🔴[badly]
►"badly" is used to emphasize how much you want, need, etc. somebody/something:
-The building is badly in need of repair. [✔️]
-They wanted to win so badly. [✔️]
-I miss her badly. [✔️]
►"badly" is used to emphasize how much you want, need, etc. somebody/something:
-The building is badly in need of repair. [✔️]
-They wanted to win so badly. [✔️]
-I miss her badly. [✔️]
✳️[make a meal of something]
Meaning:
►Exaggerate:
For example:
-He made a meal of the size of the enemy force.
-He exaggerated the size of the enemy force.
#idiomatic_expressions
Meaning:
►Exaggerate:
For example:
-He made a meal of the size of the enemy force.
-He exaggerated the size of the enemy force.
#idiomatic_expressions
ADDUCE = cite ✏️ as evidence.
INDUCE = persuade; cause; produce.
SEDUCE = allure 💋; tempt.
REDUCE = decrease. 📉
DEDUCE = reason; infer. 💭
#Vocabulary
INDUCE = persuade; cause; produce.
SEDUCE = allure 💋; tempt.
REDUCE = decrease. 📉
DEDUCE = reason; infer. 💭
#Vocabulary
It may knot seam fare, but there are dozens of confusing words in the English language, and writers often fowl up when using them. It happens all the thyme. We use won word when we mean another. We make word errors day and knight! Eye will give yew a peace of advice:reed your work carefully and bee alert four these sneaky critters. I'd be embarrassed if I rote a paper with many goofs! Aye no ewe wood bee two.
Did you catch all the goofs?😁
Did you catch all the goofs?😁
💁 FACT: You don’t always need to put a comma before “but”:
The comma before but is NOT always necessary:
✍Ali is not tall but short.
✍When Ramzy is hungry, he does nothing but complain.
✍The Doctor would be in a good mood but for the rain.
#fact
The comma before but is NOT always necessary:
✍Ali is not tall but short.
✍When Ramzy is hungry, he does nothing but complain.
✍The Doctor would be in a good mood but for the rain.
#fact
✅Judicious = wise; prudent: Spend money 💸 judiciously.
✅Judicial = relating to court or justice: The ruling was political, not judicial. ⚖️
#Vocabulary
✅Judicial = relating to court or justice: The ruling was political, not judicial. ⚖️
#Vocabulary
🔴"1.8K" or "2K" what do these k's stand for?
👉Think of kilometre, kilogram and kilobyte. The kilo prefix comes from the Greek meaning a thousand. In computing a kilobyte is really 1024 bytes but it is taken to be a thousand.
written abbreviation for ONE THOUSAND. 1k= 1000
👉Think of kilometre, kilogram and kilobyte. The kilo prefix comes from the Greek meaning a thousand. In computing a kilobyte is really 1024 bytes but it is taken to be a thousand.
written abbreviation for ONE THOUSAND. 1k= 1000