The phrase 'the following' means something or many things come after what was stated first. The phrase can be use in statements or questions.
Examples of statements:
Students attending the English Festival should bring a 3-ring notebook of at least 70 pages; a pen with blue or black ink; and one novel which the student has read recently. Students will delve into character development and dialogue during the Festival.
The driver committed the following infractions: failure to stop at a stop sign; failure to properly signal before changing lanes; traveling 62mph in a 15mph school zone;failure to maintain safe distance behind a stopped school bus; and failure to pull to the side for the police to make a lawful stop.
As questions, "the following" is often the structure used in multiple choice tests. But it could also be a non-test question, such as in conversations:
Was the man right when he gave me the following directions? He said to get to the park, I should go to the top of the hill, turn right, then go 4 blocks and turn right, then, another quick left into the park--is that correct?
9x
The phrase implicit deny means that something is completely denied unless it has explicit permission. For instance, the traffic in a network.
The phrase a little bit goes a long way is very simple to explain. It means that the smallest gesture can mean something larger. For example something as small as a smile can mean the world to somebody.
It means that it is valid until the same date of the following month, e.g. Feb 8 - Mar 8 or Sep 21 - Oct 21 (the number of days very depending on the month). Source: https://support.skype.com/en-us/faq/FA10414/how-do-subscriptions-work (see "How do skype subscriptions work?")
The phrase, twice over means that someone has given it a second look. A person has checked it more than once.
The phrase "Cuando seas mia" is the Spanish phrase mostly used by the lovers. This phrase may means the following translations; When you are mine, Please be mine, just be mine, and be mine only.
'Are you crazy?' or, literally 'Have you moved out of your mind?'
all above
You did not include any of the 'following'.
Nothing. The phrase 'pro-quit' contains errors. The correct phrase is the following: 'quid pro quo'. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'quid' and 'quo' mean 'what'; and 'pro' means 'for'. The English meaning therefore is as follows: something [given] for something [else].
Nothing. The phrase 'pro-quit' contains errors. The correct phrase is the following: 'quid pro quo'. The word-by-word translation is the following: 'quid' and 'quo' mean 'what'; and 'pro' means 'for'. The English meaning therefore is as follows: something [given] for something [else].
A ground phrase is a musical term referring to a recurring bass pattern or chord progression that provides a solid foundation for the harmonic structure of a piece. It is often repeated throughout the composition, anchoring the music and providing a sense of stability.
prepositional phrase
sequel (as in a second story following an original) = hemshekh (המשך)However, the phrase "en sequel" doesn't appear to be an english phrase, so I can't translate it.
The phrase "to the T" means exactly. The words will be followed as closely as possible, with careful attention to every detail.
"Around the corner" is a prepositional phrase.
That is not a phrase