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- Provide information on, of or about something?
That's indirect information, a hint, something that tells us she wasn't there then, but doesn't tell us anything directly It sheds some light but it doesn't relate to her directly Still, in a great many cases you can use the two interchangeably There's one more case when you use strictly on: Dirt Tools of blackmail
- grammar - to do something vs. to be doing something - English . . .
I have a question about the usages of to do something and to be doing something What's the difference between them? Example: To do something: "This is a really big moment for us and for the t
- Whats the correct usage of something of something and somethings . . .
BUT parts of a car can also be understood as: the engine, the hood, the roof, the chassis, and not something replaceable as in something you can buy at an auto parts' store
- word choice - Do you say you feel pride for something or you feel . . .
You dont feel pride "for" something unless that thing is capable of feeling pride itself and you are emulating that feeling due to empathy If you do something for "person", you are serving the persons benefit If you do something for "object" you are attempting to obtain the object
- meaning in context - What does thats something mean? - English . . .
From the lexical meaning of something, it seems to mean "that’s an important thing " Yet, an example on a Korean website is translated as "one consolation in sadness," and this can make sense in the context
- consumed by something - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
The best definition of the idiom to be consumed by something, in this context, is to be completely absorbed and controlled by one's passion or lust for something or someone
- prepositions - Care of for about something or somebody - English . . .
What is the difference between Care of something or somebody Care for something or somebody Care about something or somebody It seems to me there's no the difference
- To prepare for something or to get prepared for something?
1 Prepare is a verb To prepare for something is to engage in the action of preparing Prepared is an adjective It refers to being in a state of having completed preparations To prepare and to get prepared both refer to the same process, but with a slightly different nuance
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