US /mɪks ʌp/
・UK /miks ʌp/
And the reason I'm focusing only on these two verbs is because people often mix up when to use one or the other.
And the reason I'm focusing only on these two verbs is because people often mix up when to use one or the other.
Mix up that mentaiko.
Mix up that mentaiko.
Sounds like there was a big mix-up.
Sounds like there was a big mix-up.
How the heck would I mix up the—oh!
How the heck would I mix up the, oh, oh, that's different.
And what we want to do now is just mix up those florets.
And what we want to do now is just mix up those florets.
Like I would do the H to the Z or the Z to the H, because they were just easy to mix up.
I did get them mixed up a lot, like I would do the H to the Z or the Z to the H because they were just easy to mix up.
And then, I mean, David is welcome to come in at any point and straighten out this mix up.
and he was like, "I'm not sure." And then I mean, David is welcome to come in at any point and straighten out this mix-up.
Hedging their bets, basically, using cloning to rapidly colonise and then using sex to mix up the genes.
and then using sex to mix up the genes.
Some of my C1 level students mix up these words.
Some of my C1 level students mix up these words: since, for, ago, and in.
And when we mix up this world of symbols with the world of things as though the symbols existed "in themselves,"
And when we mix up this world of symbols with the world of things as though the symbols existed in themselves, then we are merely doing once more what we have always done.