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In Japanese it means 'One who has gone before.' Most people simply say it means teacher.
Absolutely. You can say it that way, or you can say "These dogs have gone to deaf people's homes." Either is fine.
"I had gone for dinner" can be used to say: (past tense) that you went out to get dinner and bring it back - you could instead say: I had gone to get dinner. Alternatively, it could mean (past tense) that you went out to eat dinner - you might want to say: I had gone out to eat dinner. Or, it could mean (past tense) that you were not there for dinner - in this case, a different phrasing could be: I had gone and would not be there for dinner, or, I had gone at dinner time. Please add a comment if you found this helpful, or would like to know more. :)
In most cases when a person sees things that are not there it is called 'hallucinations.' Some people believe in ghosts (entities) and say they have experienced seeing something and when they looked back it was gone.
There's no other non-family specimens to mate with.
.Both, it depends on their hearts,
Did you mean HOW do you say people in French? les gens
when someone keeps on talking about a certain conversation when it should be over it would be necessary to say to them "you've gone too far"
You say he is gone when you do not expect him to come back.
As a young teenager (14,) I say "murkier" as in you've been murdered or killed, me and my friend saw the term "murk" and we use it for y'know, almost everything. We play COD and use it there as well. For murkier, I almost feel like it means "more violent than others" in my dictionary.
When people say this, they mean that you have to work together to get whatever is in question accomplished.
they say it because they mean it was a joke.