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Ella Ye Posted 5 years ago
Grammar

The rule of roads

hi all,

I have questions about these two places in the video. What do they mean?

16:48 Jolling kent now with the price you pay
17: 52 The rule of roads for how much you pay still apply even online.


http://dict.youdao.com/search?q=the&keyfrom=chrome.extension [ð?; ði; ði?] X????art. ?;?adv. ??(?????,????)????http://dict.youdao.com/search?q=THE&keyfrom=chrome.extension&le=eng ???????(Times Higher Education)http://dict.youdao.com/search?q=The%20Reader&keyfrom=chrome.extension&le=eng ???http://dict.youdao.com/search?q=The%20Expendables&keyfrom=chrome.extension&le=eng ???
  

Top answer

The woman who starts talking when the report begins is Jo Ling Kent. The title of the report is "The Price You Pay", taken from a common expression often expressed as "that's the price you pay for X", meaning if you want to have X, you have to suffer for it, pay a figurative price for it. That meaning has no bearing on the report.

  • The woman who starts talking when the report begins is Jo Ling Kent.
  • The title of the report is "The Price You Pay", taken from a common expression often expressed as "that's the price you pay for X", meaning if you want to have X, you have to suffer for it, pay a figurative price for it.
  • That meaning has no bearing on the report.
  • It is just a would-be-clever meaningless reference.
  • Ella Ye 17: 52 The rule of roads for how much you pay still apply even online.
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1 Answers
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The woman who starts talking when the report begins is Jo Ling Kent. The title of the report is "The Price You Pay", taken from a common expression often expressed as "that's the price you pay for X", meaning if you want to have X, you have to suffer for it, pay a figurative price for it. That meaning has no bearing on the report. It is just a would-be-clever meaningless reference.

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