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If you know that a person is between twenty and thirty but you are not sure about the exact age, you can say "twenty-something". The same with "thirty-something", "forty-something", "fifty-something", etc.
I'm not sure if this is considered
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Both of them are right.
In the first sentence your is a possessive adjective.
In the second sentence you is an object pronoun (as in me, you, him, her, etc).
In informal or spoken English it is more common to use object pronouns before
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What's the most hilarious film you've ever watched? The one that you can't help laughing out loud when you watch it. I'm thinking of "Meet the parents" right now. It makes me laugh every time I see it.
How about you?
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I like these from "Fight Club":
You're not your job. You're not how much money you have in the bank. You're not the car you drive. You're not the contents of your wallet. You're not your f***ing khakis. You're the all-singing, all-dancing crap
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I found this googling "go missing". I hope it's of any use.
Lately, however, the American press has become that professor. What set the ball rolling, I believe, was use of the verb phrase "to go missing" to mean "disappear," as in a person or
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maj, I can't do it right now because I have a good job that I can't leave by the moment, though I'm happy with it. Don't be scared by the future. Perhaps I'm an optimist but I see a brilliant future ahead. It's just waiting for me out there. It's
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Write them down!! I keep my own notebook, which is like my private dictionary. Write a definition of them, a phonetic transcription - if you know any phonetic symbols, and a translation into your own language. And use these new words as much as
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Hello prabeersikdar! The best way to improve pronunciation is to listen to lots of English, whether on tv or cd's, tapes, etc. Watch English films in their original version, whenever possible. If there's any chance you have some English speakers
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Ok, sonimu, let's go with those mistakes.
You can translate 'ya decia yo' as 'I thought so' because you're implying that you knew something beforehand.
Instead of 'I had inherited', I'd say 'I have inherited' because it relates to the present
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'Nerd' is sometimes translated into Spanish as 'empollón' but this depends on the context. It has some other meanings, as I told you, and they can't be conveyed by this word into Spanish, though. Perhaps you have to choose any other word to
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