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666 record(s) found in 0.01 seconds.
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Right, Yankee. That should be it; I guess I heard it. Thanks! Hiro
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Could anyone help with this video clip? - What does the weather forecaster say after "Finally, this storm has maxed out" and before "as you walk away through the weekend"? Does he say "You get to breed a little bit of
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Words --- yes! I was focused upon whether 'are' could be used for the relative pronoun 'what.' It is, isn't it, when 'what' means more than one entity? Hiro
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Quick question: What might describe her are : pretty, intellectual, young ... there are more. Is the selection of are okay? Hiro
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Thanks, jemaasjr. Do the other two example sentences sound idiomatic? Hiro
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Could anyone please help me see how "A is nothing if not B" comes to mean "It is a conspicuous trait of A's that A is B"? ex) She is nothing if not persistent. The book is nothing if not full of difficult words. He is
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Do the following sound idiomatic? Your excuse won't sell . Nobody believes you. Your idea won't sell . We don't buy it. Thanks, Hiro
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Thanks, Mr. M. I feel good now. Hiro
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Please help me see why 'but' is used at the start of the third paragraph. I don't think the third paragraph contradicts or contrasts with the second in any way, or does it? Two years ago, soprano Barbara Bonney was scheduled to make
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Can I say "Am I anywhere near correct?" or "Am I anywhere close to correct?" to mean "Am I almost correct?"? Maybe, I would like to know if you could place an adjective after 'anywhere/somewhere near' or
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