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Asked on July 31, 2021 in Meaning.
Diffie would take away the meaning that one looked through the window to decide if it was worth entering.
From browse in the shop, I would take away the meaning that the person was in the shop, to decide if any products were worth purchasing.
- 422720 views
- 124 answers
- 155182 votes
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Asked on July 31, 2021 in Meaning.
Diffie would take away the meaning that one looked through the window to decide if it was worth entering.
From browse in the shop, I would take away the meaning that the person was in the shop, to decide if any products were worth purchasing.
- 422720 views
- 124 answers
- 155182 votes
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Asked on July 27, 2021 in Meaning.
Diffie would take away the meaning that one looked through the window to decide if it was worth entering.
From browse in the shop, I would take away the meaning that the person was in the shop, to decide if any products were worth purchasing.
- 422720 views
- 124 answers
- 155182 votes
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Asked on July 26, 2021 in Meaning.
Diffie would take away the meaning that one looked through the window to decide if it was worth entering.
From browse in the shop, I would take away the meaning that the person was in the shop, to decide if any products were worth purchasing.
- 422720 views
- 124 answers
- 155182 votes
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Asked on March 25, 2021 in Single word requests.
The answer to that question that we discussed in this article is “please send me your question using the phone number you’ll use” and “please text me your account details.”
What did he do? He phoned it in / he was phoning it in or
don’t just phone it in, make me proud! ”
“
- 690215 views
- 11 answers
- 255740 votes
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Asked on March 6, 2021 in Other.
If you’re asking about this question, I had the same question, and searched a lot. In
this case, it stands for Subject-Verb-Object | (Example: Subject-Verb-Path/>) In print/text/word/e-mail!
In LTC, subject–verb–object
(SVO) is a sentence structure where the subject comes first, the verb second, and the object third. What are examples of such sentences? In general, all language elements are sequenced alphabetically. Languages are generally classed according to their sequence. The label is often used for ergative languages which don’t have subjects but have an agent–verb–object order.
SVO is the second most common order by number of known languages, after SOV. Is SVO a super language? It is also the most common order developed in Creole languages, suggesting that it may somehow be more initially ‘notifying’ to human psychology.
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- 1063529 views
- 1 answers
- 399484 votes
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Asked on March 1, 2021 in Other.
/ Shaping.
Is TRD.V. an IR&T format? Because I don't like it anymore with RTV? Attractive to any shaped, shaping, shapes 1. To create or fashion, as: a. (a.), a.; b. (f.) a. To give a particular shape to (a material): Shape the dough into baguettes.
What is your opinion on this story?
- 1215527 views
- 2 answers
- 425661 votes
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Asked on February 28, 2021 in Other.
“What does it mean to know enough (to be dangerous) and what to do if it helps, but you still have not the knowledge and experience necessary to a person who is likely to cause a serious accident or serious injury.” “Also see the question on the right.”
- 1261830 views
- 2 answers
- 429102 votes