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you ought to go and see it

См. также в других словарях:

  • you ought to see — you ought to see/hear/meet/etc phrase used for emphasizing how good, impressive, or unusual something or someone is You ought to see their new house – it’s enormous. Thesaurus: modal verbshyponym ways of emphasizing how good something is …   Useful english dictionary

  • you ought to hear — you ought to see/hear/meet/etc phrase used for emphasizing how good, impressive, or unusual something or someone is You ought to see their new house – it’s enormous. Thesaurus: modal verbshyponym ways of emphasizing how good something is …   Useful english dictionary

  • you ought to meet — you ought to see/hear/meet/etc phrase used for emphasizing how good, impressive, or unusual something or someone is You ought to see their new house – it’s enormous. Thesaurus: modal verbshyponym ways of emphasizing how good something is …   Useful english dictionary

  • You Ought to Be in Pictures — Infobox Hollywood cartoon cartoon name = You Ought To Be In Pictures series = Looney Tunes/Daffy Duck and Porky Pig caption = director = I. Freleng story artist = Jack Miller animator = Herman Cohen Gil Turner Cal Dalton voice actor = Mel Blanc… …   Wikipedia

  • ought — [ ɔt ] modal verb *** Ought is usually followed by to and an infinitive: You ought to tell the truth. Sometimes it is used without to or a following infinitive in a formal way: I don t practice as often as I ought. It is also used in an informal… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • Ought — Ought, imp., p. p., or auxiliary. [Orig. the preterit of the verb to owe. OE. oughte, aughte, ahte, AS. [=a]hte. [root]110. See {Owe}.] 1. Was or were under obligation to pay; owed. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] This due obedience which they ought to the …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • ought — In current use the verb ought is followed by a to infinitive: • You ought to have a cooked breakfast, these cold mornings David Lodge, 1988. Since it is a modal verb, it forms a negative directly with not and forms a question by plain inversion:… …   Modern English usage

  • ought */*/*/ — UK [ɔːt] / US [ɔt] modal verb Summary: Ought is usually followed by to and an infinitive: You ought to tell the truth. Sometimes it is used without to or a following infinitive in a formal way: I don t practise as often as I ought. It is also… …   English dictionary

  • ought — ought1 /awt/, auxiliary verb. 1. (used to express duty or moral obligation): Every citizen ought to help. 2. (used to express justice, moral rightness, or the like): He ought to be punished. You ought to be ashamed. 3. (used to express propriety …   Universalium

  • see which way the wind is blowing — to see how a situation is developing before you make a decision about it. I think we ought to talk to other members of staff and see which way the wind s blowing before we make any firm decisions …   New idioms dictionary

  • And did those feet in ancient time — is a short poem by William Blake from the preface to his epic Milton a Poem, one of a collection of writings known as the Prophetic Books. The date on the title page of 1804 for Milton is probably when the plates were begun, but the poem was… …   Wikipedia

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