Hospitality

hos‧pi‧tal‧i‧ty / ˌhɒspəˈtæləti, ˌhɒspɪˈtæləti $ ˌhɑː- / noun [ uncountable ] 1 friendly behaviour towards visitors : Thanks for your hospitality over the past few weeks. Register In everyday English, when thanking someone for their hospitality, you usually say thanks for having me/us : Thanks for having us . We had a great time. 2 …

Expertise

ex‧per‧tise AC / ˌekspɜːˈtiːz $ -ɜːr- / noun [ uncountable ] special skills or knowledge in a particular subject, that you learn by experience or training technical/financial/medical etc expertise What he’s bringing to the company is financial expertise. trainee engineers with varying degrees of computer expertise expertise in expertise in the management of hotels COLLOCATIONS …

Amenable

a‧me‧na‧ble / əminəb ə l $ əmin- əmen- / adjective 1 willing to accept what someone says or does without arguing :She was always a very amenable child.amenable toYoung people are more amenable than older citizens to the idea of immigration.2 suitable for a particular type of treatmentamenable for/toSuch conditions may be amenable to medical …

Merely-Just-Only-Barely

mere‧ly S3 W2 / mɪəli $ mɪrli / adverb1 used to emphasize how small or unimportant something or someone is SYN only :He’s merely a boy – you can’t expect him to understand.2 used to emphasize that nothing more than what you say is involved SYN just :We’re merely good friends.He merely shrugged and walked …

Decipher

de‧ci‧pher / dɪˈsaɪfə $ -ər / verb [ transitive ] 1 to find the meaning of something that is difficult to read or understand → indecipherable : She studied the envelope, trying to decipher the handwriting. 2 to change a message written in a code into ordinary language so that you can read it SYN …

All Types of Map Questions

1-Map Comparison 2-Past vs Present MapTenses : Past Simple + Present Perfect / Present Simple 3-Present vs Future Map Tenses : Past Simple + will be / is planned to / is expected to 4-Past vs PastTenses : past prefect +used to 6-Development Mapadded +demolished+ expanded +relocated7-Single Map Description 8-Three Maps (Past → Present → …

Enrol

to officially arrange to join a school, university, or course, or to arrange for someone else to do thisenrol on/for British English :I decided to enrol for ‘Art for Beginners’.enrol in especially American English :Californians are rushing to enroll in special aerobics classes.

City center and Downtown

Yes, you can use both “city center” and “downtown.” They mean almost the same thing, but the grammar is a little different. Downtown Example: City center Example: So both are correct, but the structure of the sentence changes slightly.But, you cannot use them interchangeably in grammar. Examples to show the difference: Correct: • I work …