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		Ask for help > Help with some doubts     
			
		 Help with some doubts 
		
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 WestHampstead
 
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							| Help with some doubts 
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							| Hi! Could you please help me with some doubts? Can you say:
 She �s wearing high heels = She �s wearing high heeled shoes?
 If a T-shirt has pictures of a duck, can you say a ducked T-shirt? I suppose it �s wrong I �ve never heard it, my students wrote it.
 What �s the difference between an evening dress and a night dress? Evening dress is for a party anda night dress for sleeping? is that right?
 what �s exactly the difference between stockings and tights? women wear tights with skirts and I know about  the Xmas stocking.
 The word pyjamas is it singular or plural? She �s wearing a pyjamas/pajamas.
 If a t-shirt it �s by Tommy Hilfiger for example, you say a brand �s name T-shirt?
 What �s the correct order of adjectives in English?
 Thanks!!!
 
 
 |  31 Jan 2010      
					
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 tancredo
 
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							| 1 - you can say : high-heeled shoes                            a ten-year-old boy                            a four-legged table    (they are adjectives ) I don �t think you can say a ducked T-shirt but let�s hope some native teacher is on the forum and tell us.   2 - I think you are right about the dress.   3 - stockings is different from tights. You put on two stockings - one on each leg and you put one one pair of tights - an entire item of clothes (with sort of panties)   4 - Pyjamas/pajamas - I think that the verb that follows is singular. " Your pyjamas is on the bed"    5 - As for the T-shirt I think you can say : a T-shirt with a name.   Let �s wait for other and better opinions!
  6 -  You �ll find the correct order of adjectives in English in a good grammar. Sometimes it is a bit difficult to put them in the correct place!   Have a nice week. |  31 Jan 2010     
					
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 Nicola5052
 
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							| Hi You can say either "she �s wearing high heels"or "she �s wearing high-heeled shoes". Pyjamas is plural - your pyjamas are on the bed. You most definitely can �t say a ducked T-shirt! The Tommy T-shirt would be a brand-name shirt.   Hope that helps Nicola |  31 Jan 2010     
					
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 WestHampstead
 
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							| Thanks! really useful!!! One more question: pyjamas/pajamas Is one for American English and one British?
 |  31 Jan 2010     
					
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 yanogator
 
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							| Yes.
pyjamas - British pajamas - US   Also, tights is the British word. In the US, we say panty-hose. Tights are something a little different. Stockings (the individual kind) are also called "hose" here.   Bruce |  31 Jan 2010     
					
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 dturner
 
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							| You would never say a ducked T-shirt.  A duck T-Shirt is OK.  or a T shirt with a duck on it. We would usually say high heels, but if I said "high heeled shoes", it almost sounds as if I �m trying to emphasize the fact that they are high heels on a pair of shoes.
 You are correct about evening and night dress.  I would never say night dress.  I would use night gown. We often say a night shirt to sleep in, especially worn by men.
 I �m in Canada and would use pajamas, pyjamas.
 Tights to me have a different feeling than panty hose.  Panty hose are see-through or slightly opaque, like nylon stockings.  Tights, to me are not see-through.  I would wear tights when I went ice skating.  They are often thicker than panty hose.  But, these are perhaps cultural differences.
 We would say a brand name t shirt.  No S.  Hope this helps.  dt
 
 |  1 Feb 2010     
					
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 Monkena
 
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							| The ducked T-shirt: duck can only be used as a verb when talking about the act of ducking (to avoid a thrown object for example; or to push someone under water); 
 In the UK, tights will always refer to the two-legged form of panty hose, regardless of thickness; stockings are almost always the one legged type pulled to the top of the thigh.
 
 |  1 Feb 2010     
					
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