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		Grammar and Linguistics > Help!     
			
		 Help! 
		
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 aloga
 
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							| Help! 
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							| Hi everybody! Please, native speakers, what do you think about this sentence: "She wants to go for a walk since it �s snowing." 
 I �d say: " Since it �s snowing, she wants to go for a walk.", but I �m not sure if what some of my students have written is OK. 
 Thanks and enjoy Sunday! Ana |  21 Apr 2013      
					
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 MoodyMoody
 
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							| Both sentences sound fine to me. You can put a dependent clause either before or after the main clause. Even the punctuation in both sentences is correct. You don �t use a comma if the dependent clause follows the main clause, but you do when the dependent clause comes first. There �s a subtle difference in emphasis between the two sentences: your student is emphasizing the walk; you are emphasizing the snow. |  21 Apr 2013     
					
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 libertybelle
 
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							| It all depends on what  she really wants to say. 
 If she wants to walk in the snow - I �d write:
 She wants to go for a walk in the snow
 or
 Because it �s snowing, she wants to go for a walk.
 
 I think the since is a bit awkward.
 
 
 |  21 Apr 2013     
					
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 MoodyMoody
 
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							| I think it �s a matter of taste since her original sentences sounded okay to me. It may be a difference in dialect. Your moniker implies that you are from Pennsylvania, and I �m from the Southern United States. |  21 Apr 2013     
					
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 libertybelle
 
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							| Moody The original means to me that because it �s snowing she wants to go for a walk but only because it �s snowing. (since it �s snowing, I want to go out for a walk.)
 
 And I �m from California!
  
 |  21 Apr 2013     
					
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