👏1
Etymology
Either from the Old French desfacier or the Anglo-French desfacer, both meaning to disfigure.
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🔥1
🗣 Diction (speaking) 🗣
Benefits➕ :
🗣 Choose the best words and phrases to improve your speaking ;
💬 Avoid embarrassing errors in conversations .
❗️ INSTRUCTIONS: Determine if the sentences contain errors by choosing VALID or ERROR.
Benefits
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❤2
Anonymous Quiz
84%
VALID ✅
16%
ERROR ❌
Anonymous Quiz
71%
VALID ✅
29%
ERROR ❌
Anonymous Quiz
65%
VALID ✅
35%
ERROR ❌
Anonymous Quiz
80%
VALID ✅
20%
ERROR ❌
👍1
Etymology
From the Latin acquiescere, meaning "to find rest in". It shares the Latin root quies, meaning "calm", with the Modern English word quiet.
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👍1
Benefits➕:
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
#RealTeam #Quiz #Speaking #30ME #Eloquence
╭━═━⊰✒️📖🖋⊱━═━╮
@EngMasters
@IELTSwMasters
╰━═━⊰✒️📖🖋⊱━═━╯
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👍1
"I was [happy] to be selected as first violin."
(e.g., cheerful etc.)
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"The nurse did everything possible to [improve] his patient."
(e.g., fix etc.)
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👍2
"The accident caused a(n) [pause] in traffic."
(e.g., stop etc.)
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👍1
Etymology
From the Latin emaciare, meaning "to make thin", which comes from macer, meaning "thin". Modern English's meager shares macer as a root.
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