Why, oh why, aren’t HMRC doing what is really needed when it comes to

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Why is it that everybody wants to help me whenever i need someone's help However, i find it puzzling.

Why does everybody want to help me whenever i need someone's help This is a common english phrase that i'm sure everyone has heard before Can you please explain to me the difference in mean.

Why, oh why, aren’t HMRC doing what is really needed when it comes to

You never know, which is why.but you never know

That is why.and goes on to explain

There is a subtle but important difference between the use of that and which in a sentence, and it has to do primarily with relevance What is the difference between these two sentences 1 ) please tell me why is it like that (should i put question mark at the end) 2 ) please tell me why it is like that

Googling 'for why' (in quotes) i discovered that there was a single word 'forwhy' in middle english. Unlike how, what, who, where, and probably other interrogatives, why does not normally take to before its infinitive I wonder if this is dialectal, or perhaps just individual. There is no recorded reason why doe, except there was, and is, a range of others like roe

Why, oh why, aren’t HMRC doing what is really needed when it comes to
Why, oh why, aren’t HMRC doing what is really needed when it comes to

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So it may have been a set of names that all rhymed and that law students could remember

Or it could be that they were formed from a mnemonic, like the english pronouciation of a prayer or scripture in latin/greek. Since we can say why can we grow taller?, why cannot we grow taller? is a logical and properly written negative We don't say why we can grow taller? so the construct should not be why we cannot grow taller? the reason is that auxiliaries should come before the subject to make an interrogative. Which one is correct and used universally

I don’t owe you an explanation as to why i knocked the glass over I don’t owe you an explanation of why i knocked the glass over Is one used more than. Why do you ask (the question)

In the first case, jane's expression makes the answer direct object predicate, in the second it makes the question direct object predicate

The subjects, being i and you respectively. Where does the use of “why&rdquo As an interjection come from