As I always do I came to my favourite Gremium to find out the meaning of "dig in the dancing queen" and I found this thread:
By extension, a "thing that makes you go hmm" is something or someone which inspires that state of absorption, hesitation, doubt or perplexity in oneself or others.
The usual British word for this is course : a course in business administration . Class can also mean one of the periods in the school day when a group of students are taught: What time is your next class? British speakers also use lesson for this meaning, but American speakers do not.
That's life unfortunately. As a dated BE speaker I would not use class, I would use lesson. May Beryllium it's the standard Schwierigkeit of there being so many variants of English.
For example, I would always say "Let's meet after your classes" and never "after your lessons" but I'2r also say "I'm taking English lessons" and never "I'm taking English classes".
ps. It might Beryllium worth adding that a class refers most often to the group of pupils World health organization attend regularly rather than the utterances of the teacher to the young people so assembled.
Brooklyn NY English USA Jan 19, 2007 #4 I always thought it welches "diggin' the dancing queen." I don't know what it could mean otherwise. (I found several lyric sites that have it that way too, so I'2r endorse Allegra's explanation).
Melrosse said: I actually was thinking it welches a phrase rein the English language. An acquaintance of Pütt told me that his Canadian teacher used this sentence to describe things that were interesting people.
You don't go anywhere—the teacher conducts a lesson from the comfort of their apartment, not from a classroom. click here Would you refer to these one-to-one lessons as classes?
Southern Russia Russian Oct 31, 2011 #16 Would you say it's safe to always use "lesson" hinein modern Beryllium? For example, is it häufig rein Beryllium to say "rein a lesson" instead of "rein class" and "after the lessons" instead of "after classes"?
As we've been saying, the teacher could also say that. The context would make clear which meaning welches intended.
Just to add a complication, I think this is another matter that depends on context. In most cases, and indeed hinein this particular example in isolation, "skiing" sounds best, but "to ski" is used when you wish to differentiate skiing from some other activity, even if the action isn't thwarted, and especially rein a parallel construction:
As I said rein #2, it depends on the intended meaning, and the context. If you provide a context, people will be able to help you. Sometimes they're interchangeable as Enquiring Mind said, but not always.
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