tgrgd
You will end up in jail if you do that. I want to end up on Long Island so I'll drive through New York City.
Yes, it is possible to use a preposition twice in a sentence if the sentence structure requires it. For example: "He walked up to the top of the hill." In this sentence, both "up" and "to" are prepositions.
"I need to take a moment to gather my thoughts."
There were lots of clues to pick up on during the treasure hunt.
This sentence is a conditional sentence, specifically a past unreal conditional. It expresses a situation that did not happen in the past, as indicated by the use of "would have to."
His cousin took up tennis when he was 5
My dad filled up his canteen this morning to take for his hike
The massively built wrestler seemed to take up half of the ring.
take to heart
I woke up early to take advantage of the natural daylight streaming in through my window.
did you chalk it up for her
They could not take in the terrible news that they had heard.
I picked up my lunch at the take-out window.
You will end up in jail if you do that. I want to end up on Long Island so I'll drive through New York City.
Most programs used on your computer take up several megabytes of space on your hard drive.
take it to the side then track it
It means your teacher wants you to look up that many idioms, and use each one in a sentence to show that you understand it.Like this:take the MickeyWhy does that bully always take the Mickey out of me when we are at school?