Wednesday, October 26, 2011

exchange

exchange |iksˈ ch ānj|nounan act of giving one thing and receiving another (esp. of the same type or value) in return negotiations should eventually lead to an exchange of land for peace |an exchange of prisoners of war opportunities for the exchange of information.• a visit or visits in which two people or groups from different countries stay with each other or do each other's jobs [as adj. nine colleagues were away on an exchange visit to Germany.• a short conversation; an argument there was a heated exchange.• the giving of money for its equivalent in the money of another country.• the fee or percentage charged for converting the currency of one country into that of another.• a system or market in which commercial transactions involving currency, shares, commodities, etc., can be carried out within or between countries. See also foreign exchange .• a central office or station of operations providing telephone service private branch exchanges to automate internal telephone networks.• Chess a move or short sequence of moves in which both players capture material of comparable value, or particularly ( the exchange) in which one captures a rook in return for a knight or bishop (and is said to win the exchange).• a building or institution used for the trading of a particular commodity or commodities the New York Stock Exchange.verb [ trans. ]give something and receive something of the same kind in return we exchanged addresses he exchanged a concerned glance with Stephen.• give or receive one thing in place of another we regret that tickets cannot be exchanged she exchanged her suburban housewife look for leathers and tattoos.PHRASESin exchange as a thing exchanged at 8, he was carrying bags of groceries in exchange for a nickel.DERIVATIVESexchangeability |iksˌ ch ānjəˈbilitē| nounexchangeable adjectiveexchanger nounORIGIN late Middle English : from Old Frencheschange (noun), eschangier (verb), based onchanger (see change ). The spelling was influenced byLatin ex- ‘out, utterly’ (see ex- ).

Monday, October 24, 2011

you told her to move on, at first it was hard for her, she always thought she couldn’t do it until she put it to action and worked on it one step at a time. now she’s back to smiling, back to laughing, and as you can tell the girl who you told to “move on” is now happy again. why ruin her happiness by trying to get her back? when you were the reason why she would cry just to move on. she now realized that you were her past and now she’s working on her future. you should be proud of her for being brave by moving on, instead of envying her because she’s finally seeing someone else. remember it was you who wanted her too move one, and she did. now it’s your turn.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

conquer

conquer |ˈkä ng kər|verb [ trans. ]overcome and take control of (a place or people) by useof military force the Magyars conquered Hungary in the Middle Ages.• successfully overcome (a problem or weakness) afear she never managed to conquer.• climb (a mountain) successfully the second American to conquer Everest.• gain the love, admiration, or respect of (a person or group of people) the Beatles were to leave Liverpool and conquer the world.DERIVATIVESconquerable |-k(ə)rəbəl| adjectiveconqueror |-kərər| nounORIGIN Middle English (also in the general sense[acquire, attain] ): from Old French conquerre, based on Latin conquirere gain, win,’ from con-(expressing completion) + quaerere seek.’

Monday, October 10, 2011

Happy Monday!

what a weekend it has been!
my fall break is nearing its end! im so da sad! I dislike school with a passion! sigh, but i will post some photos of my weekend!
now im off to grab some ice cream & food with the loves!
i should really be doing my English paper. -_-
AHHH!
& reading back over my old posts, ohh lawwwd, was i emo, lol