| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | ||
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 8 months |
| seen | Sep 18 '12 at 5:44 | |
| stats | profile views | 4 |
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Sep 17 |
awarded | Scholar |
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Sep 17 |
accepted | give a lift to or without “to”? |
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Sep 17 |
revised |
give a lift to or without “to”? added 6 characters in body |
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Sep 17 |
comment |
give a lift to or without “to”? Oh right, this is just a typo, of course from the context is clear am I asking about the "to" as the dictionary states "give sb a lift" (speaking about the ride) |
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Sep 17 |
comment |
give a lift to or without “to”? @Andrew Leach What? I am asking whether the following are equivavlent and correct: "give sb a lift" and "give a lift to sb".. |
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Sep 17 |
revised |
give a lift to or without “to”? edited title |
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Sep 17 |
revised |
give a lift to or without “to”? added 8 characters in body |
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Sep 17 |
awarded | Student |
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Sep 17 |
revised |
give a lift to or without “to”? added 25 characters in body |
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Sep 17 |
asked | give a lift to or without “to”? |
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Sep 4 |
comment |
Meaning of “put on” in “the accuser can be put on the defensive” (i) Hm but that does not make a sense. The accuser is the one who blames the liar, but the liar defends himself. |
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Sep 4 |
asked | Meaning of “put on” in “the accuser can be put on the defensive” |
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Sep 4 |
awarded | Editor |