English, asked by wwwkhasim345, 1 month ago


. Choose the correct meaning of the underlined idiom in the following sentence.
You seem out of spirits.
O without alcohol
B. O without money
C. O without friends
D. O without enthusiasm​

Answers

Answered by soumyajaisal
3

Explanation:

o without money

I hope it helpful for u

Answered by gunjanbaidyasl
0

Answer:

The correct meaning of the idiom, "You seem out of spirits" is

(D) without enthusiasm.

Explanation:

The idiom, "You seem out of spirit" is generally used when a person is sad, depressed or not very enthusiastic.

  • E.g. After returning from work, Neha seems out of spirit.
  • Out of the given four options, without alcohol, without money, without friends, and without enthusiasm, option D, i.e. without enthusiasm gives the correct meaning for the given idiom.

#SPJ2

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