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ten-hut - WordReference Forums One day during the first week of boot camp, the RPOC (the recruit placed in a position of authority over all the other recruits in the company) said "Ten-HUT!" The company commander's response was "Don't bark, RPOC - Marines and other dogs bark " From then on the RPOC pronounced the word clearly: "Atten-TION!"
pronunciation: hat hot hut - WordReference Forums hut hat hot nut not hut cat fat mat mutt hot cot lot You can add caught next to cot and see which speakers say them the same, and which say them differently There are various speakers and by having different ones say the same text, one can get a feel for some of the ranges these vowel sounds cover
hun hun way to say no [uh-uh; uh-huh] - WordReference Forums It is also in the Oxford English Dictionary For its entries "uh-uh," "uh-huh," and "unh-unh," it gives as pronunciations for those words, respectively, ʌˈʌ , ˈʌhʌ , and ˈʌ̃ʌ̃ , but the pronunciation sections for "uh-uh" and "uh-huh" refer the reader to a 1982 cite (under the entry "uh-huh") from J C Wells Accents of English III vi 556, which discusses the pronunciation of uh
also can can also - WordReference Forums Hello, I have two sentences below 1) It can also help the collector connect with others 2) It also can help the collector connect with others The difference in the two sentences is the position of also and can I wonder whether the second sentence is grammatically correct and has the
back to vs back in | WordReference Forums HI there, I've got a question about the usage of "back to a place" "back in a place" Now I am not quite sure when to use "to" or "in", in other words, is it more correct to say "I am back to UK" or "I am back in UK"? Seemingly, "I am back to London" or "I am back in London"? I was trying to
all day all the day | WordReference Forums I wouldn't use the present perfect in this sentence unless I was making a general statement about my experience: "I've sung at the Met for 10 minutes, I've been a truck driver for an hour, and I've cleaned house all day "
leave or leave from? | WordReference Forums A: "None of us must meet until we rob the bank tomorrow We must spend the night in different places I have a house in the countryside, a flat in the city, a house by the sea, and a small hut in the forest Each one of you must be at the bank at 11 o'clock exactly! Who will leave from the city tomorrow?
share something with someone or share with . . . - WordReference Forums Hello I have a question about the word orders - share something with someone share with someone something I learned "share something with someone" is the right order, but recently I came across some sentences in the different order: share with someone something For example, 1 I would
the wind is heavy blowing heavily it is windy Example 2 sounds a little unnatural If the wind is blowing heavily, it usually blows heavily against something: "The wind blew heavily against the walls of the hut " <- you are creating an image of something heavy (e g an elephant) pushing against the walls