English, asked by rukhsanajabeer, 9 hours ago

explain what is meant by the following words and phrases as used in the passage
fared
amiable
rigour
ponderous
maliciously​

Answers

Answered by shreeyanaik651
0

Answer:

fare

verb

past tense: fared; past participle: fared

1.

perform in a specified way in a particular situation or over a particular period.

"the party fared badly in the elections"

amiable

/ˈeɪmɪəb(ə)l/

adjective

having or displaying a friendly and pleasant manner

rigour

noun

the quality of being extremely thorough and careful

ponderous

adjective

slow and clumsy because of great weight.

maliciously

adverb

in a manner characterized by malice or ill will; with intent to do harm.

Answered by KinjalForever
0

Answer:

Fared- performed in a specified way in a particular situation or over a particular period.

Amiable- having or displaying a friendly and pleasant manner, or being kind and doing a nice gesture.

Rigour- the quality of being extremely thorough and careful, or being extremely thorough and careful.

Ponderous- slow and clumsy because of great weight or slow and clumsy because of being heavy.

Maliciously​- in a manner characterized by malice or ill will; with intent to do harm or doing something the wrong way or doing something for bad and not good.

Hope this helps!

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