Here are the meanings of the bolded words/expressions in the passage:
1. **Agent** - A person who acts on behalf of another person or group. In this context, it likely refers to a talent agent who helps actors/performers get jobs.
2. **Broads** - An offensive/derogatory term for women.
3. **Fool around** - To engage in casual sexual activity or intimacy.
4. **Windbags** - People who talk at great length without saying anything meaningful or important.
5. **Tweed jackets with suede elbow patches** - A stereotypical style of jacket associated with intellectuals or academics. The tweed fabric and
Original Description:
EFL Worksheet to work on Friends season 9 episode 20.
Here are the meanings of the bolded words/expressions in the passage:
1. **Agent** - A person who acts on behalf of another person or group. In this context, it likely refers to a talent agent who helps actors/performers get jobs.
2. **Broads** - An offensive/derogatory term for women.
3. **Fool around** - To engage in casual sexual activity or intimacy.
4. **Windbags** - People who talk at great length without saying anything meaningful or important.
5. **Tweed jackets with suede elbow patches** - A stereotypical style of jacket associated with intellectuals or academics. The tweed fabric and
Here are the meanings of the bolded words/expressions in the passage:
1. **Agent** - A person who acts on behalf of another person or group. In this context, it likely refers to a talent agent who helps actors/performers get jobs.
2. **Broads** - An offensive/derogatory term for women.
3. **Fool around** - To engage in casual sexual activity or intimacy.
4. **Windbags** - People who talk at great length without saying anything meaningful or important.
5. **Tweed jackets with suede elbow patches** - A stereotypical style of jacket associated with intellectuals or academics. The tweed fabric and
Charlie Who said the following sentences? 1) My agent hooked me up with six tickets to a great play 2) What do these broads want? 3) Do you think its possible for two friends to fool around and not have it be a great deal? 4) Off the top of my head, Dan and Janette 5) I just know theyll be a couple of windbags wearing tweed jackets with suede elbow patches 6) If I werent doing this, Id be at the gym working out. 7) And the year before that, when you set up that night tour of that button factory?! 8) Youre kind of playing fast and loose with the word interesting 9) If youll excuse me, Im going to the restroom 10) Lets ditch him 11) When we exit, should we walk or run, or prance or stroll? 12) We actually managed to salvage the day 13) Im so lucky it worked out you dont have class on Tuesday 14) I saw the article on your coffee table and memorised the title to freak you out 15) Hey guys, Im turning in 16) If Id known I was coming to this party, I never wouldve gotten married 17) Im sorry, I dont mean to pry. Its just that this must be what regular people experience when they watch Access Hollywood 18) They are so out of my league 19) This guy wears a rug 20) After chapter 16: Fat, single and ready to mingle I was uplifted 21) Maybe she is looking to, you know, slum it with some average Joe PhD 22) I could still won a Nobel Prize, although the last two papers Ive written were widely discredited 23) And your paper on punctuated equilibrium in the Devonian Era was top-notch 24) Stop going through my stuff!
What is the meaning of the words/expressions in bold?
You Laugh You Lose Challenge - 7-Year-Old Edition: 300 Jokes for Kids that are Funny, Silly, and Interactive Fun the Whole Family Will Love - With Illustrations for Kids: You Laugh You Lose, #2