Je cherche à comprendre comment résoudre un système d’équations linéaires avec deux inconnues. Quels sont les différentes méthodes pour les résoudre (substitution, addition, graphique) et dans quel cas chacune est préférable ?
Vous avez perdu votre mot de passe ? Veuillez entrer votre adresse e-mail. Vous recevrez un lien et créerez un nouveau mot de passe par e-mail.
Veuillez expliquer brièvement pourquoi vous pensez que cette question devrait être signalée.
Veuillez expliquer brièvement pourquoi vous pensez que cette réponse devrait être signalée.
Veuillez expliquer brièvement pourquoi vous pensez que cet utilisateur devrait être signalé.
Because non-native speakers use English differently as compared to native speakers. It’s… it’s as simple as that.
I can also usually tell within the first few moments of talking to somebody on the internet whether they are from a native English-speaking country or not. They’ll use slightly different phrasing. Use of idioms is also a dead giveaway.
I dunno. It’s usually patently obvious. This doesn’t make a non-native English speaker’s English bad by any stretch; just different.
I can also generally tell where native English speakers are from as well, at least in a general sense. Canadians tend to sound like Americans (even in writing) but spell more like the Brits. British persons obviously use British English and will use British colloquiums and the word ‘whilst’ often will pop up. Australians lean heavy on the word ‘mate’ a lot of the time. Americans use American spellings and sound like Americans.
And so on.
You probably have strange grammar. Pretty much every language has a different grammar style than English, as far as I know. Don’t know Malaysian, so I can’t answer that specific part. But based on your question, you have better grammar than most on the internet. So that could be it, that you’re “too perfect.” Could be an accent, too. Or idioms, those things are pretty funny.
It may be little things like not using native idioms, that you would pick up from living in the UK.
But, hey. That’s just a guess.
Also, I don’t think I would’ve noticed you were foreign from what you wrote, if you didn’t point it out.