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1.What role are you applying for?
2.Give me a copy of your college transcripts.
3.What are your hobbies?
4.What personality traits do you admire most and why?
5.What are you most concerned about at the moment (and in this case, issues of public concern)?
6.How do you deal with failure?
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1 What position you want to apply for.
2 Please summarize to me what you have learned during your time at university.
3 What are your hobbies?
4 Which personal quality do you most admire and why?
5 What are your main concerns at the moment? issnes should be issues.
6 How you deal with failure.
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1.Later next year.
laterin
nextyear
2.Day after day.
dayafter
day3.Outside the house.
outside
thehouse
4.next week ago.
before
nextweek
5.We have to do morning exercises every day.
wemust
doexecises
everyday
I have to do my homework every day after school.
wemust
dohomework
afterschool
everyday.
7.Don't go to basketball.
don'tgo
toplay
basketball.
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1, This sentence is incorrect, it should be can you join me?Because join can be used as a transitive verb or an intransitive verb, if it is join me in the question, it should be followed by an object, and in this case is a preposition.
please join me in welcoming our special guest for today professor atul kohli.
2.It's five days later
The s plural is added to indicate many winters.
during the extremely cold winters, these people would move to lower, warmer areas。
It means that in those unusually cold winters ...
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you join me in?This sentence is right. This in is an adverb.
days later if after five days is also true, but put this adverbial at the beginning of the sentence.
3.The season (winter) after +s is the sum of most of the season in a region, which is an average meaning and representative, rather than a one-sided season of a particular year.
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Preposition Five Days Later
n. 1.Winter, winter; Cold.
vi. 1.Winter.
vt. 1.winter protection (of flora and fauna); Right. Carry out winter rearing.
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Five days (used in past tense) in five days (used in future tense) 3 every winter.
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winters is added to the s plural to indicate many winters.
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Of course, let me tell you, a prepositional phrase is almost exactly the same as an adverb. It can be followed by an adverb after a verb.
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Yes, because the predicate can be used to borrow this prepositional phrase.
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