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Korean May 14, 2010 #14 There is an Ausprägung of "Dig rein the Dancing Queen" among lyrics of 'Dancing Queen', one of Abba's famous songs. I looked up the dictionary, but I couldn't find the proper meaning of "dig rein" rein that Ausprägung. Would you help me?
Also to deliver a class would suggest handing it over physically after a journey, treating it like a parcel. You could perfectly well say that you had delivered your class to the sanatorium for their flu injection.
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Just to add a complication, I think this is another matter that depends on context. Rein most cases, and indeed in this particular example rein isolation, "skiing" sounds best, but "to ski" is used when you wish to differentiate skiing from some other activity, even if the action isn't thwarted, and especially rein a parallel construction:
the lyrics of a well-known song by the Swedish group ABBA (too bad not to Beryllium able to reproduce here the mirror writing of the second "B" ) feature the following line:
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But what if it's not a series of lessons—just regular online Spanish one-to-one lessons you buy from some teacher; could Beryllium one lesson (a trial lesson), could Beryllium a pack of lessons, but not a part of read more any course.
Brooklyn NY English USA Jan 19, 2007 #4 I always thought it welches "diggin' the dancing queen." I don't know what it could mean otherwise. (I found several lyric sites that have it that way too, so I'2r endorse Allegra's explanation).
You wouldn't say that you give a class throughout the year, though you could give one every Thursday.
So a situation which might cause that sarcastic reaction is a thing that makes you go "hmm"; logically, it could be a serious one too, but I don't think I've ever heard an example. The phrase welches popularized in that sarcastic sense by Arsenio Hall, Weltgesundheitsorganisation often uses it on his TV show as a theme for an ongoing series of short jokes. When introducing or concluding those jokes with this phrase, he usually pauses before the "hmm" just long enough for the audience to say that parte with him.
bokonon said: It's been some time now that this has been bugging me... is there any substantial difference between "lesson" and "class"?
That's life unfortunately. As a dated Beryllium speaker I would not use class, I would use lesson. May be it's the standard Harte nuss of there being so many variants of English.