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Neither nor (both before and after).
either...or not, or (negate one of them) and not give the others in the range, usually followed by a noun.
There is no thing added after others, which means something else, no specific scope, the others, all other things within a specific range, and the other a specific thing in a specific range.
-
1.neither neither, neither ...nor ;either one of the two, either...or
2.another with more than three other tables, the table is indeterminate in time.
others is another part of the two categories, the table generally refers to, some....others ..others
the other table refers to the other, the table specifically refers to, one...the other
the others is the other part of the two categories, the table specifically refers to, some....the others
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1. Word meaning analysis is to explain words.
2. Word meaning discrimination is to distinguish the difference between words with similar meanings (such as different usages, non-stupid collocations, etc.). For example: smooth sailing: the boat is sailing with full sails. The parable went very smoothly, and there was no hindrance.
3. Reverse swift words: twists and turns, storms, fierce waves.
4. a constriction type; as a predicate, a definite, an object; Compliments.
-
noone = nobody, both of which can only refer to people and not things, and then usually do not follow the of the phrase, and the predicate is singular when used as the subject; And none
It can refer to both a person and a thing, and is usually followed by a phrase of of, when used as a subject, if it refers to an uncountable noun, the predicate can only be singular, if it refers to a countable noun, the predicate can be singular (more formal) or plural) (used in informal style): no
onenobody]
likesit.
Nobody likes it. noneofthe
foodwas
left.There was no food left.
noneof
thebooks
isare]
interesting.
None of the books are interesting.
none often implies that there is a certain range (which is usually expressed in the of of phrases that follow), and . noone
Or. nobody
does not imply such a range (and does not accept the of of phrases for table ranges). Compare: "didanyof."
yourfriends
cometo
seeyou?”
none."Yamahan.
Has any of your friends ever visited you? ”
Not a single one came. (none for noneofmy.)
friends).
didanyone
cometo
seeyou?”
noone.”
Has anyone come to see you? "No one came. ”
none sometimes implies a quantity, i.e. "none" on the exponential amount, while. noone
Or. nobody
It often expresses a kind of praise and prudence comprehensive negation, that is, "no one", so in.
howmany or. how
Usually used when asking questions.
none, and in.
It is usually used when asking questions from the WHO. noone
Or. nobody。
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Cape refers to"Point-shaped highlands jutting out into the sea"
And promontory generally refers to the headland, the cape.
Cape Wilson. Reach in.
Bass Strait. bass
Strait), much like an island, so use Wilson'spromontory (reference.
Whereas. Cape.
It is a promontory of the promontory (see.
The origin of the name is Li Qi"
The third paragraph, so use cape
ofgood
hope.But in fact, the two are interchangeable.
It's just that. Proper noun.
That's it"Good hope arguments"At.
Chinese-English Dictionary. Explanation in:
geology]
capeof
goodhope;
capecolony;
capeprovince
apromontoryonthe
southwest
coastof
southafrica
southof
capetown) can actually also be used a
promontoryonthe
southwest
coastof
southafrica
southof
The Capetown alternative is a bit like the relationship between Mountain and Hill.
-
thankfor
Just....Say thank you2
Put....Ascribe;
for....Blame 3
Please, excuse me. thanks
TO: Thankfully, thanks to, because.
beacase
Because. for:
Because. Because.
insearchof.
insearch
for: Find.
First, there is no obvious difference in the meaning of the word, and Zhifengyan can be used in the general rental bridge pass examination and daily use;
Second, the usage is different, search
for is a verb phrase that is directly used as a predicate; in
search
of is a prepositional phrase, which can only be used as a predicate with the verb of be, or directly as a predicate, etc., which is the same as an ordinary prepositional phrase.
-
Cure means **, which means completely**.
therapy
refers to the method, and mostly refers to the non-drug. For example, ** treatment of hidden methods Lu Kai, music
therapy
treat means **, verb. If it is a noun**, it is generally treatment. This refers to medicine**. For example, accept **:receive
treatment.
This spring hall ** works. the
treatment
isvery
effective.
-
bulgen.
The swollen chain locust is swollen and swollen.
bulgein
hispocket.
The apple stuffed his pockets bulging.
vi.Bulging, bulging, bulging.
hisstomach
bulged.
His belly bulged out.
stickout
Sticking out, protruding;
Ruffled. your
hairis
stickingoutin
theback.
The hair on the back of your head stands on end.
Hang on; Assertion. heis
determined
tostick
outthe
raceevenifhe
finishes
last.He was determined to finish even if he finished last.
protrude
to make something) stretch out;
Make something) stand out.
histeeth
protrude.
His teeth were exposed.
-
bulgen.
Swelling, swelling.
bulgein
hispocket.
The apple stuffed his pockets bulging.
vi.Bulging, bulging, bulging.
hisstomach
bulged.
His belly bulged.
stickout
Sticking out, protruding;
Ruffled. your
hairis
stickingoutin
theback.
The hair on the back of your head stands on end.
Hang on; Break the royal imitation group words. heis
determined
tostick
outthe
raceevenifhe
finishes
last.He made up his mind that he would finish last even if he was the last runner.
protrude
to make something) stretch out;
Make something) stand out.
histeeth
protrude.
His teeth were exposed.
Probably that's the case with the town orange!
-
Heal is the body, soul, and spirit that are plagued by illness.
Cure's is the one that haunts the body, soul, and spirit.
A cold is a disease, so use cure
heal the would wound.
heal your broken heart
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Both A and C are acceptable. b and d are not correct because they are both transitive verbs that require an object.
arose refers to the emergence of, e.g. problems arose, opportunity arose;
Rose is rising, the emotional aspect becomes stronger. For example, the Longman dictionary example sentence: the doctor sounded optimistic and John's hopes rose.
So grammatically both a and c are good, and semantically, hopes arose shows that they had no hope at all before, and hope only came after seeing the doctor. Hopes Rose showed that they had been hopeful before, and after seeing the doctor, they felt even more hopeful. Personally, I think that without context, C-Rose is more logically reasonable.
-
A, the first time we saw the doctor, our hope appeared.
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