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544 record(s) found in 0 seconds.
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There's also a quite common expression:
"on the beat"
This is an example I found on COCA:
I think it's time for us not to be the policemen on the beat in the city of Baghdad
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And choosing "preference" would run counter to common sense here. The intended meaning is "the laws could turn out to be to the research team's disadvantage".
"Preference" has little to do with
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I would add the word "the" to the left of "U.S.A".
Absent that, it looks good to me.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longest_word_in_English
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3. ???
I'll hazard a guess:
he meant "whether a man can keep his desire for specimens of the same sex in check, to a large extent depends on his upbringing, education"
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I think the speaker does actually say "he would", though both words are said very quickly -- which is why I initially suggested "he'd". But in the louder recording, I think there's enough there that you can't really
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Listening to the tape a second time, I heard "he would" too.
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Please correct my spelling misstakes plz.
That's a rather odd favor to ask of us.
Don't you have a spellchecker to do this job for you? For all I know, the firefox browser has a spellchecker build in.
Apart from that, you
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#1 You come of age as America itself finished coming of age
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That we can't tell you due to lack of context.
What we can tell you, though, is that you should capitalize the pronoun "I" at all times.
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