Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Jan 3, 2021 · I think "to hide out" has a specific connotation of a person trying to avoid pursuers (like the police), so the subject must be doing the hiding. While "to hide" can be used in exactly this way, it has many other usages. For example, you can use it as a transitive verb: I hide the cookies from the children. But you cannot use "hide out" in this ...

  2. Apr 22, 2022 · 4. the difference between hided and hidden is that hided is having hide (skin) of a specified kind while hidden is that has been moved out of sight invisible or unapparent. RIGHT. The verb is hide, hid, hidden. An animal hide means the skin of a dead animal that has been treated. Not sure I would accept it as a verb.

  3. He helped me out during the exam when I was sick last year. He helped me during the exam when I was sick last year. He helped me clean the room. He helped me out cleaning my room. He helped me out with the math problem. He helped me with the math problem. He helped me decide which college I am supposed to attend.

  4. Here is the piece of text where I happened upon the phrase take out an attempt: To that end, there must be a reduction in both volume and intensity starting about 10 days out from the competition. In the week to ten days prior to the meet, the lifter should not be grinding out high volume sets of 5, nor should he be taking out maximum attempts.

  5. 1. Vent without out is more idiomatic when the object is a person. Vent out is used to refer to getting air into an enclosed place such as a room or possibly clothing to clear it of bad air or smells. Share. Improve this answer. answered Mar 3, 2020 at 22:16. LawrenceC. 37k 27 81.

  6. However, the use of copy out has a specific meaning: [Merriam-Webster]: to write down (words that one is hearing or reading) // Are you copying all of this down? // I copied out the equations on a piece of paper. In short, when you copy out something, you generally copy it in real time (simultaneously). You are copying it while listening to it ...

  7. "The plane has just flown in New York" implies a flight within the boundaries of New York. You could say that a new, experimental plane could take off, fly in a circle, and land in the same place, as having flown in a certain place.

  8. Apr 7, 2022 · 5. A metaphorical 'smokescreen' is something that hides a truth by obscuring it, causing confusion, or misleading the listener. For example, a lie about your whereabouts might be a 'smokescreen' to hide your true whereabouts. We tend to use 'smokescreen' metaphorically as a noun for the misleading information, for example:

  9. Dec 17, 2020 · Stack Exchange Network. Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q&A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers.

  10. May 30, 2019 · (E.g. it would be a far stretch for someone to think "Upon hearing John's joke, Sarah let out a snigger," meant that Sarah freed a black person from confinement.) – jmbpiano Commented May 30, 2019 at 18:26