Friday, 9 January 2009

Concerns over 2010 World Cup

Withdraw PhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhonetic Phonetic PhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhonetic
(v) withdrew, withdrawn
to take or move out or back, or to remove
rút lại, thu hồi
This credit card allows you to withdraw up to £200 a day from cash dispensers.
The UN has withdrawn its troops from the country.
Eleven million bottles of water had to be withdrawn from sale due to a health scare.
Once in court,he withdrew the statement he'd made to the police (= he claimed it was false).
All charges against them were withdrawn after the prosecution's case collapsed.
FORMAL After lunch, we withdrew into her office to finish our discussion in private.
MAINLY UK The team captain was forced to withdraw from the match due to injury.
Following his nervous breakdown, he withdrew from public life and refused to give any i

Federation PhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhonetic Phonetic PhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhonetic
(n)
a group of organizations, countries, regions, etc. that have joined together to form a larger organization or government
liên đoàn
The United States is a federation of 50 individual states.
Confederation PhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhonetic
(n)
an organization consisting of different groups of people working together for business or political reasons
liên minh

constraint PhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhoneticPhonetic
(n)
something which controls what you do by keeping you within particular limits
kìm hãm
The constraints of politeness wouldn't allow her to say what she really thought about his cooking.
Financial constraints on the company are preventing them from employing new staff.

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