|
أرشيف المنتدى هنا نقل الموضوعات المكررة والروابط التى لا تعمل |
مشاهدة نتائج الإستطلاع: WHAT IS YOUR OPINION | |||
BAD | 0 | 0% | |
GOOD | 3 | 23.08% | |
VERY GOOD | 4 | 30.77% | |
EXCELLENT | 6 | 46.15% | |
إستطلاع متعدد الإختيارات. المصوتون: 13. أنت لم تصوت في هذا الإستطلاع |
|
أدوات الموضوع | ابحث في الموضوع | انواع عرض الموضوع |
#901
|
||||
|
||||
الفرق بينهما كالآتي They are not interchangeable and you cannot say missing call. We say something is missing when we can't find it because we forgot where we put it or someone moved it or stole it. People can be missing if they lose their way, are kidnapped, are in some sort of disaster, etc. My keys are missing. (I don't know where I put them.) My missing keys were found under the sofa. The guards found that a painting was missing from the museum. The police are looking for three missing hikers who did not return to their camp last night. At least 40 people are missing after flash floods swept through a small town today. We say something is missed when we failed to catch it, such as when we failed to answer a phone call, or we arrived too late at a train station or we missed a connection for a flight (i.e., our first plane arrived too late for us to get on the second plane for the next stage of our journey). I have five missed calls. The airline charged me a penalty for the missed flight. (They fined me because I didn't arrive on time to catch my plane.) In another sense of the word, we can say that a person is missed to mean that others feel sad about that person's death, disappearance, or absence. The adjective does not usually come before the noun.
My uncle died recently. He was such a kind and funny person. He's missed by everyone in the family. |
#902
|
|||
|
|||
بارك الله فيك على هذه المعلومات الجميلة
|
#903
|
|||
|
|||
اقتباس:
هو منهج اكسل كان فرنسى و المنهج الجديد انجليزى يا استاذ دى قواعد ثابتة و هذا رد موقع لونجمان Sec 3, Unit 10, WB page 64, Rewrite, item a: you changed "would like to have" to "had" but in item f you changed "would like to" to "could". Please, I can't understand why. Sender Mr. Ahmed Imam Position Teacher There is no irregularity here. The exercise is to rewrite the sentences using wish. Would like to becomes wishes and the lexical verb changes to the past tense. This is a case of the unreal past, where the past tense is used for an unreal situation in the present or future. (1a) My dad would like to have a bigger car. (1b) My dad wishes he had a bigger car. You have mistakenly stated that would like to have becomes had. Only would like to changes to wishes, and the lexical verb have becomes had. (2a) He'd like to be able to play the piano. (2b) He wishes he could play the piano. In (2a), we use to be able because there is no infinitive form of the modal verb can. Wish is used here for a general ability, so to be able changes to could, not to was able. We use were/was able to say what someone was able to do on one occasion, not for general ability. (However, in the negative we use couldn't for something that didn't happen on one occasion.) ed 09/01/11 |
#904
|
|||
|
|||
والان مع unit 12
|
#905
|
|||
|
|||
في انتظار تقييماتكم للموضوع , أأستمر أم أنها دون المستوى؟
|
#906
|
|||
|
|||
شغل رائع ربنا يوفقك
|
#907
|
||||
|
||||
great work u must keep on sir
|
#908
|
||||
|
||||
بارك الله فيك اخى الكريم
شغل جميل و نحترم فيك الصراحة اكمل على بركة الله و نحن فى الانتظار
__________________
|
#909
|
||||
|
||||
مكالمة فائتة لم أرد عليها a missed call
a missing call مكالمة أبحث عن تفاصيلها منذ فترة لأتذكر شىء ما- أو أنتظرها فقط أحاول
__________________
سبحان الله وبحمده سبحان الله العظيم خالص الدعاء - عبدالهادي يحيي
|
#910
|
|||
|
|||
كلماتك و رأيك يهمني كثيرا مستر أيمن شكرا على تعليقك
|
#911
|
|||
|
|||
something .............missing means that i do'nt know where it is . is that right ?
something ..................missed means i tried to get it but i failed . is that right ? that is what i understood so when we correct the exam answers and we dont find the answer of any question, we write missing |
#912
|
||||
|
||||
missing / missed (adjs) = lost / cannot be found
When missing and missed are used as adjectives, they behave like present and past participles, e.g missing pages are pages that are missing, a missed opportunity is an opportunity that has been missed. Note also that missing is often placed after the noun it qualifies, rather than in front of it. Compare the following: The weather cleared. We should have climbed the mountain. It was a missed opportunity. They were unable to complete the jigsaw as several pieces were missing. Did you know there are five pages missing from this book? It goes from 32 to 43. My name was missing from the list of participants but it was clear that I had enrolled. Ten people are known to have died in the blast and a further fifteen are still missing. Did you know you've got a button missing from your blue shirt? She has been missing for over six months and has now been placed on the missing persons register. Note that in this last example we talk about a missing person or a missing persons register, rather than missing people or a missing peoples register, to emphasize the individuality of people who have left home and it is not known whether they are alive or dead. miss in idioms Note also idiomatic usage in the following expressions: He didn't have all the advantages of a proper education and really missed out. Growing asparagus is very difficult and can be a very hit-and-miss affair. There have been several near misses between planes landing at this airport recently. He's failed his exams again and I think he has missed the boat as far as higher education is concerned. I think I've missed a trick here in failing to consult my accountant about tax returns. I think I'll give the book signing ceremony a miss. What about you? ~ No, I'm going. They came fourth in the league and missed promotion by only one point, but as the old saying goes: a miss is as good as a mile. miss out on something = miss an opportunity that you would clearly benefit from hit and miss / hit or miss = sometimes very successful, sometimes not near miss = when something is nearly hit by e.g. a vehicle or a bomb miss the boat = miss an opportunity which will probably not arise again miss a trick = fail to take advantage of an opportunity give something a miss = to avoid it a miss is as good as a mile = a failure is a failure by however small an amount NB1 Miss can be used as an alternative to Ms placed in front of the name of an unmarried woman when the person concerned wishes it to be known that she is single. NB2 Miss Right or Mr Right can be used as expressions to describe a woman or man who is regarded as an ideal marriage partner: He was looking for the perfect Miss Right and had some difficulty in finding her!
__________________
|
#913
|
||||
|
||||
طريقة اخرى من موقع متخصص
Adjective: missed mist Not caught with the senses or the mind "words missed in the din"; - lost ***** Adjective: missing mi-sing Not able to be found "missing in action"; "a missing person" Nonexistent "her appetite was missing"; - lacking, absent, wanting
__________________
|
#914
|
|||
|
|||
wonderful mr Ahmed
|
#915
|
||||
|
||||
__________________
|
العلامات المرجعية |
الكلمات الدلالية (Tags) |
مستر, يعقوب, style, test unit two, the present, علي, units, units 1-2-3-4-5 |
|
|