
bar lácteo - WordReference Forums
2006年7月30日 · Es que en Gales todavía hay milk bars que son un resto del movimiento anti alcohol - son cafes donde no se sirven bebidas que tengan alcohol. Hace un mes tomé un sandwich en un national milk bar en Llanidloes.
Cow gives us milk - WordReference Forums
2019年11月20日 · Hello, Everyone. I have getting trouble to express a sentence about cow. 1. We get milk from cow. 2. Cow gives us milk. 3. We get milk from cow by milking it. Cow doesn't give us milk but milk cow by milking cow . Am I right? Please …
a <splash><cloud> of milk in my tea | WordReference Forums
2008年3月13日 · I'd say some milk or a drop of milk. A cloud of milk is undoubtedly a reference to the French comic book "Astérix chez les Bretons", which includes the phrase "un nuage de lait". For those not familiar with French cartoon characters, Astérix and his friend Obélix are Gauls who fight 'always and forever' against the Roman invaders of Gaul.
tend <to> someone's wounds - WordReference Forums
2017年7月9日 · “She tends (turns her attention) [to] the sick” / He tends (looks after) the machine.” (compare He tends the bar/He is a bartender) (ii) and to change or move towards a certain state or direction, “In hot weather milk tends to go sour”; “Elephants tend to be large”; “The car tended to the left.”
She drinks her milk - WordReference Forums
2007年5月20日 · If you say "he drinks his milk" about a man, what you mean is that he has already grown up big and strong--either he's tall and muscular or he's a badass or both. Used about a woman, I would interpret this to either mean she's "all grown up" in the sense that she has a sexy, adult body or in the sense that she's tall, muscular, and a badass.
It's no use ~ing/to infinitive | WordReference Forums
2012年12月20日 · = When you cry over spilled milk, it (= your crying over spilled milk) is a waste of time. It's no use crying over spilled milk. = (When someone is) crying over spilled milk, it (= crying over spilled milk) is (of) no use. Notice that "crying over spilled milk" here is not a participle phrase modifying "it". I hope this makes sense.
Is there some/any/...milk in the fridge? | WordReference Forums
2013年7月20日 · 1."Is there some milk in the fridge?" 2."Is there any milk in the fridge?" 3."Is there milk in the fridge?" All these sentences are correct and have different meanings. 1."Is there some milk in the fridge." Here, you know that there is some milk in the fridge, and you want the listener to answer "YES". 2."Is there any milk in the fridge?"
to be sent or to send | WordReference Forums
2011年5月2日 · Hello everybody! Which sentence is more proper? I have asked for a bottle of milk to be sent to my house. I have asked for a bottle of milk to send to my house. In my opinion the 1st one is more idiomatic. I would be grateful for your comments.
name of a table in a bar | WordReference Forums
2021年1月26日 · That's the bar. The bar means (1) that 'table' (we'd call it a counter, like in a shop, not a table), and (2) the room it's in (a hotel would have a bar where they serve drinks), and (3) an establishment (a business) that is principally a bar room - like a pub, not just part of a hotel.
A little- a few in negative sentences? | WordReference Forums
2012年5月14日 · I have a big doubt. As the title says, I don't know if "a little" and "a few" can be used in negative statements. This is not related with the negative meaning of "few" and "little",, this is related with, for example, "I don't have a few apples"- "I don't have a little milk".