what
people must face tradeoffs
"poorest of the poor" means the very poorest. Even among the poor, there are people who are better off than others. This phrase would mean the low end, that are worse off than even the other poor people.
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.'
polar
The phrase 'Sent to Coventry' is a phrase that was created by a man named Neil Coventry and has been used by a few people here and there but is not that widely known.
All people in the world
All people in the world
To emphasize that phrase's importance.
Burgo's Catch Phrase was created in 1997.
Egalitarians?
An appositive phrase is a noun or noun phrase that renames or explains another noun in the sentence. It provides additional information about the noun it follows. Appositive phrases are usually set off by commas.
Clockwork - Phrase album - was created on 2009-04-27.
An appositive phrase is a noun or noun phrase that renames or explains another noun right beside it. It provides additional information about the noun it follows and is set off by commas. For example, in the sentence "My friend, a talented artist, painted a beautiful portrait," the phrase "a talented artist" is an appositive phrase.
The infinitive phrase "to consider the proposal" acts as the purpose or reason for the board meeting. It explains why the board met.
The phrase "sat always at my right hand" reveals that Crusoe is preoccupied with mastery.