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conceptualise    
v. 使有概念



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  • Whats the difference between a restaurant and an eatery?
    Eatery is defined on OALD as: a restaurant or other place that serves food In that case, can I call McDonalds an eatery? Or can I call any single one restaurant in the city I see an eatery?
  • phrase usage - best in town for something not in town - English . . .
    I checked Google Word for "best in town" and it looks like this phrase is commonly used for food and eateries Both foods and eateries belong to a class of things that can be found only in some geographical location, hence the phrase 'in town'
  • phrase usage - How many meanings does I am in have? - English . . .
    I have heard the phrase ‘I am in’ or ‘I am absolutely in’ (and similar variations) several times As I understand it, it means I agree with the idea and I will join you in your efforts Recently
  • What is it about - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    What is it about people who want to clone dogs? "What is it about" "What is this about" is a standard idiom which is used before stating something that one has heard about to ask if it is true, if it exists, it really happened, etc Merriam Webster definition So might be there is a trend going on about people cloning dogs (I don't know what that is supposed to mean, at all) that the author is
  • “I have little money” vs. “I have a little money”
    There is a difference in meaning between “a little” and “little” The meaning of “ a little” is positive It means some or a small amount, such as, “I have a little money ”, “He made a little progress ”, etc On the other hand, “little” has a negative meaning It means an extremely small amount or an amount that is less than expected or wished for, as in, “I have
  • meaning - Does A Steep Learning Curve mean learn fast or learn in a . . .
    How do I understand the phrase a steep learning curve? I feel confused about it Does it mean someone learns something fast or something is difficult for someone to learn?
  • have been vs were looking for - English Language Learners Stack . . .
    Both are fine The difference is in how the speaker is choosing to frame the event in time The goal that France have been looking for is choosing to treat this as an event extending to the present The goal that France were looking for is choosing to treat it as an event in the past Both are grammatical and idiomatic In this case there is very little difference in meaning The people who
  • Is there a difference between to put down someone and to put someone . . .
    Sometimes words are just used a certain way out of habit rather than logic Yes, "put someone down" and "put down someone" mean essentially the same thing, but the phrasing may be different simply out common usage Personally I find both phrasings work for both meanings, but it certainly possible that certain phrasings are more common for certain meanings
  • How to differentiate between got and receive
    Both "have you got" and "have you received" are correct However, there is a difference in meaning I assume your intent is to ask about reception of an email message With "have you received", this is the only logical meaning "Have you got" can also mean "do you have" For some styles of English this is the only meaning; "have got" is equivalent to "have", and is not the present perfect of
  • verbs - What is a word for saying something without intention or . . .
    To answer such questions, it is useful to research by starting with the word with that meaning in your language and looking in a bilingual dictionary What does the bilingual dictionary translate the word as?





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