stated its case or made its presentation or tried to persuade
In this context, "pitch" refers to a persuasive presentation or proposal made by the opposition to convince others of their viewpoint or to gain support for their ideas.
The sentence "Dictate your notes to the translator" correctly uses a root word with the meaning to write.
"malofakieo" does not have a specific meaning in English. It appears to be a made-up or nonsensical word. It does not contain any recognizable English words with a loving meaning.
The word you are referring to is called an intensifier. Intensifiers are adverbs that provide extra emphasis but are not essential to the sentence's overall meaning or grammatical structure. Examples of intensifiers include "very," "extremely," "totally," and "completely."
Yes, a pronoun takes the place of a noun and performs all of the functions of a noun as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:Noun subject of the sentence: Aunt Jane made cookies for the children.Pronoun subject of the sentence: She made cookies for the children.Noun subject of the clause: The cookies that Aunt Jane made are for the children.Pronoun subject of the clause: The cookies that she made are for the children.
The teacher's monotone voice made it difficult for the students to stay awake during the lecture.
We were very tired after we had made 5 laps of the pitch.
The compact made between the two countries included trading goods.
An antidocumentary is a documentary made in opposition to the normal standards of a documentary.
pitch is pitch pitch is made by sound air is pitch
he made slaves
"Shoddy" means "made of cheap materials", and it also means "contemptibly low and sneaky". "The shoddy construction of the old barracks made them unsafe, in his view".
When digital music made its debut, I sold my record collection. (a different meaning): In keeping with technology, I decided to record my songs digitally. (the first sentence was a noun; the second a verb.)
it depends on thesentence if the sentence is something like this ... she made it. then you would put made but if your sentence is this... had she made it?
The word you are referring to is called an intensifier. Intensifiers are adverbs that provide extra emphasis but are not essential to the sentence's overall meaning or grammatical structure. Examples of intensifiers include "very," "extremely," "totally," and "completely."
A sentence is made up of a string of words.
"Myself" is considered an intensive pronoun when it emphasizes the subject of the sentence. An example would be: "I made dinner myself." It is reflexive when it refers back to the subject and is necessary for the sentence's meaning, like in "I hurt myself."
His strung nerves made it difficult for him to relax Could also say - he is highly strung meaning intense, anxious etc.