Tᴚoɯɐuo's Profile

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  • Asked on May 25, 2021 in Synonyms.

    The idiom we tend to use for “static picture”, is snapshot. The term is used in English to be “picture at a point

    in time”.

    • 568483 views
    • 148 answers
    • 209613 votes
  • Asked on May 25, 2021 in Synonyms.

    The idiom we tend to use for “static picture”, is snapshot. The term is used in English to be “picture at a point

    in time”.

    • 568483 views
    • 148 answers
    • 209613 votes
  • Asked on May 24, 2021 in Synonyms.

    The idiom we tend to use for “static picture”, is snapshot. The term is used in English to be “picture at a point

    in time”.

    • 568483 views
    • 148 answers
    • 209613 votes
  • Asked on May 23, 2021 in Synonyms.

    The idiom we tend to use for “static picture”, is snapshot. The term is used in English to be “picture at a point

    in time”.

    • 568483 views
    • 148 answers
    • 209613 votes
  • Asked on May 22, 2021 in Synonyms.

    The idiom we tend to use for “static picture”, is snapshot. The term is used in English to be “picture at a point

    in time”.

    • 568483 views
    • 148 answers
    • 209613 votes
  • Asked on March 28, 2021 in Meaning.

    What is a spot?

    London has some good tearooms.

    What does it mean to be a child?

    • 304358 views
    • 29 answers
    • 112031 votes
  • Asked on March 28, 2021 in Meaning.

    What is the difference between dislike and dislike in the physical sense?

    the emotional sense: You hate it

    when someone steals your umbrella. I am not in the emotional sense. It happens every night.

    He wants to make clear what he means by the verb like in the phrase “not liking it”. He has no written English and the English language isn’t idiomatic. And as of now, his grammar is not very idiomatic… Is the idiomatic way to indicate that you’re offering an example to explain or clarify your intended meaning with a word you just put out, is with the phrase as in.”.

    If I stubbed my toe on a rock, it won’t suck me into “not liking it” conditions. So why would I not like it without insulting myself of course?

    As in Example phrase.

    I took her—as in, “I escorted her” not “i fleeced her for all she was worth”.

    • 660719 views
    • 2 answers
    • 244379 votes
  • Asked on March 27, 2021 in Meaning.

    The latter of whom is a relative construction that refers back to the second-mentioned of the two people, “Leon”. For example, “the latter of whom” is a proxy for the noun “Leon.” How do people use “whom” in other forms because they have involved.? If you find what you use in a math paper and have similar structures you used for words in other books, the same construction can be used with other books. If you are using something, then you must use what instead of whom.

    On the medicine cabinet had a bottle of aspirin and ipecac — the latter of which induces vomiting. I was told that ipecac is safe for a serious disease and was overdosed at home the next day.

    What are some points to be made in my English: a new general interest or a new education?

    • 640011 views
    • 9 answers
    • 236898 votes
  • Asked on March 27, 2021 in Meaning.

    The latter of whom is a relative construction that refers back to the second-mentioned of the two people, “Leon”. For example, “the latter of whom” is a proxy for the noun “Leon.” How do people use “whom” in other forms because they have involved.? If you find what you use in a math paper and have similar structures you used for words in other books, the same construction can be used with other books. If you are using something, then you must use what instead of whom.

    On the medicine cabinet had a bottle of aspirin and ipecac — the latter of which induces vomiting. I was told that ipecac is safe for a serious disease and was overdosed at home the next day.

    What are some points to be made in my English: a new general interest or a new education?

    • 640011 views
    • 9 answers
    • 236898 votes
  • What are the advantages of Mastering Classical Studies (also known as Mastering Classics)?

    Classicist professor is not idiomatic. Many people have said they would ignore those who are.

    “classics instructor” is what the person is called informally in the US. The “job title”

    may vary according to where the person is on “tenure track” assistant professor of Classics

    Professor (theory) in Classics.

    professor of Classics.

    If the person is not on the tenure track:

    Adjunct Professor of Classics.

    Adjunct Instructor of Classics.

    • 718719 views
    • 6 answers
    • 264225 votes