Lose ['looz) verb 1. to come to be without 2. to misplace 3. to be beaten, as in
a game. From Old English losian, to perish.
Which sentence uses the word lose correctly?
A. I have a lose understanding of how the process works.
B. The chain on my bike has become lose.
C. Usually she tied her hair up, but today she wore it lose.
D. Be careful that you don't lose your keys before you get home.
Answers: 3
English, 21.06.2019 17:40
The colonists had difficulty coming together to revolt because they
Answers: 3
English, 22.06.2019 01:30
Read the excerpt from the dark game: true spy stories from invisible ink to cia moles. yet, by the time robert e. lee surrendered to ulysses grant at appomattox, virginia, some four years later, about 620,000 soldiers had died on the battlefields, more than american battle deaths in all other wars from the revolution through the vietnam war. what is the author’s primary purpose for including this detail? to inform readers about the differences between three military conflicts to persuade readers of the seriousness of the american civil war to entertain readers with tales from behind the lines of battle to encourage readers to visit battlegrounds in appomattox, virginia
Answers: 2
English, 22.06.2019 05:30
In the book outsiders what character least fits the stereotype of a greaser? asap
Answers: 1
English, 22.06.2019 07:30
According to this article , in what way does the message about obesity need to be refined ?
Answers: 3
Lose ['looz) verb 1. to come to be without 2. to misplace 3. to be beaten, as in
a game. From Old E...
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Mathematics, 24.09.2021 22:40