May 16, 2025
i dont know, trust me, i know, shut up, alone, i loved you.
im two days watching movies in english, im sad, this is very difficult, but i go continue. thank you
wWhat iI learned from the movies legends
iI don't know, trust me, iI know, shut up, alone, iI loved you.
iI'm two days into watching movies in eEnglish, i. I'm sad, because this is very difficult, but i goI will continue.
tThank you.
wWhat iI learned from the movies legend characters
(1) "I" is always capitalised.
(2) I'm not too sure what "legends" means here. I'm guessing you meant "characters".
iI don't know, trust me, iI know, shut up, alone, iI loved you.
iI'm two days into watching movies in eEnglish, i. I'm sad, this is very difficult, but i goI continue on.
(1) "[time] into (doing something)" is a set phrase.
(2) "English" is a proper noun and should also be capitalised.
(3) I broke up your sentence into two, so it flows more naturally.
tThank you.
Feedback
Currently, the biggest point you must take note of is capitalisation. Always capitalise "I" and proper nouns like the names of places, languages, nationalities, etc. Additionally, the first word of any sentence should also be capitalised.
wWhat iI learned from the movies legends?
"I" is always capitalized.
iI don't know, trust me, iI know, shut up, alone, iI loved you.
I don't understand what "alone" means in this context.
im two daysFor the past two days, I have been watching movies in eEnglish, i. I'm sad, thisat it is very difficult, but i goI continue to do it.
Languages are also always capitalized.
tThank you.
Feedback
Keep it up!
what i learned from the movies legends
"I" is always capitalized.
(1) "I" is always capitalised. (2) I'm not too sure what "legends" means here. I'm guessing you meant "characters".
|
i dont know, trust me, i know, shut up, alone, i loved you.
I don't understand what "alone" means in this context.
|
im two days watching movies in english, im sad, this is very difficult, but i go continue.
Languages are also always capitalized.
(1) "[time] into (doing something)" is a set phrase. (2) "English" is a proper noun and should also be capitalised. (3) I broke up your sentence into two, so it flows more naturally.
|
thank you
|
You need LangCorrect Premium to access this feature.
Go Premium