It is not necessary that every headache has to be tumor The Next CEO of Stack OverflowIs the following sentence written in a conditional sentence structure?'You rather not' constructionWould you regret “of” not doing something?Sentence Structure 3Is the sentence; 'Can people stop inviting me to play games I don't want to.' grammatically correct?Word order in an embedded question (“She can't decide which IS the best place for it”)don't and don't in the same sentence? What was the authors point?“Has anyone forwarded this to you too?” vs. “Have you too been forwarded this by someone?”“should always have been done”/“should have made”/ should have been always done”Is this sentence correct? - “Every one of them could not solve it.”

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Traduction de « Life is a roller coaster »



It is not necessary that every headache has to be tumor



The Next CEO of Stack OverflowIs the following sentence written in a conditional sentence structure?'You rather not' constructionWould you regret “of” not doing something?Sentence Structure 3Is the sentence; 'Can people stop inviting me to play games I don't want to.' grammatically correct?Word order in an embedded question (“She can't decide which IS the best place for it”)don't and don't in the same sentence? What was the authors point?“Has anyone forwarded this to you too?” vs. “Have you too been forwarded this by someone?”“should always have been done”/“should have made”/ should have been always done”Is this sentence correct? - “Every one of them could not solve it.”










0















I think this not a right sentence. Can anyone help me to correct this?










share|improve this question







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  • It seems like valid syntax and semantics to me. A little awkward, perhaps, and not particularly idiomatic.

    – Hot Licks
    1 hour ago











  • Aside from a missing article in front of tumour, there's nothing wrong with that sentence. Versions that might be a bit more idiomatically are: (1) it's not (the case / necessarily true) that every headache is caused by a tumour; and (2) it's not (the case / necessarily true) that a tumour causes every headache.

    – Jason Bassford
    1 hour ago
















0















I think this not a right sentence. Can anyone help me to correct this?










share|improve this question







New contributor




Christy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • It seems like valid syntax and semantics to me. A little awkward, perhaps, and not particularly idiomatic.

    – Hot Licks
    1 hour ago











  • Aside from a missing article in front of tumour, there's nothing wrong with that sentence. Versions that might be a bit more idiomatically are: (1) it's not (the case / necessarily true) that every headache is caused by a tumour; and (2) it's not (the case / necessarily true) that a tumour causes every headache.

    – Jason Bassford
    1 hour ago














0












0








0








I think this not a right sentence. Can anyone help me to correct this?










share|improve this question







New contributor




Christy is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I think this not a right sentence. Can anyone help me to correct this?







grammatical-structure






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share|improve this question







New contributor




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asked 1 hour ago









ChristyChristy

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  • It seems like valid syntax and semantics to me. A little awkward, perhaps, and not particularly idiomatic.

    – Hot Licks
    1 hour ago











  • Aside from a missing article in front of tumour, there's nothing wrong with that sentence. Versions that might be a bit more idiomatically are: (1) it's not (the case / necessarily true) that every headache is caused by a tumour; and (2) it's not (the case / necessarily true) that a tumour causes every headache.

    – Jason Bassford
    1 hour ago


















  • It seems like valid syntax and semantics to me. A little awkward, perhaps, and not particularly idiomatic.

    – Hot Licks
    1 hour ago











  • Aside from a missing article in front of tumour, there's nothing wrong with that sentence. Versions that might be a bit more idiomatically are: (1) it's not (the case / necessarily true) that every headache is caused by a tumour; and (2) it's not (the case / necessarily true) that a tumour causes every headache.

    – Jason Bassford
    1 hour ago

















It seems like valid syntax and semantics to me. A little awkward, perhaps, and not particularly idiomatic.

– Hot Licks
1 hour ago





It seems like valid syntax and semantics to me. A little awkward, perhaps, and not particularly idiomatic.

– Hot Licks
1 hour ago













Aside from a missing article in front of tumour, there's nothing wrong with that sentence. Versions that might be a bit more idiomatically are: (1) it's not (the case / necessarily true) that every headache is caused by a tumour; and (2) it's not (the case / necessarily true) that a tumour causes every headache.

– Jason Bassford
1 hour ago






Aside from a missing article in front of tumour, there's nothing wrong with that sentence. Versions that might be a bit more idiomatically are: (1) it's not (the case / necessarily true) that every headache is caused by a tumour; and (2) it's not (the case / necessarily true) that a tumour causes every headache.

– Jason Bassford
1 hour ago











1 Answer
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If you want to keep the sentence as close to the original as possible you would at least need to add an article in front of the word "tumor."
This would give you "a tumor" or "the tumor."
To write it in a more natural way I might say "A headache does not necessarily mean there is a tumor" or "Not every headache means there is a tumor."






share|improve this answer








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    Your Answer








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    0














    If you want to keep the sentence as close to the original as possible you would at least need to add an article in front of the word "tumor."
    This would give you "a tumor" or "the tumor."
    To write it in a more natural way I might say "A headache does not necessarily mean there is a tumor" or "Not every headache means there is a tumor."






    share|improve this answer








    New contributor




    M. Carr is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.
























      0














      If you want to keep the sentence as close to the original as possible you would at least need to add an article in front of the word "tumor."
      This would give you "a tumor" or "the tumor."
      To write it in a more natural way I might say "A headache does not necessarily mean there is a tumor" or "Not every headache means there is a tumor."






      share|improve this answer








      New contributor




      M. Carr is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.






















        0












        0








        0







        If you want to keep the sentence as close to the original as possible you would at least need to add an article in front of the word "tumor."
        This would give you "a tumor" or "the tumor."
        To write it in a more natural way I might say "A headache does not necessarily mean there is a tumor" or "Not every headache means there is a tumor."






        share|improve this answer








        New contributor




        M. Carr is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.










        If you want to keep the sentence as close to the original as possible you would at least need to add an article in front of the word "tumor."
        This would give you "a tumor" or "the tumor."
        To write it in a more natural way I might say "A headache does not necessarily mean there is a tumor" or "Not every headache means there is a tumor."







        share|improve this answer








        New contributor




        M. Carr is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.









        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer






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        answered 1 hour ago









        M. CarrM. Carr

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