| Domanda   | Risposta   | 
        
        |  the action of moving, or of moving something, with skill and care  inizia ad imparare The directors managed to secure a good deal for the company with a bit of subtle manoeuvring. |  |   the action of cleverly planning something to get an advantage   e.g. With some careful manoeuvring, I was able to get the car into the narrow space. |  |  | 
| inizia ad imparare |  |   a plant that has long, sour-tasting red and green stems that can be cooked and eaten as a fruit  |  |  | 
|  inizia ad imparare He sat up in bed, bewildered, unsure of where he was. |  |  |  |  | 
|  inizia ad imparare He's good at devising language games that you can play with students in class. |  |   to invent a plan, system, object, etc., usually using your intelligence or imagination  |  |  | 
| inizia ad imparare |  |  |  |  | 
|  inizia ad imparare The dictionary shows "neighbour" with the American variant spelling "neighbor". |  |   something that is slightly different from other similar things  |  |  | 
|  inizia ad imparare Your ultimate goal is to play the game as well as you can |  |   most important, highest, last, or final  |  |  | 
|  inizia ad imparare Don't bother with the computer manual - you'll pick it up as you go along. |  |   to learn a new skill by practising rather than being taught  |  |  | 
|  inizia ad imparare I thought I'd brush up (on) my French before going to Paris. |  |   to improve your knowledge of something already learned but partly forgotten:  |  |  | 
|  inizia ad imparare We can get by with four computers at the moment, but we'll need a couple more when the new staff arrive. |  |   to be able to live or deal with a situation with difficulty, usually by having just enough of something you need, such as money  |  |  | 
|  inizia ad imparare There was a lot of positive feedback, which was very encouraging. |  |   making you feel more confidence or hope  |  |  | 
|  inizia ad imparare hese watches are good-quality fakes, and would pass for the genuine article in a store. |  |   to appear to be someone or something else, or to cause people to believe that you are someone or something else  |  |  | 
|  inizia ad imparare She was telling me he was dead, and I couldn't take it in. |  |   to understand completely the meaning or importance of something  |  |  | 
|  it's more formalinizia ad imparare |  |  |  |  | 
|  inizia ad imparare I think we've been talking at cross purposes - I meant next year, not this year. |  |   If two or more people are at cross purposes, they do not understand each other because they are talking about different subjects without realizing this  |  |  | 
|   on the tip of your tongue   inizia ad imparare I know her - her name is on the tip of my tongue, but it won't come to me. |  |   about to be said if you can remember it:  |  |  | 
|   get the wrong end of the stick   inizia ad imparare Her friend saw us arrive at the party together and got the wrong end of the stick. |  |   to not understand a situation correctly  |  |  | 
|   get your tongue around/round sth   inizia ad imparare It's one language that I have real difficulty getting my tongue around. |  |   to pronounce a difficult word or phrase  |  |  | 
|   can't get your head around sth   inizia ad imparare I just can't get my head around these tax forms. |  |   If you say that you can't get your head around something, you mean that you cannot understand i  |  |  | 
| inizia ad imparare |  |   the standard way in which middle-class speakers of southern British English pronounce words  |  |  |