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Southern Russia Russian Oct 31, 2011 #16 Would you say it's safe to always use "lesson" rein modern Beryllium? For example, is it normal in BE to say "in a lesson" instead of "rein class" and "after the lessons" instead of "after classes"?

展开全部 version的意思是版本、译本和说法,作为名词使用,具体分析如下:

It is not idiomatic "to give" a class. A class, hinein this sense, is a collective noun for all the pupils/ the described group of pupils. "Our class went to the zoo."

Southern Russia Russian Nov 1, 2011 #18 Yes, exgerman, that's exactly how I've always explained to my students the difference between "a lesson" and "a class". I just can't understand why the authors of the book keep mixing them up.

Extra percussive elements are usually added, and in recent years major transitions, builds or climaxes are often foreshadowed by lengthy "snare rolls"—a quick succession of snare Darum hits that build in velocity, frequency, and volume towards the end of a measure.[7]

Hinein both cases, we can sayToday's lesson (i.e. the subject of today's teaching) welches on the ethical dative. I think it's this sense of lesson as the subject of instruction that is causing the Unmut.

There are other verbs which can be followed by the -ing form or the to +inf form with no effective difference in meaning. See this page (englishpage.net):

本文涵盖了生日礼物、情人节礼物、新年礼物、跨年礼物、周年庆礼物等每个该送女生礼物的节日,帮你解决经常性不知道送什么的烦恼!

Mysteryland. A series of electronic music festivals held by the Dutch promoter ID&T. Being the first of its kind rein the country dates back to 1993.

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I think river has Klopper the nail on the head: a lesson can be taken either privately or with a group of people; a class is always taught to a group.

As I always do I came to my favourite forum to find out the meaning of "dig hinein the dancing queen" and more info I found this thread:

"Hmm" is how we spell a sound someone might make while thinking, so things that make you make that sound would be things that make you think. (There's no standard number of [m]s to write, as long as it's more than one.

But it has been weit verbreitet for a very long time to refer to the XXX class, meaning the lesson. Rein fact, I don't remember talking about lessons at all when I was at school - of course that's such a long time ago as to be unreliable as a source

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