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A part(allocation) of something, is given(allocated) to someone. The thing to be allocated can be anything, for example, it can be a non-tangible item like responsibilty, or it can be a tangible item, example a piece of land, or a desk in an office.
Identify item Verb Finish Thought
Symbolic proportion is when you use another item to explain what something is to someone. For example, you might tell someone an old Nintendo game looked like an 8-track tape.
When something is on back order it means the item ordered is out of stock. When the item is in stock again or available from the manufacturer it will be shipped as soon as possible.
if you talk to an item you are having a conversation with this item wich is illogical as items are not living obejcts....... but if you are talking about an item you are making reference to it, and you can describe it to someone you are talking with...
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You can say what a thing is
When someone regains something this means they are getting something that they once had back. This can happen both mentally or with a physical item that you now have.
No, once they have given you the item it is then officially yours and you have the option whether to give the item back or not.
"Here you are" is a polite way to offer or present something to someone. It is often used when handing an item to someone or when providing assistance.
Not really! Something usually refers to more of an object or item, while someone usually refers to a person. You wouldn't want them to get confused. For example, you could say "someone" is parked in my spot. It's not usual to say, "something" is parked in my spot.
A trade is when you give someone an item and they give you something back Commercial is when buy something and theres not returned items
A part(allocation) of something, is given(allocated) to someone. The thing to be allocated can be anything, for example, it can be a non-tangible item like responsibilty, or it can be a tangible item, example a piece of land, or a desk in an office.
I'm not sure there is a specific word for the item you must add to make something incomplete become complete. Perhaps it needs to be taken in context.If it's a single thing that is missing, you might just call it the missing item, or missing piece. For example:There is a set of ten items. You have nine. To make your collection complete you need to add the tenth item to your collection. That tenth item is the missing item, or missing piece, you need to complete your collection.Or, where you cannot clearly identify what's missing, you could call it the x-factor:We're redecorating the reception area and it looks nearly right, but there's something missing. It needs an x-factor to make it perfect, and we need to identify that x-factor.
You can know if something is a potential sale if people are looking at the item. The item will most likely be a sale if someone is asking questions about it, especially about the price.
Anything that has mass, and moves.
Trial by Jury