If you mean "importanter" and "importantest," then no. We can't do that. We simply use "more important" and "most important":- Hanging out with friends is important, but taking care of responsibilities is more important. Taking care of yourself (physically, emotionally, and mentally) is the most important.
what are the difference of complaint and complain?
COMPLAIN is a verb: Don't COMPLAIN about the food!COMPLAINT is a noun: We made a formal COMPLAINT about the hotel's poor customer service.
how to use the word "late"
These all deal with time:- Henry sleeps very LATE at night. - Nan never drinks coffee when it's LATE. - Don't be LATE to school.There is one other fairly common usage of "late":- We visited Nan's LATE grandfather's grave. (In that sense, LATE is a nicer way of saying "no longer alive.")
"How's work today?" = How IS work today?Therefore, we'd answer something like "It's going well," "It's not too bad," "It's stressful," and something else in the present tense.If the question had been "How WAS work today?" then we'd say something like "It WAS fine," "It WAS terrible," "It WAS frustrating," etc.
What's The different "they are so nice" and "they were so nice" ?
They ARE so nice = they are always nice: We always love talking with YUNicorns; they are so nice.They WERE so nice = at some time in the past, they were very nice: I miss my high school teachers; they WERE so nice to me back then.
life must goes on or life must go on? why? PLEASE answer this it will help me a lot thank you yuniversity
"Life MUST GO on." After MUST, always use the base form (bare infinitive) of the verb:- She MUST PASS the exam. - They MUST BE tired. - Peter MUST FINISH the book on time.
All student or all students?
"All students": ALL STUDENTS must take and pass the exam in order to graduate.
im using my mom's. wrong or not?
That's fine: "My laptop is broken, so I'm using my mom's."
Can you tell me what this means 'she's got it where it counts' thanks
It's another way of saying that "she is attractive where it matters." You can use it for people or for objects that we refer to as "she." For example, someone can point to a really old-looking car and say, "She (the car) might not look like much, but she's got it where it counts (the engine)."The expression was made famous by Han Solo from "Star Wars," who was talking about his beloved spaceship, the Millennium Falcon.
"I am IN Malaysia." We use "in" for countries, cities, counties, and other enclosed spaces:- Nan lives IN California. - Henry grew up IN the United States. - Peter wants to work IN Tokyo.
how to differentiate between apologize and apologise ? are both correct ?
They're the same word. APOLOGIZE is the American spelling; APOLOGISE is the British spelling. We Americans often use the -ze ending: recognize, realize, theorize, baptize, categorize, etc. In British spelling, those words would end in -se.
whats the difference between descendant and descendent?
DESCENDANT is a noun: I am my grandfather's DESCENDANT.DESCENDENT is an adjective that means "descending from an ancestor." It is used almost exclusively in scientific contexts: That mammal has produced numerous DESCENDENT species.
what does 'ship' in this sentence mean? "i really ship adrian and sandy" could you explain it? TYSM
When you "ship Adrian and Sandy," you're approving (or hoping for) their romantic relationship.For example, fans of DARAGON have been shipping Sandara Park and G-DRAGON for years.IMPORTANT: It's slang.
whats the difference between memories and memoirs?
MEMORIES are in your mind.MEMOIRS are historical accounts or biographies written from personal knowledge or special sources.In other words, you might write a MEMOIR of your brother based on your MEMORIES of him.
GRAY = GREY. They're the same color. GRAY is how Americans spell it; GREY is how just about everyone else around the world spells it.Read this article we wrote for other words that are spelled/spelt differently between American and British English: http://bit.ly/1mY4Qav
LITERALLY = what it actually is; objective truth:- I am LITERALLY twice as tall as my dog. = I am actually, in truth, twice as tall as my dog. - I am LITERALLY crying right now. = I am actually, in truth, crying right now.We use TECHNICALLY to point out that even though something is true, it's not exactly the truth; we use it for clarification:- She is TECHNICALLY my mother (she gave birth to me), but my real "mother" is my aunt, who raised me. - Many people call a tomato a vegetable, but it's TECHNICALLY a fruit. - The teacher praised the entire group for the excellent report, but TECHNICALLY, Jane and Joe did all the work.