The answer is the word WRONG - this is a five-letter word that is always pronounced as "wrong."
A group of people that are always around you helping with things. Such as stylist, etc(For celebrities) Street life posse is a way of life, your always down for each other and got each others back. They always roll with you no matter what.
Tormented love is the theme here. It is the theme that no matter how pure and sacred a love may be, it will always be have thorns.
One times One is One. One times of One will always be One no matter how many times you multiply it by one
You would create anti-matter. you would also realize that you have waaaayyy too much free time
hi i love pie and slugs with sandwitches -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Okay, wow that "answer" up there isn't even remotely relevant. Anyway, the answer is: A hole.
There are a couple ways it can be pronounced: u-lee-sha or u-lee-cee-a Seems to be a matter of personal preference.
It is pronounced "Boor-gwah-ZEE"or more commonly in the US, bor-jwah-ZEE, not gwah, a slurred jwhah)*see the related dictionary link
You can pronounce it either with a silent t or without it doesn't matter.
I is always capitalized, no matter where it is in a sentence.
"Guanxi" is the phonetic spelling for the Chinese phrase meaning "matter". To pronounce the phrase, you would say "gwan she".
Obviously, you can't keep the letter as it would explode. This does not matter because you still get the stamp for it.
Thomas Cahill's book SAILING THE WINE-DARK SEA: WHY THE GREEKS MATTER contains a "pronouncing glossary" that gives us "Dee - da - lus." According to other words listed there, it looks like "ae" in Greek is pronounced "eee"
The t in often is not pronounced and does not belong there. It was added to the word in the Middle English period, on the analogy of oft. +++ I beg to differ. Although it is not stressed, I hear it pronounced far more than ignored completely! It may be a matter of dialect. OFT = OFTEN anyway. The EN is the addition.
It is a matter of personal preference. Some pronounce it Ev-ee and some pronounce it Ee-vee. The 70s singer Evie Tornquist pronounces her name Ev-ee.
CRACK-EN iTHiNK tbh i think it's just a matter of where you come from and what your accent is, i pronounce it Krah-Ken but my family pronounce it Krack-in it's just how you want to say it
Using "oh" instead of "zero" when pronouncing numbers like 0 can be informal or a matter of personal preference. It can help to differentiate the number from the letter "O" in spoken communication or simply be a habit individuals develop. In more formal contexts, it is generally recommended to pronounce 0 as "zero" to avoid ambiguity.
No, when matter becomes heated it always expands, meanwhile when matter becomes cool it always contracts.