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Think deeply. Are your feelings about Ellie and Carl shaped by the way they feel about or react to each other? Discuss your thoughts in (5-8 sentences)

(check the comment for the title video)

User Sfgroups
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Answer:

As with any language, American English is full

of idioms, especially when spoken. Idioms

add color and texture to language by creating

images that convey meanings beyond those of

the individual words that make them up. Idioms

are culturally bound, providing insight into the

history, culture, and outlook of their users. This

is because most idioms have developed over

time from practices, beliefs, and other aspects

of different cultures. As a culture changes, the

words used to describe it also change: some

idioms fall out of use and others develop to

replace them. With idioms in particular, the beliefs

or practices leading to their use may disappear while

the idiom itself continues to be used. Idioms can be

so overused that they become clichés; or they can

become slang or jargon, expressions used mainly by

specific groups or professions.

Idioms can be complimentary or insulting. They can

express a wide range of emotions from excitement

to depression, love to hate, heroism to cowardice,

and anything in between. Idioms are also used to

express a sense of time, place, or size. The range of

uses for idioms is complex and widespread.

The complexity of idioms is what makes them

so difficult for non-native speakers to learn.

However, this complexity is also what can make

idioms so interesting to study and learn; they

are rarely boring. Learning about idioms, in this

case those used in the United States, provides a

way to learn not only the language, but a little

about the people who use it.

lazyuser30

User Idigyourpast
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