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Nothing! The words convey no intelligible English meaning, the word "Situation" seems particularly out of place with the rest of the phrase!
The phrase 'take advantage' means to 'receive benefit from one's mistake's.' The French equivalent of the English phrase would be the word 'profiter.'
To be out of pocket means literally Out of money
The phrase " doing well economically" can be closest in meaning to the word prosperous It also means making gain, flourishing, increasing success, or thriving.
What does etvir mean on a deed on real estate
verb phrase
Adverb phrase
refusal to honor an agreement
watashi no unmei watashi = me no = 's unmei = destiny
One alternative phrase you can use instead of "for example" is "such as."
John O'Sullivan used the phrase "manifest destiny" to argue for his position that the US should expand across North America. He first used the phrase in 1845.
A man by the name of Henry Parkes coined the phrase "One people, One destiny" in regards to Australia. He founded the Australian Federation.
It is a prepositional phrase that indicates an example is being provided.By way of illustration, the speaker placed an ice cube into the beaker of alcohol, and it sank.We will classify this type of rhyme, and by way of illustration, examine how it is used in the poem.
He wanted to include Texas into the Union. In order to so so, he would use the phrase "manifest destiny," sort of as his slogan for support.
The Manifest Destiny
An appositive is a word or group of words that identifies or renames another word in a sentence.An appositive construction is two elements, normally a noun or noun phrase, placed side by side, with one element defining or modifying the other. An appositive most often appears directly after the noun it identifies or renames. Examples:Mary's brother Georgerepaired her car. (the noun 'George' identifies the noun phrase 'Mary's brother')George the mechanic can fix cars. (the noun phrase 'the mechanic' renames the noun 'George')Can George look at my car, a Honda? (the noun phrase 'a Honda' identifies or renames the noun phrase 'my car')
John O'Sullivan used the phrase "manifest destiny" to argue for his position that the US should expand across North America. He first used the phrase in 1845.