APPRECIATE [transitive] used to thank
someone in a polite way or to say that you are grateful for something they have
done:



WORD CHOICE: 
clothes, clothing, garment, cloth

clothes, clothing, garment, cloth
Clothes are
things that you wear, for example shirts and dresses• I need some new
clothes. • Do you ever wear your sister's clothes?!! Clothes is always
plural and has no singular form• He was wearing nice clothes (NOT a
nice clothe/clothes).Use clothing to talk about a particular type of
clothes or when talking about making or selling clothes• Special
protective clothing is worn.• a clothing manufacturer!! This word
is not used much in ordinary spoken language• I went shopping for
summer clothes (NOT clothing).In formal English, you can use garment or piece
/ item / article of clothing to refer to one thing you wear• a long
velvet garment• a discarded article of clothing
But it is more
usual to name the particular thing you mean• He was wearing a long coat
(NOT long garment).Cloth is the material that clothes are made from• a
suit made from fine woollen cloth
Good riddance (to somebody)
Spoken a rude way of saying you are glad someone has left:

Food poisoning [uncountable]
A stomach illness caused by eating food that contains harmful bacteria,
so that you vomit
WORD FOCUS: doctor
Similar words: physician especially AmE, GP (general practitioner) British English, consultant, registrar
A doctor who does operations:
surgeon
A doctor who treats mental illnesses:
psychiatrist, psychotherapist, shrink
informal
A doctor who treats people's teeth:
dentist, orthodontist
A doctor who treats animals:
vet, veterinarian especially AmE
Someone who is training to be a doctor:
medical student, intern American English
The place where you go to see your doctor: surgery British English,
office American English
Accident and emergency [countable] British English
The room or department in a hospital where people go if they have an
accident or suddenly become ill [= A & E; = emergency
room AmE]
prin‧ci‧ple
1
moral rule
[uncountable and countable] a moral rule or belief about what is
right and wrong, that influences how you behave:




against somebody's principles

man/woman of principle (=a man or woman with strong moral ideas)

Morcilla: sustantivo femenino blood sausage (AmE), black pudding (BrE)
throw somebody/something ↔ out
phrasal verb
1 to get rid of something that you do not want or need:

Stool [countable]
1 a seat that has three or four legs, but no back or arms:

Claim
1
Truth
[Transitive] to state that something is true, even though it has
not been proved
Claim (that)

Claim to do/be something


IQ [countable]
Intelligence quotient
Your level of intelligence, measured by a special test, with 100 being
the average result:

Lobby past tense and past participle lobbied, present
participle lobbying, third person singular lobbies [intransitive
and transitive]
To try to persuade the government or someone with political power that a
law or situation should be changed
Lobby for/against

Lobby somebody to do something

Ad‧mi‧ra‧ble formal
Having many good qualities that you respect and admire:

radical 1 / ˈrædɪkəl/
phobia / ˈfəʊbiə/
irrational /ɪˈræʃnʲəl / || /ɪˈræʃənlʲ/
principle / ˈprɪnsəpəl/
eco-friendly / ˌiːkəʊˈfrendli/
fundamental / ˈfʌndəˈmentlʲ/
efficient /ɪˈfɪʃənt/
friendly 1 / ˈfrendli/
consume /kənˈsuːm / ||/kənˈsjuːm/
raw 1 /rɔː/
destruction /dɪˈstrʌkʃən/
fiber, (BrE) fibre /
ˈfaɪbər / || / ˈfaɪbə(r)/
wheatgerm / ˈhwiːtdʒɜːrm / || /
ˈwiːtdʒɜːm/
comfortable / ˈkʌmftərbəl / || / ˈkʌmftəbəl/
cheerful / ˈtʃɪrfəl / || / ˈtʃɪəfəl/
physically / ˈfɪzɪkli/
figure 1 / ˈfɪɡjər / ||/
ˈfɪɡə(r)/
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