Fear → be afraid of someone or something
Scare → make someone be afraid
We *fear* rats. They *scare* us so much!
#Vocabulary
Scare → make someone be afraid
We *fear* rats. They *scare* us so much!
#Vocabulary
In spoken English, they, them, their, and themselves are used by many people for referring to a person without mentioning whether the person is male or female, especially when referring back to a pronoun such as ‘everyone’ or ‘someone’
🛑When a student succeeds, they should thank their teacher
🛑If you ask somebody for the time and they refuse to tell you, it's their problem.
🛑When a student succeeds, they should thank their teacher
🛑If you ask somebody for the time and they refuse to tell you, it's their problem.
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@EnglishTipsandTools_bot
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Active: 2931 (2882👤 + 49👥)
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Deleted: 4501 (4466👤 + 35👥)
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For diseases,
“endemic” = in a small area;
“epidemic” = widespread;
“pandemic” = universal. Earth globe asia-australia
They get worse in alphabetical order.
#Vocabulary
“endemic” = in a small area;
“epidemic” = widespread;
“pandemic” = universal. Earth globe asia-australia
They get worse in alphabetical order.
#Vocabulary