... will also notice a
difference in practice between British
English and American English.
Increasingly, however, the trend is
towards American English practice, i.e.
being guided by the way the word ... syllables so
that your reader is not confused and
can continue smoothly from the first
part of the word to the second part.
There are dictionaries of
hyphenation available that will
indi...
... example, this year
in our country, Indonesia there’s KGRE (Kangaroo Radio English) the center is in
Bali, it has English programs. Almost all regency has radio station that join in the
KGRE’s ...
KGRE’s program. So it is important and useful for the students, more over student
of English to improve their English.
In this short paper we are going to discuss the history of radio, th...
... energy, excitement. A vari-
ation, if not a misspelling, of PIZZAZZ US, 1970
bezel noun any car part US, 1959
bezzie adjective best UK, 2005
BF; bee eff noun a bloody fool. A euphemistic abbreviation ... face-to-face
intercourse
US, 1965
belly ride noun sexual intercourse US, 1993
bellyrubber noun a slow song in which partners dance close to each
other US, 1992
belly rubbing noun dancing UK...
... three words are pronouns and cause
a great deal of confusion.
(i) Most people use the pronoun ‘I’
correctly when it is used on its own:
I love cats.
I like chocolate.
I mow the lawn every Sunday.
I ... chocolate.
I like chocolate.
MY HUSBAND AND I like chocolate.
(ii) Most people use the pronoun ‘me’
correctly when it is used on its own:
The burglar threatened ME.
It was given to ME.
Once aga...
... STOPS.
pyjamas (American English: pajamas)
144
PROPOGANDA
Q
quarrel quarrelled, quarrelling
See
ADDING ENDINGS (iv).
quarrelsome
quarter
question marks A question mark is the correct end stop
for ... enclosed in paper or soft
material
raspberry (not rasberry)
ratable/rateable Both spellings are correct.
147
rehearsal
rehearse
relevant (not revelant)
relief See
EI/IE SPELLING RULE.
rememb...
... SHAMMING?
The SCOTS language is quite distinct from
English.
What is the SCOTS word for ‘small’?
We also talk about SCOTS law being
different from English law.
In connection with people, we have the
rather ... silk.
Compare
METAPHOR.
sincerely sincere + ly (not sincerly)
Note the punctuation required when
‘sincerely’isusedaspartofa
complimentary close to a letter.
Traditional layout:
Yours...
... you leaving the water?)
2
Spoken English Learned Quickly www.FreeEnglishNow.com
3.18
Spoken English Learned Quickly www.FreeEnglishNow.com
3.22
They still had their eyes ... when two men suddenly stood beside
them. (1 :10)
Why are you standing there looking up at the sky? (1:11)
Spoken English Learned Quickly www.FreeEnglishNow.com
4.2
from the sky which...