Difference between revisions of "Language/English/Grammar/Collocations-with-pay"
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A collocation is made up of two or more words that are commonly used together in English. Here are some important collocations with "Pay". | A collocation is made up of two or more words that are commonly used together in English. Here are some important collocations with "Pay". Happy learning :) | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
|'''pay''' | |'''pay''' | ||
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|} | |} | ||
== | ==Other Lessons== | ||
* [[Language/English/Grammar/Definite-Article|Definite Article]] | * [[Language/English/Grammar/Definite-Article|Definite Article]] | ||
* [[Language/English/Grammar/-After--as-an-adverb| After as an adverb]] | * [[Language/English/Grammar/-After--as-an-adverb| After as an adverb]] | ||
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* [[Language/English/Grammar/Present-Tense|Present Tense]] | * [[Language/English/Grammar/Present-Tense|Present Tense]] | ||
* [[Language/English/Grammar/ADJECTIVES|ADJECTIVES]] | * [[Language/English/Grammar/ADJECTIVES|ADJECTIVES]] | ||
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Latest revision as of 23:26, 26 March 2023
A collocation is made up of two or more words that are commonly used together in English. Here are some important collocations with "Pay". Happy learning :)
pay |
pay a fine
pay attention pay by credit card pay cash pay interest pay someone a compliment pay someone a visit pay the bill pay the price pay your respects |
Other Lessons[edit | edit source]
- Definite Article
- After as an adverb
- How do you use Adjectives
- False Ellipsis (Part 2)
- Different Forms of the Verbs
- Actual and actually
- Although VS Even though
- Adverbs of Time
- Present Tense
- ADJECTIVES