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- Difference between assist in and assist with
We assisted him in the whole procedure assist someone with someone or something - to help someone manage someone or something, especially with lifting or physical management
- Assist vs Support - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
He assisted his brothers to carry their father's coffin It's not really useful to try to decide exactly what the words assist and support signify in your two examples
- What does farm off mean? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
The mines of Almaden , after having been the property of the religious knights of Calatrava , who had assisted in expelling the Moors , were farmed off to the Fuggers , the celebrated merchant princes of Augsburg , whose descendants still rank among the high aristocracy of Germany
- Whats the meaning of to ask the indulgence of someone?
In the book ' the little prince ' by Antoine de Saint Exupéry, I found the expression ' I ask the indulgence of the children ' What's the meaning of that? I'm not sure if it means ' I ask the children for forgiveness ' or ' I ask for the children's pardon ' Here is the full sentence: I ask the indulgence of the children who may read this book for dedicating it to a grown-up Do you think
- Using the verb leave (somebody something) to do something
The third example is inherently ambiguous But even if it's the same idiomatic usage as I'll leave it to you to finish the job (which doesn't necessarily imply speaker is actually going somewhere else), #3 implies nothing at all about whether the boy wants to see a movie Perhaps he knows perfectly well that it's just some boring old movie that his parents and grandparents like (and they want
- Is the word suicide a verb? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Although ironically, it remains a crime to assist somebody to carry out a perfectly legal act, as the neurosurgeon, Henry Marsh, pointed out on BBC Radio 4's The Spark Marsh, who has terminal cancer, is campaigning for the legalisation of assisted dying
- present perfect - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
The only grammatical sentences are found in #6 The others are ungrammatical or marginal at best The present perfect ("I have worked", "I have studied", "I have lived") does not provide the necessary time-point for it to be used with temporal since Even the simple past doesn't work unless assisted by an adverb ("since I last worked")
- Whats the difference between go, go to, and go to the?
In addition to the issues regarding proper nouns mentioned in this question and its answers, there are some usage notes specific to the words you've asked about Home I'm going home The speaker is going to their home I'm going to a home "A home" would be usually be interpreted as some sort of assisted living facility A person with mental illness or an elderly individual may be put "in a
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