Apedia

Collocates Adjective C Word Found Guilty Jury Felt

Front "For example, the adjective m... almost always collocates with c... or f...; it ‎ rarely collocates with any other word. Although she was found guilty, the jury felt there were ‎m... c.... [factors or c... that lessen the blame] ‎"
Back "For example, the adjective mitigating almost always collocates with circumstances or factors; it ‎rarely collocates with any other word. Although she was found guilty, the jury felt there were ‎mitigating circumstances. [factors or circumstances that lessen the blame] ‎"
Unit Number 2
Unit Subject "Strong, fixed and weak collocations "

Learn with these flashcards. Click next, previous, or up to navigate to more flashcards for this subject.

Next card: I expected ‎(very formal unpleasant collocates exclusively inclement

Previous card: P h place home introducing collocations

Up to card list: Cambridge English Collocations In Use- Advanced