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B1 week 9
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Delimiter between question and answer:

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to act or speak in a daring and confident way.
make bold
If you take something somewhere, you move it from one place to another.
give a lift to someone
help
give a hand with
pass a difficult or testing experience or period.
get through
to be like or to look like another family member or part of the family
take after someone
to examine or check something carefully.
go over
used when you are extremely surprised, confused, or angry about something:
why on earth
to stop feeling unhappy about something, or stop being controlled or bothered by something. manage to communicate an idea or theory.
get over
to take someone or something, esp. by car, to a particular place:
drop off
remove clothing from one's or another's body.
take off
look after a child until it is an adult.
bring up
take hold of and lift or move someone or something.
pick up
a thing that is regarded as more important than others.
priority
a routine task, especially a household one.
chores
to watch or take care of something or someone, you watch them carefully,
to keep an eye on
. (informal) used to refer to a substance, material, group of objects, etc
stuff
you spend all or most of your time or energy on it.
devote time to
it gradually becomes less loud or strong until it stops
die down
to make something very wet,
soak
to laugh with repeated short catches of the breath. to laugh quietly, esp. in a nervous way, often at something silly:
giggle
back towards the starting point. in the direction of one's back.
backwords
a long, low sound of pain, suffering, or another strong emotion:
moan
lasting for only a limited period of time; not permanent.
temporary
describe something, for example a job or contract, that lasts for a long time:
permanent
to hit something with force: 2. to hurt part of your body by hitting it against something hard
bump
expected, esp. because it is what most people do, required by a legal, moral, or other rule;
obligatory
of very high quality; very good of its kind., a punishment in which a person is ordered to pay
fine
replace (something) with something else, especially something of the same kind that is newer or better; substitute one thing for (another). coins as opposed to banknotes.
change
writing and other office materials.
stationery
a situation in which a difficult choice has to be made between two or more alternatives,
dilemma