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By happenstance, i stumbled upon the words cha, char and chai in the dictionary today, all defined as meaning tea in informal british english In an effort to be an attentive listener, what is a good alternative su. I lived and worked in london for some time, but never.

Say you do something simple and nice for someone I have been hearing the expression bang for you buck many times a day and i find myself distracted when i or others use it A normal reply would be i appreciate that, thank you. (phrased in either order) but for the past year or two, down here in the southern us, i'v.

For example, i know that chameleon or chamomile are pronounced with a hard c like in camel, not with a soft c like in change

Charity, on the other hand, is pronounced as in change Is there some rule to infer the correct pronunciation? Gotcha actually has several meanings All of them can be derived from the phrase of which this is a phonetic spelling, namely [i have] got you

Literally, from the sense of got = caught, obtained, it means i've caught you As in, you were falling, and i caught you, or you were running, and i grabbed you Are these words examples of elision What effect do they create

If a child says them what does this suggest about their language development

I am confused about the selection of in, of or to i want to explain that changes in hydrological variables and changes in landscape variables in wetlands can change the populations of waterbirds. Oxford dictionaries online writes in their u.s Section that the phase cover one’s ass is an informal phrase meaning Foresee and avoid the possibility of attack or criticism

Sometimes ch is pronounced as /k/, as in chorus/chameleon Sometimes as /tʃ/, as in chamber/chalk Are there any rules for the pronunciation of ch words In words like, for example, chess, chemistry, school, etc

I want to know when should we pronounce 'ch' as k' and when this has to be pronoun.

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