The Ultimate Guide to Chillout
The Ultimate Guide to Chillout
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知乎,让每一次点击都充满意义 —— 欢迎来到知乎,发现问题背后的世界。
想摘下星星给你,想摘下月亮给你,你想要的都给你,送她这款星月项链,星星月亮一起送给她!
Enquiring Mind said: Hi TLN, generally the -ing form tends to sound more idiomatic and the two forms are interchangeable, but you haven't given any context.
Also to deliver a class would suggest handing it over physically after a journey, treating it like a parcel. You could perfectly well say that you had delivered your class to the sanatorium for their flu injection.
Sun14 said: Do you mean we tend to use go to/have classes instead of go to/have lessons? Click to expand...
I don't describe them as classes because they're not formal, organized sessions which form parte of a course, in the way that the ones I had at university were.
There are other verbs which can Beryllium followed by the -ing form or the to +inf form with no effective difference in meaning. Tümpel this page (englishpage.net):
这款是李佳琪都推荐的爆款哦,如果你的女朋友还没有香水,选择这个绝对没错!
) "Hmm" is especially used as a reaction to something else we've just learned, to tell other people that whatever we just learned is causing this reaction, making us think, because it doesn't make sense or is difficult to understand or has complication implications or seems wrong rein some way.
This article get more info needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may Beryllium challenged and removed.
Xander2024 said: Thanks for the reply, George. You Tümpel, it is a sentence from an old textbook and it goes exactly as I have put it.
Brooklyn NY English USA Jan 19, 2007 #4 I always thought it welches "diggin' the dancing queen." I don't know what it could mean otherwise. (I found several lyric sites that have it that way too, so I'd endorse Allegra's explanation).
知乎,让每一次点击都充满意义 —— 欢迎来到知乎,发现问题背后的世界。
He said that his teacher used it as an example to describe foreign countries that people would like to go on a vacation to. That this phrase is another informal way for "intrigue." Click to expand...