@@beaslay8045 Thank you so much for your encouraging words! I'm thrilled to hear that you find the method improving with each time. Your feedback truly motivates me to keep refining and enhancing the learning experience. Grateful to have you as a part of this journey!
@nadinaforsman6160 Thanks for taking on the challenge twice and making such impressive progress! Going from 18 to 29 shows real determination and growth-well done!
@ruthjohnson4380 Thank you for catching that! Enthral and enthrall are indeed both correct, depending on regional spelling conventions-Enthral being the preferred British spelling. Your feedback is much appreciated, and I welcome any additional feedback or suggestions. Thank you for watching!
Hardly any of these are accurate synonyms. You are confusing verbs with adjectives, adjectives with nouns, and the second example frequently uses a different part of speech or is a phrase which cannot be used with the original example. NOT a good teaching aid.
@vivienhodgson3299 Thank you for sharing your feedback! Each word pair was carefully selected from reputable dictionary sources, focusing on context-based accuracy. However, I understand that some pairs might seem unconventional due to part-of-speech variations or specific phrasing. If you noticed particular examples that felt off, I'd be glad to clarify the rationale behind them. Your insights help refine the content for everyone, so I truly appreciate the input.
@GianlucaMariaLecchi Thank you for your thoughtful feedback and congratulations on your perfect score! I’m glad you enjoyed the roots and the challenge. Regarding "chronic," dictionaries like Oxford do indeed include "incurable" as a synonym due to its common use in describing long-term, persistent conditions. I appreciate your perspective on it, though, as nuances like these can definitely deepen our understanding.
@@thelighthouse13 long term persistent bar conditions are chronic but always you have to cure them, not always you solve the problem but cure Is due. You can't always heal you can always cure. As an old practicioner I beg to differ with the academic dictionary. I stand for it!
Thank you for your improving written method. It gets better each time.
@@beaslay8045
Thank you so much for your encouraging words! I'm thrilled to hear that you find the method improving with each time. Your feedback truly motivates me to keep refining and enhancing the learning experience. Grateful to have you as a part of this journey!
First attempt: 18, second attempt: 29
,
@nadinaforsman6160
Thanks for taking on the challenge twice and making such impressive progress! Going from 18 to 29 shows real determination and growth-well done!
28/30 😊
@@skylilly1
Impressive score! You're just a step away from a perfect 30. Thank you for participating and for challenging yourself with the quiz!
You spelled “enthrall” wrong.
@ruthjohnson4380
Thank you for catching that! Enthral and enthrall are indeed both correct, depending on regional spelling conventions-Enthral being the preferred British spelling. Your feedback is much appreciated, and I welcome any additional feedback or suggestions. Thank you for watching!
30/30
I tried just getting the closest, but not exactly correct, and it worked.
Your logic appears to be fundamentally flawed , you chose the ones that weren't correct but got 30/30 lol
Hardly any of these are accurate synonyms. You are confusing verbs with adjectives, adjectives with nouns, and the second example frequently uses a different part of speech or is a phrase which cannot be used with the original example. NOT a good teaching aid.
@vivienhodgson3299
Thank you for sharing your feedback! Each word pair was carefully selected from reputable dictionary sources, focusing on context-based accuracy. However, I understand that some pairs might seem unconventional due to part-of-speech variations or specific phrasing. If you noticed particular examples that felt off, I'd be glad to clarify the rationale behind them. Your insights help refine the content for everyone, so I truly appreciate the input.
❤ the Latin and Greek roots and the contest helped my 30/30 score.
I have to say that chronic Is not a synonym for incurable but for inhealable
@GianlucaMariaLecchi
Thank you for your thoughtful feedback and congratulations on your perfect score! I’m glad you enjoyed the roots and the challenge. Regarding "chronic," dictionaries like Oxford do indeed include "incurable" as a synonym due to its common use in describing long-term, persistent conditions. I appreciate your perspective on it, though, as nuances like these can definitely deepen our understanding.
@@thelighthouse13 long term persistent bar conditions are chronic but always you have to cure them, not always you solve the problem but cure Is due. You can't always heal you can always cure. As an old practicioner I beg to differ with the academic dictionary. I stand for it!
25/30 at 1.75 playback speed. Reading your definition was time-consuming 😅