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  1. 3 mag 2015 · May 3, 2015. #6. SReynolds said: Both b and c are wrong, however, c is sometimes used accidentally when someone wants to say an adjective with more but decides to use one which takes -er. Stressing would make this clear, though. b - "more easy" is not wrong. Whilst "easier" is by far the more usual form, "more easy" is a valid variant. S.

  2. 20 gen 2007 · Jan 20, 2007. #1. 1. “It’s not that easy as I have to use words according to the type of sentence. Can I say: 2. “ That is not easy as I have to use words according to the type of sentence. I changed “that”-an adverb in sentence 1 to “that”-a pronoun in sentence 2. What will happen to these two sentences when they are changed?

  3. 25 feb 2011 · Feb 25, 2011. #3. Someone is "easy to talk to" if conversation with that person flows naturally and there aren't many awkward pauses or gaps of silence. Generally it also means that the person seems listens intently and seems interested in the conversation. I.

  4. 8 mag 2009 · My difficulty in answering your question is that "He is easy to be deceived" does not seem correct to me. I could say "It is easy to be deceived", but I would not use the infinitive form of deceive as in the example sentence #2. Grammatically, your own sentence #1 works. It seems an unlikely thing to say, but it is possible to make sense of it.

  5. 9 gen 2016 · a : relaxed and casual in style or manner <an easygoing boss>. b : morally lax. [Collins English Dictionary] If you describe someone as easy-going, you mean that they are not easily annoyed, worried, or upset, and you think this is a good quality. [approval] [Chambers Dictionary] adj. relaxed, tolerant or placid.

  6. 27 ago 2008 · There are many more hits of 'Take it easy now', about 35,600, compared to about 600 for 'Take her easy now' on the Internet, half of which seems to belong to a classic posted on the Web (Open Boa t by Stephen Crane). I also found it in The Talisman by Stephen King and Peter Straub (page 38, first page of Chapter 4): 'Say, son, take her easy ...

  7. 31 mar 2007 · I've only heard the expression 'she's easy' to refer to a woman who makes it easy for men to sleep with her. I don't think I've ever heard 'he's easy', although I can imagine that it may have used to describe a man who is gullible and easily swindled/easy to make fun of, but only BEFORE the word 'easy' became associated with a woman.

  8. 1 ago 2009 · Italian - Italy. Aug 1, 2009. #1. Hi, people! Here it is something that's driving me crazy. A customer in a café asks "extra large diet, easy ice". Please, don't ask me more context because the customer has just arrived in the city, he walks in the café and his request is out of the blue, he says nothing before or after that for a while.

  9. 11 ott 2011 · Egmont said: Both are used, but they have different meanings. Usually: "To get into debt" describes a process that goes on over time, often without conscious thought. "The family got into debt because both parents lost their jobs." "To go into debt" describes the result of a single, intentional activity. "John went into debt to purchase an ...

  10. 22 nov 2007 · Canadian English. Nov 22, 2007. #5. veracity said: I got it. no easy task = not an easy task (or almo u st) but : no easy task =/= not an easy task. You need an article in the second usage. Yes there is a similarity in meaning, but, as we both said, no easy task is more emphatic.

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