Yahoo France Recherche Web

Résultats de recherche

  1. 4 janv. 2007 · Jan 5, 2007. #6. Hola, "la miss" est peut-être utilisé, de manière affectueuse ou flatteuse, pour faire référence aux "Miss France", "Miss Monde" etc. On l'entend souvent dire en France, et cela ne s'adresse pas spécialement à de très jeunes filles. Pour ce qui est de "Mistinguette" j'y ai eu droit aussi (ma mère a presque 65 ans) et c ...

  2. 24 juin 2010 · If you miss something, for example, someone may have told you some information and if you didn't hear or understand part of it, you would say, "I missed that". But if you mess up on something, you made a mistake, or did it incorrectly. For example, if you were balancing your checkbook and you found an addition error, you could say, "I messed up ...

  3. 4 févr. 2012 · To miss = to regret the absence of something or someone. "I would take the radio apart but I have lost my screwdriver, it was a particularly good one and I miss it." "My wife died three years ago and I still miss her. You ask if I lack a wife; I suppose I do but I have no desire to remarry." However, you can say,

  4. 20 avr. 2007 · Apr 20, 2007. #4. Pour moi c'est un mot un peu taquin, un peu condescendant, qui place la personne désignée à une certaine distance. On marque sa différence en l'appelant "la miss" et on se moque un peu d'une prétendue supériorité. Je ne crois pas qu'on l'emploierait pour désigner quelqu'un qu'on déteste ou qu'on méprise vraiment, car ...

  5. 1 sept. 2012 · There's obviously a reason for the difference in tense, but semantically, it doesn't make a big difference. Did - strictly past (Did I miss something? (in the past, which is done and gone) Have I missed something? - literally means - Did I miss something in the past continuing up until the present moment - hence, present perfect. M.

  6. 9 janv. 2011 · Turk was vacuuming. JD deliberately threw a tissue and said "You missed a spot" when he was sitting on the couch. Thanks~. Turk is vacuuming while J.D. sits on the couch eating a snack. J.D.'s Narration: ...I knew I could make it worse. J.D.: You missed a spot! Turk: You know, you can help. You can't even hear the television!

  7. 31 août 2023 · Explication: - “Aim small, miss small” is an instruction phrase used by people who shoot guns. It means that, when looking at a target, you should pick a smaller point to aim for within that target. In that case, if you miss, you’ll still hit the target. You need to turn your grand ambitions into smaller, obtainable goals. Aim small, miss ...

  8. It sounds very strange to me, but the verb patter for miss is 'miss + gerund', so I was just wondering if I'm wrong, and this is acceptable. I think "Don't miss out on [touristic attraction]" is a better option, but I don't want to overcorrect the student in case her structure is ok. Thanks!

  9. 14 juin 2021 · Jun 15, 2021. #10. Roxxxannne said: You can miss out on the opportunity of getting to know someone, but a person is not an opportunity, so it sounds wrong (as though you are objectifying a human being) to say "I missed out on her." Maybe so, but I think that's the meaning: = "I missed the/my chance to get into a relationship with her."

  10. 17 juin 2009 · Jun 17, 2009. #7. The only thing I could think of would be if "miss" were used as an ironic subsitute for a verb for the sake of sarcasm. For example, in baseball it is occasionally said that someone would "hit [the ball] to [person]." The term "To miss [the ball]" is also used within baseball. If someone misses the ball, the catcher will ...

  1. Recherches associées