isosceles. In geometry, the word isosceles describes a triangle with two sides that are the exact same length. ... The Greek root, isoskeles, means "with equal legs."
Answer:
It really depends on the circumstance. If theyre cheating on you, or you suspect that they are, confront them directly. Never do it over text unless you guys are long distance. Remember that its your choice and you don't need to give them a reason as to why. If you have a reason you can bring it up. If they start guilt tripping you, end it even faster. good luck
Explanation:
You didn't italize or mark the phrase, but I see one good candidate:
"The circus animal trainer" is in a way another name given to Mervin, a kind of "renaming" him: this is called an appositive phrase, so if this was the phrase appositive phrase is the answer! (also, I don't see the other phrases here).
Even though synonyms generally share the same meaning, they might not apply in the same context. So, if you want to use one specific word you should do that instead of trying to find a synonym that doesn't quite fit into the context you've established. An example is if you want to use the sentence "I was mad", meaning "I was angry", you could look for a synonym. One synonym is "absurd". However, this is a different type of mad, meaning crazy instead of meaning angry. "I was absurd" has an entirely different meaning than originally intended. This is why you should always double check the contextual meaning of the synonym you want to use.