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Mr. Reginato was using the verb in its ceremonial sense.
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Generally, they are used in a very similar fashion; however, they should know how to identify a past participial phrase and a present participial phrase using the verbs in the sentence.
Our earliest quote for this use, from 1984, uses the verb in 'I heart my dog's head', a jokey play on bumper stickers featuring a heart and a picture of the face of a particular breed of dog (expressing a person's enthusiasm for, say, shih-tzus) which itself became a popular bumper sticker.
(I'm putting to one side the possibility that Trump was in fact using the verb "to hone" in an unexpected and rather eloquent way).
The question becomes accentuated in view of Numenius' statement that the second and third gods are one, using the verb "to be" in the singular (estin; fr. 11.14 15) in referring to them together.
ADAM GOPNIK: What worries me my goodness, seem to be using the verb "worry" a lot in this chat but what worries me is the spread, the break, that's happening between elite education, which bounces along on its meritocratic basis, and all the rest of us.
The question, "About how fast were the cars going when they smashed into each other?" elicited estimates of high speed from test subjects, compared to questions using the verbs "collided," "contacted" or "hit" in place of "smashed".
For example, one can say mər gə-ya "He died," bhūl gə-ya "He forgot," bol uṭh-a "He blurted out" in Hindi, using the verbs ja "go" (masculine singular past gə-ya), uṭh "stand up".
For example, one can say mər gə-ya "He died," bhūl gə-ya "He forgot," bol uṭh-a "He blurted out" in Hindi, using the verbs ja "go" (masculine singular past gə-ya), uṭh "stand up". This phenomenon is pan-Indo-Aryan and still requires investigation.
The Daily Mail also use the verb "summoned" in both its headline and its copy.
Dorothy gave me a lot of vocabulary, but the words that stuck were those she used conversationally, in direct address, like the time I arrived panting and she asked, "Διψάς;" (Dipsás?) I knew that a dipsomaniac was someone with an insatiable thirst, but to hear Dorothy use the verb διψάω in the second-person singular present tense and match it with my parched throat felt like a revelation.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.
Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com