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I've never studied "Twelfth Night" (the obligatory Shakespeare for me in my school years was "Henry V" ), but this phrase simply comes across to me as 'many thanks' or 'I can't thank you enough' in
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As a BrE native speaker, I'd use At as the first choice preposition here. During is also acceptable, but not On or In in the sentence provided. To use On you'd have to add Day to Christmas , and it wouldn't really make sense here
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Hi Yankee, Yes, that's a fair point, although as I mentioned above, I suspect that this set of questions derives from a British source (the curious combination of colour and favorite notwithstanding!), and in BrE, I think you'd be much
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Hi again Chris, Believe me, question 10 does need an adjective; the sentence would be ungrammatical without one, whichever of the four options is chosen.
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Hi Chris, It looks to me as though these questions might derive from a British source, so I'll answer them in that context. By the way, you're lacking an adjective in number 10 (probably the word difficult ). Also, number 7 seems to have
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Hi, I'm just a little kid who ((dreams or dream)) to become dreams of becoming a famous artist in the future.
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Hello hellohello , The expression the tires veer off onto the shoulder here is a figurative one meaning 'letting the mind drift' and it originates from the (hard) shoulder on a road or motorway which is a lane normally free of traffic,
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Yes, I had exactly the same problem a couple of days ago, and it was profoundly irritating to say the least. I imagined that the hijacking of my browser might have been caused by a virus (even though I have good PC security), and I was
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Hmmm, I haven't too much to add to this, and as a BrE speaker, I'm here speaking only for myself, not for BrE speakers in general. With MrP's sentences 1. & 2., I might use either, in both colloquial and written English. However, I
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The context here is the sometimes uneasy relationship between Rafa, aka Rafael Benitez, the current team manager of Liverpool Football Club (an English Premiership club, currently in second place in the Premiership, for anyone not too familiar
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