Yes, it is grammatically as well as stylistically correct to speak of breaking a vicious circle. The term "vicious circle" dates from the late 1700s.
It is perfectly normal idiomatic English to say that someone is on break, or on a break. A more formal phrasing would be, someone is taking a break.
It doesn't look grammatically correct, but not everything that is correct looks that way. When you break the sentence apart, there is nothing missing. It has a subject and a predicate. Although "You are the winner" may be more appealing to most people, I do not believe there is anything grammatically incorrect with your example, as ugly as it may sound. It is correct. You can be be a subject or an object pronoun. subject - You are the winner! object - The winner is you!
Break in the Circle was created in 1955.
The syllable break for 'circle' is in the middle between 'cir' and 'cle'.
whatever we say same we have to practically do. it is the duty only not for our government. even all citizens of country have to help to alleviate the poverty only then we can get out of poverty
Break in the Circle - 1955 is rated/received certificates of: Finland:S Sweden:15
to break it in half
The only thing wrong with this sentence is that both parts of the sentence are in present perfect. Rewriting the sentence without contractions: "He has gone down, and he has not put his hands out to break his fall". One wouldn't say this. One would say, "He has gone down, and he did not put his hands out to break his fall"; or "He went down, and he did not put his hands out to break his fall".
when u get half way to the wall you fold it and you can break out
Break is the correct spelling in the context of "I will break something".Brake is the correct spelling in the context of "You need to brake if something runs into the road".
Yes. If it moved faster, it would break the center from the circle.
Break it down.the word Quad, means four.So four quadrants are in one circle.