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I'll do it. Some have more than one meaning. If that is the case, I made a guess as to which meaning is most common or the one that I think you want. Out of context, it's impossible to be sure.
1. Shaken up. Discombobulated. I was
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Ha, I just found out this: Usually good teachers got assigned to a class of good students. But these forums are such a contradiction to this "(what word to put here?)" where so many good teachers guide a lot of "bad" students.
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In general, 'carnival' is just another word for 'festival'. The main differences, I would say, are these: A festival commonly lasts for only one day, but a carnival can last a week or more; a carnival is more associated with
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(a) The Christians / Christians are celebrating Christmas. okay (b) They are celebrating a Christmas day. They are celebrating Christmas Day.
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Can I say, (a) The Christians / Christians are celebrating Christmas. (b) They are celebrating a Christmas day.
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My new screenplay has a scene where the two characters are revealing their autobiographies to each other, and they are ... other about their pasts; however, I don't see how to do it without the way-too-long-to-be-cinematically-palatable
misc.writing.screenplays.moderated
by
2.71828183
185 days ago
Universities, Marriage, Jokes, Countries, United States, Relationships, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Schools, Students, Christmas, Holidays, Sentences
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They're both correct. You'd choose depending on where you are when you say it. If you're at home, your wife might say, "Why didn't you ever bring home the present they gave you at the office Christmas party?" If
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Hi,
You don't use "substitution holiday"?
When I have to work on Sunday, I can take a day off on Monday to make up for it.
We call this "substitution holiday."
I guess you just say
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Cleaning up - yes, cleaning up his mess. Could mean correcting his errors, apologizing for his mistakes/to those he has offended, or anything similar. "could have fooled me" - your actions led me to think the opposite. Mary: God, I
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I found a website that could help you. I'll quote part of it for you: "May/might is an example of a modal auxiliary verb. The distinction
between may and might has to do with the tense (present, past etc.)
and/ or mood (indicative/
ESL Basic English Grammar Questions and Help
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vince
197 days ago
Difference Between, Tenses, Modals, Auxiliaries, Present Tenses, Conditionals, Subjunctives, Simple Present, Modal Auxiliaries, United Kingdom, Christmas, Holidays, Languages, Simple Tenses, Easter
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How to Write a Letter Idioms Formal Letter Graduation Songs
Who sings a certain song
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