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Reading and Use of English Part-1

1.recover from
2.object to
3.participated in
4.care for
5. adapted to
6. approve of
7. depended on
8. competing with
9.benefited from
10. react to
Reading and Use of English Part-1
1. apply for
2. believe in
3. resulted in
4. dealt with
5. contributed to
Reading and Use of English Part-1
1. assist +N 1. manage +to v1
2. support +N 2. agree + to v1
3. accept +N 3. pretend + to v1
4. imagine+ N 4. struggle + to v1
5. achieve +N
6. appreciate + N
Reading and Use of English Part-1
1. put pressure on
1. make use of
2. put an end to
2. make your way
3. hold your breath
3. make the most of
4. keep an eye on
4. take into account
5. keep someone waiting
5. take responsibility
6. keep pressure on
6. take a risk
7. have responsibility
7. take advantage of
8. have a word
8. take an interest
9. have the opportunity
9. take charge/ control
10.take the opportunity
Reading and Use of English Part-1
To raise means to lift or move something or
someone upward. It also means to increase.
For example: He raised the window and leaned out

To rise means to move upward or to increase.


For example: The balloon rose gently (up) into the
air. .

Notice that “raise” includes the words “something”


and “someone.” That's the big difference
between the two.
Reading and Use of English Part-1
As nouns the difference between assist and support
is that assist is a helpful action or an act of giving
while support is something which supports often
used attributively, as a complement or supplement
to.

E.g= The army arrived to assist in the search.


My father supported the Labor Party all his life.
Reading and Use of English Part-1
An error is that part of the system state that may
cause a subsequent failure: a failure occurs when
an error reaches the service interface and alters the
service.
A fault is the adjudged or hypothesized cause of
an error.

It's not my fault she didn't come!


He admitted that he'd made an error.
Reading and Use of English Part-1
The word: definitely denotes certainty (it represents
the extreme positive endpoint along a continuum of
probability)
The word: absolutely relates more to the degree or
extent to which something is the case (and
constitutes the extreme positive endpoint of scales
such as completeness)

Have you definitely decided to go to America?


I believed/trusted him absolutely.
Reading and Use of English Part-1
There's a big difference between providing
something that is valuable and something that
is valued.
Again, according to Webster's
Dictionary, VALUABLE means "1. Of high monetary
or material value 2. ... VALUED, on the other hand,
means "Highly esteemed
for example : a valued member of staff
These antiques are extremely valuable.
Reading and Use of English Part-1
1. catch up- to reach someone in front of you by going
faster than them
2. give something away- to give something to someone
without asking for payment
3. fall through- to fail to happen
4. come across- to find something by chance
5. sort smt out- to separate one type of things from a
group of things
6. take after- to be similar to an older member of your
family in appearance or character
7. live up-to be as good as something
8. get away- to leave or escape from a person or place,
often when it is difficult to do this

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