A. To entertain friends
B. To fail or to miscarry
C. To engage in a competition
D. Get up to be involved in something
A. To entertain friends
B. To fail or to miscarry
C. To engage in a competition
D. Get up to be involved in something
A. Between two great difficulties
B. Between two great opportunities
C. In a confused situation
D. None of these
A. A difficult situation
B. To meet suddenly with someone
C. To leave someone in difficulty
D. To assist someone in adverse circumstances
A. To get rid off
B. In a state of terror
C. To be against person wishes
D. To make a challenge.
A. To do something risky
B. To get benefit of the opportunity
C. Change the parties
D. Being to improve
A. A person with good behaviour
B. To solve one’s own issues without any help
C. To have aims & desires suitable to circumstances
D. To be successful
A. Become uncertain about something
B. To avoid from someone
C. To reveal the Secrets
D. Something difficult to accept
Disclose a secret or reveal something prematurely, as in You can count on little Carol to spill the beans about the surprise. In this colloquial expression, first recorded in 1919, spill means “divulge,” a usage dating from the 1500s.
A. Something difficult to accept
B. Extremely Impatient
C. A pessimistic Person
D. None of these
A. In a indirect way
B. The impossible task
C. In a direct & straight way
D. None of these
A. 14 days
B. 18 days
C. 20 days
D. 22 days
a period of two weeks.