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Well, it's quite tricky, because in English most verbs can be used in both transitive and intransitive contexts. The verb surface can be both... An old report has been surfaced by the research team that went through the archives. (passive)
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Thanks, certainly there is not mistake in my questions, I just like to know if there is such a relation name. I am doing Natural Language Processing research. such as, car -> motor vehicle the relation between them is, motor vehicle is a
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Hello! As you may have noticed, these verbs are virtually synonymous. However, there is an easy way to explain the difference. We will have to look at these words in detail. - 'to clarify' is a word formed by its root 'clar-' (to
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To pull sth/sb apart is to separate two things or people. E.g. "Can't you see that he is pulling us apart ?" I wonder if there is a phrasal verb with the opposite meaning? I haved looked up the antonyms of this phrasal verb in a thesaurus already
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The word Remember , according to a dictionary, has two primary verb definitions. The first is the process of storing data in your memory, which is the antonym of “forget.” The second definition is the process of recovering lost data – information
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Go to:
bear
http://www.m-w.com/dictionary/bear
Select from the drop down list.
At the bottom you'll find the reasonable synonyms for bear.
It's a very good dictionary for synonyms. Even better, is:
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The Antonym of Sin
In order to arrive at a suitable antonym for the word “sin”, one must understand the word as it is correctly used in the English language. This explanation will address the meaning of sin and its antonym in an attempt to
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Paco2004 wrote:
Hello guys Could you allow me to throw my two cents? As for the second question, if we are not given a particular context, I would like to choose the option "a" given by MrP. In English you have an adjective "untrained" as an
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Hello guys Could you allow me to throw my two cents? As for the second question, if we are not given a particular context, I would like to choose the option "a" given by MrP. In English you have an adjective "untrained" as an antonym to "trained",
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C. gather together - This is like "interview", you gather potential employees together before hiring one. — You don't "gather potential employees together", during an interview. You keep them apart.
You sure don't invite the whole town. You do
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