Generally we refer to the English spoken in the British Isles as "British English," but the distinction could be made between various forms of it: Irish English, Scottish English and English English.
Olde English, Middle English, Modern English and slang English and lingo of English.
*American English *British English *Australian English *Filipino English
Literature in English is the writing written in English, but English in literature is the overall English literature that there is in the general category of "literature."
At secondary school there was English language and English literature. English language was punctuation etc. English literature was popems, stories etc.
It doesn't need refrigeration.
Because the body needs it.
"You are someone who needs help."
Do you need help? = Necesita usted ayuda? (Literally: Needs you help?) Necesita - naythaySEEtah ('th' as in thin') usted - oostAY ayuda - ahYOOdah The above is formal. If you are friendly with the person, say 'Necesitas (naythatSEEtass) ayuda?' instead of 'Necesita usted ayuda?'
The woman buys eggs but she doesn't need them
Stitches in Spanish is: "puntadas." Puntadas
Tibi opus est auxilium= Latin. ¿Necesita ayuda= Spanish.
It means, "Help is needed." Idiomatically, it's used where you'd see "Help Wanted" signs in English. Also, this is a common expression used in work ads, where someone in the area of service is needed, for example, dishwashers or cleaning ladies "Se necesita ayuda doméstica" (We need domestic help: looking for a cleaning lady) "Se necesita ayuda en cocina" (We need kitchen help: looking for a dishwasher)
"Usted necesita ayuda" means "You need help" in Spanish.
"Estoy enumirado tanto" translates to "I am so tired" in English.
formal (to older person): "usted necesita" informal: "tu necesitas"
what you need to do