You can always tell the person you are not comfortable talking about that particular subject.
If not, just keep answering with yes, ok, etc. And then just change the subject and say something like, hey what you up too?
Good Luck.
xx
Yes, a dog is a subject if your talking to someone about your dog, the dog would be the subject you are talking about.
just bring up something casual they will transition if so and talk about the same thing.
When you are talking about something and you slowly drift off the subject and start talking about something else.
You ask someone to explain it to you - not to do it for you. If someone else does the work for you then you'll be OK for that time but you will be stuck the next time, and the next, and ... . You need to find someone who knows the subject, someone who can work with you and you are comfortable with. That someone must be able to communicate with you. And then, you have to trust that person to know what they are talking about, but if you don't understand what hey are telling you then ask - until it is clear.
Assuming you're talking about something illegal.... yes !
You can use it when talking about loving something or someone such as "I adore you"
The expression "too close for comfort" usually occurs when someone is talking about intimacy. It means that someone is getting too close to you and you are no longer comfortable or accepting of the situation. It can also mean that someone might be doing something that is not legal - and there might be people involved who are 'too close' to the situation to allow transaction.
'Injection' means 'to put something in' It's usually talking about syringes or needles.
I would talk to a girl
s' is belonging to someone! like the two boys' hats.
Backstabbing = Talking about someone or doing something behind their backs. You can lose friends that way.
That depends on the definition of the word in question. If you are talking about your favourite school subject, the stress is on the first syllable (/SUB-ject/, transcribed in IPA as /səbˈdʒɛkt/), but if you are talking about subjecting someone to something, then the stress is on the second syllable (/sub-JECT, transcribed in IPA as /ˈsʌbdʒɪkt/).