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  • When do we say skies instead of sky? - English Language Learners . . .
    The sky is not always the same When you talk about "skies" you are comparing different instances of the big thing above you, and emphasizing its changing characteristics A night sky is beautiful and full of stars A cloudy sky is grey A clear sky is nice for pilots In a sense, those are all different "skies" even though the expanse above us is always the same "sky " For a safe option, just
  • difference - When should I use the word skies? - English Language . . .
    What's the difference between "sky" and "skies"? I'm really confused since I watched a news saying "People cheered and clapped as the moon blocked the sun for about 2 5 minutes under clear skies o
  • Sitting on a desk or at a desk? Whats the difference?
    At and on are two very different, distinct prepositions "I'll be waiting on the lamp-post" is a lot more painful than waiting at the lamp-post On is, well, above while at is beside There's a very big positional difference, and that difference is more than tangiable! So, mental picture of a desk - one is either at (beside) it, or perched on (above, but part of your body touching) it
  • Difference between pull in, pull up, and pull over a vehicle
    What's the difference between "pull in", "pull up", and "pull over" when talking about driving a vehicle? I know they all mean "to stop" a vehicle, but is th
  • meaning - What does take by the heel mean? - English Language . . .
    It is literal Take = hold or grasp (etc), heel = part of the the foot Jacob was said to be the second twin to be born, and was holding his brother's foot in his hand as he was born Later Jacob "supplanted" his older brother to be come the Father of the twelve tribes of Israel
  • Ill be going Ill go - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    I'll [I shall] be going to the shops anyway means "I am already planning to go to the shops" You could also say I'm going to the shops anyway (present referring to the future) The continuous (progressive) tense usually means that an action is ongoing, but this is a special use of I'm going to meaning that you plan or expect to do something in the future I'll go to the shops doesn't carry
  • Difference between in the centre and at the centre
    Since the centre of something is a theoretical point - with no inside as it were - in this case "at" and "in" mean the same thing I would hesitate myself to extend this to replacing the phrase with "is the centre" unless the object you're referring to also can be conceptualised as being a point, that is, having only one dimension and a location If the scale was very large one might assert
  • causative get - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    In a business office environment "We'll get it done " is more than just accepting the task It is also connotes, "We won't fail to accomplish this task satisfactorily " A manager telling an employee to "get it done" often implies either that the employee's current progress towards completion is unsatisfactory or that there is now an urgency to the task's completion It could be both at the
  • past vs present perfect - Have forgotten or forgot? - English . . .
    I'm walking out of a bar and I'm putting my hand in my pocket, and I can't find my wallet So it's better to say "I have forgotten my wallet" or "I forgot my wallet" ?
  • What does in what mean in the sentence? - English Language Learners . . .
    "in what became" introduces an additional interesting fact about her lawsuit It starts a new subordinate phrase describing the lawsuit It could also have been written "in the" or as a new sentence starting with "It was" or "It became" Choosing "in what became" rather than "in the" gives a more dramatic flair of something starting small and unnoticeable and then becoming large and significant





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