Some questions about choice of words. (May be more questions later )
The emperor (v.) you to ...
The situation is: The emperor commands you to do something. If you don't do well or refuse to do, you will be executed. Is there a word better than 'command' to use in the blank?
He is (v. present participle) the area.
Same, the situation is: he is invading an area, by military. The lands was planned to be taken into control by his country. Is it good to use 'conquering' or 'invading'? Or maybe there is a better word?
I come up with the two sentence, simply to find vocabularies. Maybe there is some other better phrases expressing similar meaning, so please neglect the fill in the blanks question if there you have other ideas..
Top answer
) you to ... Is there a word better than 'command' to use in the blank? -- 'Commands' sounds fine.
— Mister Micawber
) you to ...
Is there a word better than 'command' to use in the blank?
-- 'Commands' sounds fine.
He is (v.
present participle) the area.
Free · every Monday
Get the Weekly English Kit 📬
New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.
. The emperor (v.) you to ... Is there a word better than 'command' to use in the blank? -- 'Commands' sounds fine.
He is (v. present participle) the area. Is it good to use 'conquering' or 'invading'? Or maybe there is a better word? -- 'Invading' is fine. 'Conquering' is inappropriate; it is seldom if ever used in the present progressiv