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choirs    音标拼音: [kw'ɑɪrz]

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  • Is it right up your alley or right down your alley?
    There isn't actually an alley, of course; it's an idiom Are you talking about when the phrase is applied to a domain of expertise interest that has literal alleys? ("the bowling tournament was right up my alley", "mugging people was right up his alley") That case seems small enough that there is no established rule about it
  • Synonym for its right up my alley: Its within my
    the word you use when you say quot;its right up my alley quot; e g its inside my _______ it means collection of interest or range of interest
  • Right up ones alley? Formal in-formal? - English Language Usage . . .
    Is "Right up my alley" formal enough to use in a cover letter job application etc? If not, are there any alternative idioms? It sounded right to me and I was just about to use it in a formal document, but then I googled it and the first result was from urbandictionary, so I became suspicious
  • Would it be grammatically correct to use the phrase right up your . . .
    I heard the phrase "right up your strasse" used in the BBC TV mini-series Sherlock When I didn't find the phrase in the dictionary, I searched online and found the link given below Now I was wondering that would the phase the eligible for usage in my school essays Would the teachers strike it off if I were to use the phase?
  • What is the word for a path that is made naturally by the action of . . .
    The word that keeps coming into my mind is a 'weird' or a 'weirdway' I believe in the UK councils used this to describe these people made paths I can't find any evidence of this term being correct though (try googling that term!)- its just what my brain thinks it was Maybe it will spark something in your own recollection though?
  • prepositions - Up vs Right up - Whats the difference? - English . . .
    It's possible that "up" has an even more literal meaning here, and that she climbed some stairs to reach the door Then we can compare "She went up to the door" with "She went right up to the door " "Right" probably changes the meaning in two different ways, but without more context, we can't know which
  • british english - Does this meet the definition of a gennel? - English . . .
    If I'm right then what you are looking at is a jigger, the Scouse word for the alley separating rows of houses I don't have access to OED here, but Wiktionary gives this definition (dialect, Liverpudlian, dated) An alleyway separating the backs of two rows of houses
  • What is a good proverb in response to two wrongs dont make a right?
    This phrase suggests that someone who does something bad implicitly opens themselves up to having bad things done to them Two wrongs don't make a right, but it is more acceptable to wrong someone who has wronged you A second wrong in retaliation for a first one may not be the "right" thing to do, but the person had it coming
  • What is the origin of go suck an egg?
    Andy said why didn't I curl up on the hood and take a nap, and I told him to go suck an egg We were sour all right Most of these examples have a distinctly countrified or lower-class tone to them, except perhaps for the one from Advertising Selling, which has a coarse bravura of its own Antecedents of 'Go suck an egg'
  • orthography - Hyphenation of left hand side - English Language . . .
    I would like to know exactly where (or whether) "the right hand side", "the left hand wall", etc should be hyphenated





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