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... , fish-rich. But by that time were simple and sincere, a lot of people do not eat fish, and fear of the village people say, “slander”, when Hou, but also slander lazy adjective is a very hard to listen to. If someone’s love to eat fish, the village would be labeled as “eat fishes and insects,” to show contempt for, and sometimes even the daughter-infestation it? Now ...
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... issue - Jill Lepore writes about the staggering amounts of violence in American society, and Anthony Lane is his usual peppy, quotable self reviewing two movies nobody will remember next week. But for my money (which reminds me: really need to start subscribing to the New Yorker), it's the two literary pieces that sell the issue - just wish they were about less (insert adjective) writers ...
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... incompetent grammar text writing and the question (which I posed here) of whether and how you can find three adjective phrases in the following list of word sequences:
thank you said Jim Janet ran ... under traditional definitions, and the one in this book, recall that it is an adjective phrase if and only if it modifies a noun. Well, when we consider it on its own, it has no noun to modify, so ...
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Fat - that's the first adjective people use to describe me when they meet me. Not fun, bitchy, or whatever normal adjective you can think of. Fat.
Last Saturday my flatmate pulled typical annoying highschool thing that girls must do when they get a boyfriend and you don't, hooking me up with her boyfriend's weird flatmates. It's not so fun when you get told by a group of below- ...
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I AM
Main Entry: worried
Part of Speech: adjective
Definition: anxious, troubled
Synonyms:
afraid, apprehensive, beside oneself, bothered, clutched, concerned, distracted, ... , tense, tormented, uneasy, upset, uptight, worried stiff
AND
Main Entry: scared
Part of Speech: adjective
Definition: frightened
Synonyms:
afraid, aghast, anxious, fearful, having cold feet, panic-stricken, panicked, ...
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Proprio is one of those words in Italian that is often misused, even by Italians. Proprio is an adverb that often means "really" (È proprio interessante!) but it can also be used as a possessive if it meets the following critera:When the possession is that of an indefinite pronoun or the subject is impersonal (si), proprio is obligatory to express possession:
Tutti vogliono possedere ...
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