"choose"
"Escoge la respuesta correcta" in Spanish means "choose the correct answer" in English. It is typically used in activities or exams where a person needs to select the right option from a list of choices.
"Escoge la palabra" is Spanish for "choose the word." It is a directive phrase instructing someone to select or pick a specific word from a group of options.
To say the word "Chose" you would use a word such as; Punto(a) or, pendehole. In English, it takes just one word to form the past tense of 'to choose' (chose) for all the conjugation. In Spanish, it takes all the following: escogí I chose escogiste you familiar chose escogió you formal/he/she chose escogimos we chose escogisteis / escogieron you all fam. chose/you all formal chose escogieron they chose
"Escoge la respuesta correcta" Literally, CHOOSE! the correct answer (it's an informal command)
Robert N. Charrette has written: 'Nunca Pactes Con Un Dragon' 'Shadowrun 19' 'A prince among men' 'Timespell' 'Shadowrun' 'Wolves on the Border' 'A Prince Among Men' 'Escoge Con Cuidado A Tus Enemigos' 'Feuertaufe' 'Heir to the Dragon' 'Choose your enemies carefully' 'A King Beneath the Mountain'
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.
English
*American English *British English *Australian English *Filipino English
I am english
No. It is an English folk dance.No. It is an English folk dance.No. It is an English folk dance.No. It is an English folk dance.No. It is an English folk dance.No. It is an English folk dance.No. It is an English folk dance.No. It is an English folk dance.No. It is an English folk dance.No. It is an English folk dance.No. It is an English folk dance.
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."
The four stages of the English language are Old English, Middle English, Early Modern English, and Modern English. These stages mark the historical development and evolution of the language over time.