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Belly Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

What are the differences?

1) You repay a loan or you pay a loan?

2) What is the difference between stroke and rub?

3) Do you have any words that means pinch but in a more gentle phrase?

5) What are the differences between pebble and gravel and shingle and cobble?
  

Top answer

1. repay the loan but pay each installement 2. stroke, usually your hand akes contact in one direction.

  • 1.
  • repay the loan but pay each installement 2.
  • stroke, usually your hand akes contact in one direction.
  • Rub, your hand makes contact up and down the same area.
  • 3.
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5 Answers
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1. repay the loan but pay each installement

2. stroke, usually your hand akes contact in one direction. Rub, your hand makes contact up and down the same area.

3. Can't think of one. Squeeze, possibly.

4) What happened to me?

5) In order of size, smallest first, gravel, pebble and cobble. Shingle isn't used about single stones, its an area or collection of smal
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1. And at the end, you could also say that you have paid the loan off.
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Hi,
2) So what if I stroke my lover's body and rub her hair?
3) In a more specific context, say, you have a beautiful baby at home and her face is so soft and nice that you want to ____ (same as pinch, any other words?)
4)I still don't know the context. Like, where do you see shingle, cobble, pebble, gravel? I have not the faintest idea. Lexicons are not that long
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3. I think I have heard "Eat her" and perhaps "bite her face". It sounds violent. Maybe a native speaker can comment.
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Hi,
2) So what if I stroke my lover's body and rub her hair? You should stroke her hair; having your hair rubbed would be quite irritating!

3) In a more specific context, say, you have a beautiful baby at home and her face is so soft and nice that you want to __ (same as pinch, any other words?). We do say pinch for this context, everyone knows you just mean gently not meanly

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