"ouila" does not exist in French, maybe you mean "oui, là" (yes, there) which is about as much as the English expression is used, as it is not really an expression.
A close synonym to "voilà" (here comes) is "voici", but it is rarely used. It originally had the same distinction as between "there" (là) and "here" (ici), but it is now blurred.
"French Exit" is merely a British equivalent of what is known in some places (mostly coastal cities in the northeast of the US) as the "Irish Goodbye." It describes a situation where someone covertly leaves a party/event/etc.. without saying goodbye. The French themselves call that "filer à l'anglaise" (to leave the English way)
depression is merely anger without all of the enthusiasm
no, Elizabeth is not a Frankenstein, merely a ward of the family. That's why its okay for Victor to marry her.
ClinicalDetachedObjectiveThe Narrator of The Lottery provide no emotional context, merely report on the incidences as they unfold.
ゼロ /ze ro/ is not originally Japanese. It's merely the same word in English, inserted into Japanese.
The spelling is "Fahrenheit", an English temperature scale, while "Celsius" is the metric scale. The measurements are not "opposite", merely on a different scale.
"What's new" in French is one of the easiest foreign phrases to learn. You merely say: "Ca va?" (pronounced: Sah Vah?) The phrase also means "Hows things?" It is roughly equivalent to the American expression: "What's up?" or "What's happening?"
Because there was not a unified Italian state, but different little soveraign states, often administered and controlled by kings linked with foreign countries like France and Austria.
It means that the variable of interest appears as a power in the expression. So, for example, 3x is exponential but x3 is merely cubic. The distinction depends on the position of x.
"Faerie" is merely the Old English spelling of "fairy". It's a fairy tale, like "Jack and the Beanstalk".
A mathematical expression does not have an answer, if it is algebraic and all of the terms are unlike. For example, x+7y does not have an answer because there are no definite solutions, and there is no possibility to combine like terms. However, the expression 2x+7y+3x does have an answer, but the solution is merely the combination of like terms. (5x+7y)
If that doesn't sound like a homework question, I don't know what is. The answer is very much Yes.
'Hullo' is not an incorrect form of 'hello'. It is merely a different way of saying it. 'Hallo' 'hullo' 'hello' are all correct, but different ways of saying 'hello'. Each form mainly refers to the different regional accents of the British Isles where the greeting became popular.
An idiom is an expression, the meaning of which is dependent on cultural context and social understanding. The meaning of the idiom is not predictable based on its constituent elements, but is merely an expression. An example of an idiom is "kicked the bucket". These words are not taken as literal, but as an idiomatic expression.
"French Exit" is merely a British equivalent of what is known in some places (mostly coastal cities in the northeast of the US) as the "Irish Goodbye." It describes a situation where someone covertly leaves a party/event/etc.. without saying goodbye. The French themselves call that "filer à l'anglaise" (to leave the English way)
"OK" does not stand for anything, but is merely a phonetic spelling of the Cherokee or Seminole word, "Okeh", which means, well, 'Okay'.
A mathematical expression in its' most simplistic form, merely assigns a value to a variable. Don't confuse an expression with an equation. An equation requires a solution. An expression cannot be "solved". It only allows you to determine the value of a variable. This is the expression in words "x is equal to 3" (X is the variable which is equal to the constant number 3) This is the expression in numbers "x=3" The expression in words "y is equal to 6" (Y is the variable which is equal to the constant number 6) The expression in numbers is "y=6" I hope you understand now.