I tried to express a sentence I would like to quote by combining God and devil / Satan like "good / bad", "magical power", or similar noun instead of their name. If possible, it is important to use male pronouns in the sentences. The sentence should start with "Both are close here ..." (as this place is vertical between God and the devil)
My question concerns the combination of pronoun and adverb used. Because English is not my mother tongue, this is not very obvious to me.
The problem is as follows. Who will define the relationship with God. If we are calling humans by name and referring to them using pronouns as they would like to know, it seems that it is common courtesy to do the same for God. If God shows himself as a father, king, lord, etc, he insists that he is a mother and the goddess is considered obscene. As Michael Bourdais said, "Respecting the address you need is at least polite, so we are calling God" our father "because we are otherwise rude. Symbolic authority for 20 people
I tried to express a sentence I would like to quote by combining God and devil / Satan like "good / bad", "magical power", or similar noun instead of their name. If possible, it is important to use male pronouns in the sentences. The sentence should start with "Both are close here ..." (as this place is vertical between God and the devil)
Some adjectives and adverbs are easy to identify in sentences. Adjectives modify nouns or pronouns. Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs. However, following verbs can be confusing. Predicative adjectives follow connection verbs, but adverbs follow behavioral verbs. Depending on adjectives and adverbs, there is a possibility of confusion, so special attention is required. Adjectives are neither good nor bad. We will connect verbs. Adverbs are very good. They will modify behavioral verbs. It is an adjective if a well is used to explain a person's health condition after a joint verb. Genuine and definitely an adjective. They describe nouns and pronouns. Indeed, it must be an adverb. Most are adjectives. The cutting edge is an adverb. In most cases, it is an adverb. Indefinite pronouns are followed by adjectives.