Offroad
Key Member
- Joined
- Feb 9, 2008
- Member Type
- Interested in Language
- Native Language
- Brazilian Portuguese
- Home Country
- Brazil
- Current Location
- Brazil
please, teachers, could you give me a light on this?
often versus frequently
a) This is a frequent mistake, no one knows how to do it right.
b) She comes here often, she likes talking to us.
c) She comes here frequently, she likes talking to me.
Do they share the same meaning?
applicable versus usable
a) Whether one can use these results to get something done, then these results are usable.
b) I need to get this machine working, it has to be useful, I need to apply this new method to do that, the method has to be applicable, easy to apply.
Do they share the same meaning?
"cold feet" slang/idiom
1) teachers, is this slang well-knowed in every English-speaking country?
2) Could one say... I got cold foot instead of cold feet with the same meaning?
I was about to do that, but I got cold feet.
3) How do you call a driver who drives fastly? Is it 'heavy feet'?
Thanks a thousand
often versus frequently
a) This is a frequent mistake, no one knows how to do it right.
b) She comes here often, she likes talking to us.
c) She comes here frequently, she likes talking to me.
Do they share the same meaning?
applicable versus usable
a) Whether one can use these results to get something done, then these results are usable.
b) I need to get this machine working, it has to be useful, I need to apply this new method to do that, the method has to be applicable, easy to apply.
Do they share the same meaning?
"cold feet" slang/idiom
1) teachers, is this slang well-knowed in every English-speaking country?
2) Could one say... I got cold foot instead of cold feet with the same meaning?
I was about to do that, but I got cold feet.
3) How do you call a driver who drives fastly? Is it 'heavy feet'?
Thanks a thousand
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