are many yellow leaves on the floor and large trees.

There are many large trees that shed yellow leafves onto the floor and large treesground. There are many large trees that shed yellow leaves onto the ground.

1. While “floor” works, floor usually refers to indoor areas like the floor of your house or a restaurant. Ground can refer to both indoor and outdoor areas, but is usually used for outdoor areas like dirt, paths, and sidewalks. 2. “And large trees” looks unnatural at the end, it works better if we say that there are many large trees that are shedding the leaves onto the ground 3. The plural form of leaf is actually “leaves”. Nouns ending in “f” or “fe” have a “ves” ending Examples: Leaves, wives, knives

There are many yellow leafves on the floorground and large trees. There are many yellow leaves on the ground and large trees.

Many words which end in "f" have an irregular plural form: "-ves". "Leaf" becomes "leaves", "hoof" becomes "hooves", "calf" becomes "calves", "half" becomes "halves", etc. There are some exceptions (I probably wouldn't do it on words like "woof" or "poof"), but it happens to a lot of "-f" nouns. "Floor" is for inside, "ground" is for outside. Floor of the kitchen, ground of the forest.

There are many yellow leafves on the floorground and large trees. There are many yellow leaves on the ground and large trees.

There are many yellow leafs on the floor and large trees. There are many yellow leafs on the floor and large trees.

The plural form of leaf is leaves.

There are many large trees yellow leafves on the floor and large treesground. There are many large trees yellow leaves on the ground.

There are many yellow leafves on the floor andground as well as large trees. There are many yellow leaves on the ground as well as large trees.

There are many yellow leafves on the floorground and large trees. There are many yellow leaves on the ground and large trees.

Floor is inside a building.

There is also a little dog lying down next to her.


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This sentence has been marked as perfect!

This sentence has been marked as perfect!

This sentence has been marked as perfect!

This sentence has been marked as perfect!

The sky is cloudy and it looks like fall.


The sky is cloudy, and it looks like fall. The sky is cloudy, and it looks like fall.

This sentence has been marked as perfect!

This sentence has been marked as perfect!

The sky is cloudy and it looks like fallis autumn. The sky is cloudy and it is autumn.

The sky is cloudy, and it looks like fall. The sky is cloudy, and it looks like fall.

The sky is cloudy and it looks like fFall. The sky is cloudy and it looks like Fall.

I think it would be a capital. Not 100% sure!

A woman in the park


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This sentence has been marked as perfect!

There is a woman sitting on a bench in the park, she´s wearing a red jacket and hold a coffee cup on her hands.


There is a woman sitting on a bench in the park, s. She´s wearing a red jacket and holding a coffee cup oin her hands. There is a woman sitting on a bench in the park. She´s wearing a red jacket and holding a coffee cup in her hands.

There is a woman sitting on a bench in the park, s. She´s wearing a red jacket and hold a coffee cup oin her hands. There is a woman sitting on a bench in the park. Shes wearing a red jacket and hold a coffee cup in her hands.

1. The sentence should end after “in the park” as there is no conjunction or connecting word to connect the two parts. You could either split the sentence in two or write “in the park and she’s wearing a red jacket”. 2. “On her hands” implies that the coffee cup is sitting on top of her hands. The correct way to say this would be “in her hands”.

There is a woman sitting on a bench in the park, s. She´s wearing a red jacket and holding a cup of coffee cup oin her hands. There is a woman sitting on a bench in the park. She´s wearing a red jacket and holding a cup of coffee in her hands.

A "coffee cup" is just the type of cup you would use for coffee. "Coffee cup" on its own almost implies that we are talking about an empty, ceramic cup. Also, very minor thing, but the ´ in "She´s" isn't the character we usually use when typing. We usually use ' . On most English keyboards, this would be between the colon/semicolon ( : and ; ) and the right Enter key. ´ isn't actually on my keyboard ( ` is, but it points the other direction)

There is a woman sitting on a bench in the park, she´s wearing a red jacket and holding a coffee cup oin her hands. There is a woman sitting on a bench in the park, she´s wearing a red jacket and holding a coffee cup in her hands.

There is a woman sitting on a bench in the park, she´s wearing a red jacket and hold a coffee cup on her hands. There is a woman sitting on a bench in the park, she´s wearing a red jacket and hold a coffee cup on her hands.

This sentence can be broken up into two independent clauses ("There is a woman sitting on a bench in the park" is one clause and "she's wearing a red jacket..." is another clause). They are both independent clauses, because they both have a subject and a verb (first clause: woman (subject), is (verb) | second clause: she's = she is). To connect them into one sentence, you can use a conjunction like 'and' after the comma. Or you could replace the comma with a period to create two separate sentences. For "hold a coffee cup on her hands", the verb hold should be conjugated to "holding" to match "wearing". The coffee cup is also held IN instead of ON her hands.

There is a woman sitting on a bench in the park, she´s wearing a red jacket and holding a cup of coffee cup oin her hands. There is a woman sitting on a bench in the park, she´s wearing a red jacket and holding a cup of coffee in her hands.

There is a woman sitting on a bench in the park, s. She´s wearing a red jacket and holding a coffee cup oin her hands. There is a woman sitting on a bench in the park. She´s wearing a red jacket and holding a coffee cup in her hands.

There is a woman sitting on a bench in the park, s. She´s wearing a red jacket and holding a coffee cup oin her hands. There is a woman sitting on a bench in the park. She´s wearing a red jacket and holding a coffee cup in her hands.

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