安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
|
- What do you call someone who likes to pick fights?
Do they pick fights that they get into, or do they start fight between other parties? I ask because shit-stirrer is generally someone who lets person A know about something bad person B did, and then runs to person B to tell him about person A's reaction But in the ensuing bunfight, the 'stirrer' plays no actual part - except perhaps to egg on the combatants
- Whats the meaning of as close as anyone gets to seeing wind?
If the conifers and sagebrush are soloists, the wheat field is a corps de ballet, each stem following all the rest in bursts of movement, a million ballerinas bending, one after the other, as great gales dent their golden heads The shape of that dent lasts only a moment, and is as close as anyone gets to seeing wind
- seeing what what looks like a bunch of random characters does?
(3) The debug option can be very helpful for seeing what, at first glance, looks like what a bunch of random characters does like But this one is conventionally erroneous like the first one
- What is the difference between remember and remembered?
In the following context: Holly begins by telling the narrator about a man named Sally Tomato who is a member of the Mafia She remembered seeing this man at Joe Bell's bar as a regular befor
- grammar - Past perfect tense with adverb never - English Language . . .
The never in example (2) means that he the past-perfect action (seeing such a beautiful place) did not occur before the past-simple action (going to India) If may -- or may not -- have happened during or after going to India
- What is the difference between to meet you and to meeting you?
Why the below one is correct? I look forward to meeting you And why this one is wrong? I look forward to meet you I generally do these mistakes in letter writing
- Whats the difference between verbs spot and see? What verb fom . . .
There is only a slight difference in meaning: seeing someone enter a house sounds more like the action of entering is watched for a short amount of time; seeing someone entering a house sounds like they were being watched for a slightly longer period
- phrase usage - Is it ok to say good morning at anytime? - English . . .
A friend of mine told me that you can say "good morning" to a person at any time, if you are seeing him her for the first time on that day Is this true?
|
|
|