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closetA wardrobe is piece of furniture for clothes. A closet is built into a room. A cupboard is in the kitchen. Example-I bought a wardrobe to hang my clothes because I do not have a closet. I put the plates in the cupboard. |Wardrobe is for clothes, closet is for whatever you need to store, cupboard was originally for dishes/food but now is mostly the same as a closet的同义词
A wardrobe tends to be a piece of furniture that stands alone where you can hang your clothes, for example: "Can you grab my jumper?" "Where is it?" "It's in my wardrobe." A closet is generally a small room built into the house that's mostly used for storage but can also be a place where you put your clothes. 查看翻译.
wardrobe@nocturnsky This is not correct at all. Closet literally means "the place in your room, behind some sort of door or slidie thingie, where you keep stuff - sometimes clothes, sometimes other stuff". Wardrobe means "all the clothes you own" or "the clothes you own that you can pick from at any point to select an outfit". These two words are far from synonyms. |Example sentences: I had to search through my messy and disorganized closet for almost an hour before finding my missing t ...
advantage in"Advantage in" is like having an upper hand, a honed skill in a certain subject. "Advantage of" is usually referred to as a bad thing, but it doesn't have to be. It means that someone is using something else for self benefit. "I have an advantage in football. I have played professionally." "I thought she was honest, but she just took advantage of my kindness." "I decided to take advantage of this clothes sale to buy a new wardrobe." I hope this helps! :) 的同义词
read the tea leaves@s1pzktn9 to tell your fortune by the patterns the tea leaves make in your empty cup.|This refers to a fortune telling practice of looking at the pattern of tea leaves in a cup after the tea has been drunk. So as a metaphor, it means look at the signs to understand what will happen. My mother seems to have left home. Her suitcase has gone and her wardrobe is empty. My father seems happier than I’ve seen him for a very long time. They had a huge row last night. No need to ...
You could say, "Well, if you have any questions just go to their website". Obviously this isn't a super casual conversation but using "should you ..." in that context would sound overly formal. It's a small distinction, but worth noting. Still, using "if you..." on a company website, or in a board meeting, would be absolutely fine.的同义词.