English, asked by Gauravdeokar, 7 months ago

3. The author uses the word Cave in two diferent ways. what appears to be
a cave (paragraph 3) and what if the roof caves (paragraph 4). Explain the two different meanings.​

Answers

Answered by vaish6105
1

Answer:

If something such as a roof or a ceiling caves in, it collapses inwards.

Part of the roof has caved in. [VERB PARTICLE]

The wall caved in to reveal a blocked-up Victorian fireplace. [VERB PARTICLE]

I had a nervous breakdown, everything just seemed to cave in on top of me. [VERB PARTICLE]

2. See also cave-in

3. PHRASAL VERB

If you cave in, you suddenly stop arguing or resisting, especially when people put pressure on you to stop.

After a ruinous strike, the union caved in. [VERB PARTICLE]

The Prime Minister has caved in to backbench pressure. [VERB PARTICLE + to]

He's caved in on capital punishment. [VERB PARTICLE + on]

Explanation:

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Answered by shahhuzaif573
0

Answer:

There are entrances every 50 metres or so all along the karez. So, one could always get to a damaged part and repair it.

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