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Showing posts from February, 2018

Short answers

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Sometimes, the answer to a question is just a simple yes or no : ‘Are you ready?’ ‘Yes. ’ But we can be a bit more emphatic by using a short answer , repeating the verb at the beginning of the question: ‘ Are you ready?’ ‘Yes, I am .’                                 When we do this, we can even omit the word yes : ‘ Are you ready? ’ ‘ I am !’ These are called short answers because we omit a part of the sentence we don’t want to repeat. The complete – or long – answer would be Yes, I am ready . This kind of answer is very common in English: ‘ Can we win?’ ‘Yes, we can . ’   ‘ Do you like music?’ ‘Yes, I do .’ When the answer is negative, we only have to add not at the end: ‘ Did you go to the concert?’ ‘No, I didn’t. ’ ‘ Have you been using my computer?’ ‘No, I haven’t. ’ Auxiliary verbs are also used like this in other situations, to avoid repeating the whole sentence: ‘ It’s a bit cold in here.’ ‘Yes, it is

When feeling hungry makes you angry, you’re hangry

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We say we are hungry when feeling the need for food, and angry when feeling annoyance, hostility, or anger. These two adjectives are combined together in hangry , a term used to describe someone who is angry because they are hungry . This process is ca lled blending , as it blends parts of two words together to create a new one. Many words formed in this way are informal, like frenemy (a blend of friend and enemy ) or mansplain (a blend of man and explain ). Some, like brunch (a combination of breakfast and lunch ) and Spanglish (a mixture of Spanish and English ), have long ago made their way into common usage. The English language is always making up new words like this: webinar (a seminar conducted on the Web ), emoticon (an icon representing an emotion ), and jeggings ( leggings that look like jeans ) are all examples of more recently created blends. And so is, of course, Brexit .