"Toward" means motion in the direction of something. "Forward" means toward the front or in the direction you are facing.- I ran toward the front door. - When I stepped on the gas pedal, my car moved forward.As you can see from those two simple examples, "toward" needs to be followed by something, e.g., "toward ME," "toward THE DOOR," "toward THE REAR EXIT," but "forward" does not.
It's short for "Enough said," and we use it to suggest that the discussion is over and that there is nothing more that needs to be said. For example, "Michael Jordan. Greatest player ever. 'Nuff said." 🏀
What is the meaning of "imma", "ain't", and "kinda"? And how we use them to make sentences? Thank you
All three of those are highly INFORMAL and SLANG, so DO NOT use them in essays."Imma" = I am going to, e.g, Imma take a shower and go to bed."Ain't" = am not, is not, are not; has not; have not, e.g., That ain't the right answer."Kinda" = kind of, e.g., I'm kinda hungry right now.
Yes. (But "Has she bought a ticket?" and "Did she buy a ticket?" sound more natural.) "Has she bought the ticket?" makes it sound as if there were only one ticket left, and she bought the last ticket.
"I would rather be at school" (if you're talking about the building); "I would rather be in school" (if you're talking about the time in your life). For example, "I would rather be in school than working to pay back my student loans and credit card bills."
hello there! what is conjuction and give me a few example please :) thankyouuu
A conjunction is a part of speech that joins two words, phrases, or clauses together.There are many different conjunctions (e.g., and, but, or, so). You can find them here: http://bit.ly/1KwCT5b
"i will explain my last week school activity. In monday bla bla bla. In tuesday bla bla bla."
or
"i will tell you my last week school activity. In monday bla bla bla. The next day bla bla bla."
Which is correct?
"Let me explain what I did at school last week. On Monday, blah blah blah. On Tuesday, blah blah blah ..." "Let me tell you what I did at school last week. On Monday, blah blah blah. On Tuesday, blah blah blah ..." Both are correct.
what is the meaning of 'when the tough gets going , the going gets tough' ?
It's actually the other way around: "When the going gets tough, the tough get going." It basically means "When life becomes difficult or challenging, strong people begin to take action (to solve the problem)."