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So "go through your homework to find the wrong answers" is wrong?

It's actually right. "Get through your homework to find the wrong answers" is wrong.
You can also use "Look over your homework to find the wrong answers."
Liked by: dyan

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I watched a video on engvid,the teacher said that bring and take are two different verbs, bring=smthig is approchng the speaker,take=smthg is getting further from speaker.He said "take me to your leader" is wrong while "bring me to ur leader"is correcr cus leader is gtting closer to speaker,comment?

"Take me to your leader" is actually right. "Bring your leader to me" would also be right.
We wrote an article on this: http://tmblr.co/Z90tLy1HQD6kw

Do u know if there is a more preferred subject test by colleges? I don't know which one should I take. Maybe some colleges prefer us history or math 2..etc.

Generally, the top schools suggest math and two others such as a science or history. Don't take two or three of the same subject.
Some schools require two subject tests; others require three. Check with each school's admissions requirements.

What is the difference between get through and go through, i referred to a source, saying that go through means you undergo or experience something or you examine, for an example,*i went through the paper twice to find the answer*, and get through means you literally walk through something*like a do

"Get through" means to suffer through:
- Jo was so tired that she found it difficult to get through the day.
- The lecture was so long and boring that I thought I would never get through it.
- - - - - - - - - - - -
"Go through" means to pass through something:
- After you insert your ticket, please go through the turnstile.
- Go through the gates and look for the auditorium: that's where the movie will be shown.
- - - - - - - - - - - - -
But in different tenses, they share the same meaning:
- Jo went (past tense of "go") through hell yesterday: her car broke down, she lost her house keys, and her phone was stolen.

The other way round or the other way around. Around vs round please

Americans would say "The other way around," but people who use British English would say "The other way round."
"Round" works just about anywhere "around" would work, but not the other way around. (See what we did there? Ha!)
This is because "round" has a number of definitions it doesn’t share with around. For example, "I played a ROUND of golf" is right, but "I played AROUND of golf" isn't.

i want to get to somewhere or i want to get somewhere ? i want to GET home or I want to GET To home? i want to GO home or i want to GO TO home?

"I want to go home."
"I want to go to Disneyland."
"Get home," "get somewhere," "get there," etc. are all considered informal.

What does Gotta mean? And where's the difference between Maybe and Might? Thank you. :)

farahsas’s Profile Photofarah.
"Gotta" is slang for "got to," which is an informal way of saying "have to": I gotta go = I have to go.
As far as "maybe" and "might" are concerned, read this: http://bbc.in/1kHwM6T

When you get an increase in your wages, is it considered a rise or a raise? Pretty pleaseeeee

In American English, it's a pay "raise."
In British English, it's a pay "rise."
Confusing, right?
Liked by: Heather Prus

https://twitter.com/ElitePrepSAT/status/497023281480744961/photo/1 i still don't get what's the difference for each answer, can u be so kind to explain one by one A, B, C, E don't work and D does? :(

This is a parallelism question involving "either ... or."
(A) is wrong because it says "either ... and." It has to be "either ... or."
(B) is wrong because "either TO PAY (verb) or HIS MANY CREDIT CARDS (noun)" is not parallel.
(C) is wrong because "either ... and."
(E) is wrong because "either THE RENT (noun) or TO PAY (verb)" is not parallel.
(D) is right because "to pay either THE RENT (noun) or HIS MANY CREDIT CARDS (noun)" is parallel.

Is "Already have I could sense having a vapid senior year" grammatically correct?

"I could already sense that I would have a vapid senior year."

Didn't enjoy Hazelnut crepe I ate a while ago. Is my grammar correct? Thank you

"I didn't enjoy the hazelnut crepe I ate a while ago."

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