Who’s and Whose

Whose is the possessive form of the pronoun who, while who’s is a contraction of the words who is or who has.

Example sentences using who’s 
My uncle is someone who’s living in Egypt. 
Ahmed told me who’s coming to the party.

Example sentences using whose 
Whose cat chewed up my homework? 
The ring came from a fire whose light was bright like a star.

Hostility - حِقْد ؛ عَدَاوَة ؛ عِدَاء

Hostility = unkindness, anger, bitterness, unfriendliness, opposition = حِقْد ؛ عَدَاوَة ؛ عِدَاء 

In particular , Mr . Eltayeb pointed to the need to distinguish between speeches that advocate religious hatred that constituted incitement to discrimination , hostility or violence , and those that did not.

أشار السيد الطيب بوجه خاص إلى ضرورة التمييز بين الخطب الداعية إلى الكراهية الدينية والتي تشكل تحريضا على التمييز أو العداوة أو العنف والخطب التي لا تدعو إلى ذلك.

Cure

Collocations. 》Cure /kjʊə/ 

1. Noun A cure + for 
There is no known cure for Alzheimer's Disease. 
نتيجة بحث الصور عن ‪Alzheimer's Disease clipart‬‏

2. Verb To be cured + of 
He was completely cured of his illness.
نتيجة بحث الصور عن ‪illness clipart‬‏

these and those

The words these and those should only be used with plurals. 


I have never seen these kind of boxes before. (...these kinds of boxes ) 

Sarah is not used to those type of situations. (...those types of situations )

How to spot a common noun and a proper noun?

How to spot a common noun and a proper noun?










A common noun answers the question "What is it?"
Q: What is it?
A: It is a bridge.

A proper noun answers the question "What's its name?"
Q: What's its name?
A: It is Talkha Bridge.

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