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The word "sentence" in French translates to "phrase" or "proposition."
means to IMPROVE SOMETHING
"Saranghandago malhalkka" is a phrase in Korean that translates to "Do you want to say I love you?" There is no numerical value associated with this phrase, so it does not have a mean in a mathematical sense.
I can give you several sentences.That phrase makes no sense to me.An idiom is a phrase that doesn't mean what it seems to mean.He copied the phrase into his notebook.
"J'avais" is a French phrase that translates to "I had" in English.
overhanging bushes of the burn
Burning bushesXhldjulvl
To 'burn' has been used to mean 'cheat' or 'victimise' since the 17th Century. To call an insult 'a burn' originates from that.
The term 'crash and burn' is a colloquial idiom that means to fail suddenly and completely. The phrase possibly originated from losing an aerial dog-fight.
Choach is a slang term for a female- it comes from the spanish word 'chocha' literally vagina, and has come to mean 1.Coward or wuss. 2.Derogatory term for a girl 3.As a verb choach means to harm, injure So the phrase ''choach to burn you' could mean you don't want 'your girlfriend to diss you/ mess you up' (Burned is slang for dissed) The phrase to choach could also in itself mean to burn..."I choached myself on the BBQ grill"
Chaparral is vegetation consisting of shrubs and thorny bushes. El Chapparral - The bushes
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This phrase means to ride at full speed. The image is of the cowboy going so fast he's catching the wind on fire.
I mean... are you serious?
it is an idiom
it means an uncontrolled fire in the trees & bushes of scrubland.
A burn is a stream.
I take it you mean the axle bushes? Disconnect the brake pipes, drop the front of the axle down, remove the old bushes, stick new ones in, reassemble brakes. Easy, took me a day