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Thank you, Clive Can you concieve an example in which the verb would be used in the transitive form? Anton
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'Wont' here is not a verb. Look it up in M-W, for example: transitive verb : accustom, habituate intransitive verb : to have the habit of doing something Anton
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Thank you, Mister Micawber. And nevertheless, I am curious about the obsolette usage of the verb-form. Anton
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Hello all, Dictionaries tell "wont" can be a verb (both transitive and intransitive), but couldn't find any examples. Can you please help me with this? Anton
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So yes? No. He rather wants us to understand that "I know" is more that even "100% sure". "I know" = "100% sure" plus "It cannot be doubted (by somebody)".
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One meaning is "I am sure". The other meaning is "I can't be wrong". The second statement is much stronger. Anton
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"Kind" means type or class, which is just a unit of a logical division, so your sentences sound a bit strange to me. You can say:«Truck is a kind of vehicle», and «Hatchback is a kind of car». It absolutely OK not to use the definite
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Yes. In this context "swallow" means to start to pronounce a phrase and then to be interrupted and either to omit the ending of the phrase or to utter it vary inarticulately.
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Hello, all. Could you please review the text on the attached screenshot and point out mistakes?
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«City Zero» — one of the very few films you like though you may not comletely understand them! It seem to a very figurative scoffing over the state of things in the late USSR. Great actors, great performace.
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