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The "l" of "bell" when it ends a word is kind of a "half l" when compared to the initial "l" in "love" which allows the "l" voicing to be completed by going to a vowel. Yet the
English Audio: Speech & Pronunciation
by
anonymous
38 days ago
American English, Pronunciation, Phonetics, Spelling, Football, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Writing, United States, American, Speeches, Languages, Sports
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It's not "Football"! Football is the sports with strong men and, well, footballs. Soccer is "Fussball" or "Foodbal" in english, closer to the german word! I'm English but most of the time I don't have a
Basic English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
43 days ago
American English, British English, Football, Spelling, Rugby, Writing, United Kingdom, Sports, Countries, Great Britain, United States, American, Apologies, Languages
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The reference is probably to American football. He was athletic. He had a good passing arm means he could throw a ball far. parlay: to exploit successfully; to increase or otherwise transform into something of much greater value. m-w.com CJ
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Hi, Could we have used the singular verb "differs" in your sentence? I think you are using the word "usage" as an uncountable noun. What is the difference between yours and this? New and old equipment needs (need?) to be fixed.
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
152 days ago
Verbs, Singular Verbs, Difference Between, Prepositions, Nouns, Uncountable Nouns, Football, Sentences, Countries, United States, Usages, American, Singular, Sports
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I counted it in again and he still didn't come in. In all probability this refers to the beginning of the song, in which case it would definitely be an audible, to use an American football term. Once the drummer begins a "song" he
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JCD: It is a military expression. Usually, "hup, hup" (Hup two is two hups) Generally the drill seargeant shouts "hup, hup" or "hup to" to his unit. It means something like "get going", "here's the
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Last, and desperate, chance, one without a big chance of succeeding. An American football expression. Sometimes when the buzzer is about to blow ending a football game (or ending the first half) if...
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@Adrenochrome: I agree with this. I had a chance to watch "Football Factory" series. (not the movie) There they visit most of british footbal firms. You can hear A LOT of different accents only in London, and cities near it. I think
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Well, the fact that you're talking about "football" already puts you in a different vocabulary than mine. In AMERICAN English, you would only say "in the Xth minute ." However, I do know there are some differences between
Sports Talk
by
grammar geek
200 days ago
Football, Vocabulary, American English, Sports, Languages, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, American, Usages
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I liked this one - To: The liberal elite, Hollywood division From: A.O.S. Back in the old days, you used ... in fantasies of universal ease, affluence and entitlement. That bubble has burst, and it¹s high time you emerged from yours. Huh? Thats
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