Much better than or more better than? Or both are incorrect?
"Much better" is right: Jo felt much better after taking a nap."More better" is redundant—and wrong. It's like saying "more smarter," "more taller," "more faster," etc. (The -er form already means "more").
"Dies" is present tense, singular: Jo's favorite flower DIES every summer."Die" is present tense, plural (except for "I" and "you"): People DIE every day."Dead" is an adjective. It's the opposite of "alive": Did you see the DEAD bug in the bathroom?
Hey, I thought SMH means 'so much hate'? :) can it also be?
Yes, but most people we know use it as "shake my head" or "shaking my head."
i've just read a schedule, what does "daily" mean in "05.00pm - 09.00 pm Daily" ?
Every day.
what does the word 'apparel' stand for?
Clothing.
U'll meet the right person. Hang in there or hang on there?
"Hang in there." (It means "Don't give up.")
whats the difference between 'center' and 'centre' and how to use it?
They're the same word: "center" is American spelling; "centre" is British spelling: "Please walk toward the center/centre of the room."In Canadian English, however, those two words are different: http://tmblr.co/Z90tLy1O9_Qro
SMH = shake my head: Jo's roommate thought that Canada was a country in Asia. SMH.FML = f*ck my life: I left my homework at home and failed my exam today. FML.
"While T.O.P is the oldest member of BIGBANG, nevertheless/nonetheless G-DRAGON is the group's leader.""Nonetheless" and "nevertheless" mean the same thing: http://bit.ly/1BtqQ6L
If you're talking about a disease, it means that it is a type of virus.If you're talking about the Internet, it means that a picture, tweet, meme, GIF, video, etc. has become very popular very quickly: "Jo became embarrassed when a GIF of her picking her nose went viral."
im sorry if my question sounds silly but i still dont get meaning of "credit by:" in a picture. thanks
If the picture you're using isn't your own photograph (someone else took it), then you'd put something like "Credit: (person's name)" or "Source: (person's name)" to give recognition to the person who took the photo or to the owner of the photo's rights.For example, if we used a picture of G-DRAGON, we might write "Credit: YG Entertainment" or "Source: YG Entertainment."
When someone thanks me for helping, can I just answer "the least I could do"?
"It's the least I could do" is fine. (But you would say that if that person has done something for you in the past.)Otherwise, simply "No problem," "You're welcome," "Don't mention it," "Glad to help," or something similar is better.
"How can you forget her name" or "how can you forgot her name?
"How can you FORGET her name?"After "can" (and "can't"), always use the base form (bare infinitive) of the verb:- I can't FORGET her face. - Can you please FORGET the secret I told you yesterday?
If i see something’s not quite right with my friend, is it okay if I ask " is there something you want to talk about" or you have anything proper? Thanks :)
"Is there something you want to talk about?" is fine. You could also ask "Is anything troubling you?" or simply "Is everything OK?"