summat - significado y definición. Qué es summat
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Qué (quién) es summat - definición


summat      
Summat is a British dialect form of the word 'something'.
Are we going to write a story or summat?
Summative assessment         
ASSESSMENT USED TO DETERMINE STUDENT OUTCOMES AFTER AN ACADEMIC COURSE
Summative evaluation; Summative Assessment; Summative; Summative assessments; Assessment of learning
Summative assessment, summative evaluation, or assessment of learningWhat Is The Difference Between Assessment Of And Assessment For Learning? is the assessment of participants in an educational program.
Ejemplos de uso de summat
1. Sometimes when you write summat and you come to sing it first time in practice, instead of ‘I‘ you put ‘he‘, without even thinking about it.
2. "I‘d have been a builder or summat," says the bassist in the gruff, deadpan tone that seems to be his default setting.
3. You can count on me 110 per cent and in return, I was thinking, like, that mebbe summat in the Lords would be nice, make a proper Lady of the little woman and, of course, a bit of foreign travel would come in handy, I‘ve grown quite fond of Colorado and I‘d want to keep the Jag and the flat in the Admiralty, naturally.
4. I noticed this not long ago in a biography of the late J L Carr, winner of the 1'80 Guardian fiction prize, who apparently deployed some fake 15th–century statuary in the graveyard of his local church on the grounds that it would give architecturally minded passers by "summat to think about"; and I noticed it again only this week in the revelations surrounding Mr Justice Smith, presiding judge in the Da Vinci Code plagiarism case.
5. But you‘d be hard–pushed to convince anyone that Whatever People Say ... is not possessed of a unique character, thanks to Turner, who comes equipped with a brave, unflinching eye for detail (in Red Light Indicates Doors Are Secured, a taxi queue erupts into violence amid anti–Catholic invective), a spring–loaded wit (Fake Tales of San Francisco advises hipsters to "gerroff the bandwagon, put down the ‘andbook") and a panoply of verbal tics that are, as he would put it, proper Yorkshire: the words "reet", "summat" and "‘owt" have never appeared in such profusion outside of the Woolpack.