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Games & Quizzes
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Make correct pairs from two columns
PERFECT HITS | {{lyricTraining.stats.PERFECT_HITS}} | +{{lyricTraining.stats.PERFECT_HITS * 20}} |
HITS | {{lyricTraining.stats.HITS}} | +{{lyricTraining.stats.HITS * 10}} |
LONGEST STREAK | {{lyricTraining.stats.LONGEST_STREAKS}} | +{{lyricTraining.stats.LONGEST_STREAKS * 10}} |
REMAINING TIME | {{lyricTraining.timeout / 1000}}s | +{{lyricTraining.timeout / 1000}} |
TOTAL | +{{lyricTraining.exp}} |
How to use "cliff" in a sentence?
You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.
/bləf/
Attempt to fool or trick someone. To pretend to do something to trick someone.
/skär/
Long lasting emotional pain from a bad experience. To leave a mark on something by scratching it.
/skärp/
Long steep slope at the edge of a plateau or ridge. cut or erode slope or hillside so that it becomes steep or precipitous.
part of something that sticks out or hangs over another thing. hang or extend outwards over.
/stēp/
rising or falling sharply. steep mountain slope. To fill with a certain quality, e.g. history.
The word "cliff" is a countable noun.
The plural of "cliff" is "cliffs".
A situation whose outcome is in extremely suspenseful doubt until the last m ...
A situation whose outcome is in extremely suspenseful doubt until the last moment. The term comes from serialized adventure films popular in the United States in the 1920s and 1930s, in which, at the end of each installment, the hero or heroine is left in a very dangerous situation, sometimes literally dangling from a cliff. The rationale, of course, was to entice the audience to return for the next installment in order to see what happened. By the 1940s the term was being transferred to other suspenseful states of affairs—for example, “the election was a cliff-hanger.”