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creditors    音标拼音: [kr'ɛdɪtɚz]

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  • vocabulary - How to properly use gear up? - English Language Usage . . .
    The phrase "gearing up" usually implies a series of increasingly important relevant tasks in relation to preparing for something e g The company has been gearing up to go public by doing x, y, and z If you can point to a specific set of actions that you have taken, then yes, you have "geared up" However, it may be more apt to use "preparing for" or "working towards [a career]" instead
  • Why is to switch gears used for to change topic?
    The expressions to switch gears, to shift gears are often (too often for my taste, but that is a different matter) used to announce a switch from one topic to another in an oral presentation (e g
  • Gear Up Etymology - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Does "Gear up" come to you as more of a "Put on your equipment" image or a "Put the gears (with teeth) together and get ready start going" image? Both sense of "Gear" appeared at around the same
  • epithet requests - Idiom for someone who buys all the best gear to do . . .
    I'm looking for an idiom to describe someone who decides to take up a new hobby, then buys an excessive amount of gear before they've even started Perhaps they believe they need this gear to maste
  • idioms - Difference between gear up and ready - English Language . . .
    Yes, gear up is synonymous with ready But then, ready is also synonymous with prepare … “Gear up” has some implications that you will be readying your equipment (your gear), though it can also be used figuratively All in all, I don't see a big difference between these uses of gear up, ready and prepare
  • Why are there so many American phrases about derrières?
    Get that ass in gear Get your ass over here put a cap in that ass cover my ass kick ass ass kicking ass kissing ass on the line ass whopping work your ass off I've always wondered how there are so many phrases about asses and butts Whereas Britain doesn't seem to have the same number of phrases about arses Particularly as America was founded
  • Good expression for things are starting to work?
    Get into gear To start to work effectively and with energy This is often used in spoken British English, and seems to crop up a lot in literature also: Alternatively, another way of saying this is to illustrate that things had previously not been working: "After a couple of false starts, we're finally underway "
  • Word for speeding up a process in line with the idiom to kick-start
    Please step up the speed of your activity McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs move step up a gear to start to work or play more effectively or quickly than before With just five lengths to go, the German swimmer stepped up a gear and edged ahead to win the race Cambridge Idioms Dictionary step on the gas
  • How come screw over means to cheat? - English Language Usage . . .
    I looked it up in Wiktionary, and I've found out that the term "screw over" means "to cheat someone, or ruin their chances in a game or other situation " I want to know how that term came about?
  • Cogs, wheels, cogwheels, cog wheels, sprockets, etc. ?
    Sprockets, cogs, and gear wheels are the 19th-century equivalent of nuclear physics and rocket science They were gee-whiz stuff then and they're sort of archaic comic items now; google "Rube Goldberg" to see their epitome





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