23/04/2023
true!
Janer Online English is an online academy which caters the English needs of students from different parts of the globe.
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23/04/2023
true!
01/09/2022
Remove my Facebook account from your business
I am looking for a house helper who could also take care of my 2 year old child.
Tasks:
- clean house
- cook
- take care and play with my 2 year old child
26/03/2018
Hear Vs Listen!
26/03/2018
watch, see, and look!
26/03/2018
Can Vs Could
Winter holiday is coming!!!!
10/12/2017
word of the day:
What is the difference between Assure and Ensure?
• The word assure is used as a verb, and it is used in the sense of ‘promise’ or ‘tell someone something positively to dispel any doubts’.
• On the other hand, the word ensure is also used as a verb, and it is used in the sense of ‘make sure’.
• The noun of assure is assurance and the adjective of assure is assured.
Macerate is derived from the Latin verb macerare, which means "to soften" or "to steep," and, in Late Latin, can also mean "to mortify (the flesh)." Macerate first entered English in the mid-1500s to refer both to the wasting away of flesh especially by fasting and to softening or steeping. A few other manifestations sprouted thereafter from the word's figurative branch (e.g., the 18th-century novelist Laurence Sterne once wrote of "a city so macerated with expectation"); however, those extensions wilted in time. Today, the "steeping" and "soaking" senses of macerate saturate culinary articles (as in "macerating fruit in liquor") as well as other writings (scientific ones, for instance: "the food is macerated in the gizzard" or "the wood is macerated in the solution").
18/01/2017
Speak or Talk?