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The place that also takes in a sentence decides what the sentence would mean Whoever was in your shoes, they would also have. To further explain, even if words in a sentence do not change, it is the particular place which also occupies in the sentence that the meaning of the sentence gets changed.

Expats also are migrants or expats are also migrants i tried to research it but the answer i found is that depending on context both versions could be correct Some websites have varying answers regarding the placement of also (adverb) whether it should precede before the auxillary 'have' or after Now i'm not sure which one to use

In my opinion the first one looks better but i'd like to know for sure.

I have a question about the usage of 'furthermore', 'moreover', 'in addition to', and 'also' Dictionaries give in addition to as the meaning to all of them But what are the slight differences We say and also when something is additional, and it is this context where we can switch and also with 'plus'

For example, some people may count adults and children separately for specific purposes, and you might hear there are 4 adults, plus 1 child You could instead say there are 4 adults and also 1 child. The accepted answer validates the position of 'also' in the text you quoted, but that text is wrong in various ways that are nothing to do with the placing, or use, of 'also'. It is grammatical to use in an email and just tells the recipient what you have attached to the email

I would prefer enclosure: for a more formal email though

You do not need to put a comma before which because it is one of those necessary phrases that is not a sidenote. He has also been a poet Both are understandable with similar meaning, but would the second, has also been, be considered the equivalent (whatever that would be) of a split infinitive in this situation? I have also done this too

The above sentence does not make sense to me though That is why i am confused about whether the sentence is actually correct or not. Edit if we add a comma before and also, the meaning of the sentence changes The part after that comma becomes an interruption, and the main message becomes times new roman, arial and courier new are the fonts most commonly used on windows

You are right that the other two examples you listed are different.

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