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安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
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- Could - Grammar - Cambridge Dictionary
Could is more formal and polite than can: Could I ask you a personal question? We don’t use could to give or refuse permission
- can and could | LearnEnglish - British Council
We use could have to say that someone had the ability or opportunity to do something, but did not do it: She could have learned Swahili, but she didn't want to
- Could - definition of could by The Free Dictionary
Could is also used to talk about ability in the present, but it has a special meaning If you say that someone could do something, you mean that they have the ability to do it, but they don't in fact do it
- COULD definition in American English | Collins English Dictionary
You use could to talk about a possibility, ability, or opportunity that depends on other conditions Their hope was that a new and better East Germany could be born
- COULD | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
COULD definition: 1 past simple of "can", used to talk about what someone or something was able or allowed to do… Learn more
- COULD - Meaning Translations | Collins English Dictionary
Master the word "COULD" in English: definitions, translations, synonyms, pronunciations, examples, and grammar insights - all in one complete resource
- COULD | meaning - Cambridge Learners Dictionary
I could (have) used when you feel so happy, sad, angry, etc that you would like to do something:
- How much wood would a woodchuck chuck? - Wikipedia
A woodchuck Sawn logs of wood " How much wood would a woodchuck chuck " (sometimes phrased with "could" rather than "would") is an American English -language tongue-twister [1][2] The woodchuck, a word originating from Algonquian "wejack", is a kind of marmot, regionally called a groundhog [3] The complete beginning of the tongue-twister usually goes: " How much wood would a woodchuck chuck
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