You are so: smart, clever, canny, adroit, skillful, shrewd, knowing, glib, urbane, sharp...
Synonymous means having the same meaning as another word or phrase. Aggression is often believed to be synonymous with violence.
"Face-to-face" or "one-on-one" are synonymous with the phrase "1 on 1."
The suffix for synonymous is "-ous."
"Working so hard" is a verb phrase. It consists of the verb "working" and the adverb phrase "so hard" describing the intensity or manner of the action.
I believe you are trying to spell "synonymous" (same meaning).
No offense .
The phrase "alteration" can be synonymous with changing in Sonnet 116.
Synonymous means having the same meaning as another word or phrase. Aggression is often believed to be synonymous with violence.
It is named after John Wilcox, an old poker player from the South. His nickname was "Big Slick" and his top hand that was famous for taking out his opponents with was A-K any suit. After a while the hand just became synonymous with him.
pick a sin sick within pick and win slick to win
six degrees of separation
You probably misheard the phrase. It was probably "forced labour". If that is the case, it is synonymous with "slavery".
"ought to have" is synonymous in many contexts. "He should have done it yesterday." "He ought to have done it yesterday."
入口 /i ri gu chi/ means 'entrance' which is synonymous to your query.
Six Degrees of Seperation
"Pradage" is a word that can be synonymous with advice. It is also used to describe a phrase that is considered words of wisdom.
The phrase "supposed to" is synonymous with "intended to"."That hat is supposed to go on your head.""That hat is intended to go on your head."