Englishfor English speakers
a
Determinative
—
A is used when the following word could be any of a certain type.
Compare "A book I saw on the shelf" and "The book I gave you yesterday".
a
Noun
—
A is the first letter of the alphabet.
The letter "a" comes before "b".
—
In some schools, an A is a very high grade.
Ron got an A on his earth science test.
vindication
—
noun
the act of vindicating or defending against criticism or censure etc
friends provided a vindication of his position
—
noun
(= defense, defence)
the justification for some act or belief
he offered a persuasive defense of the theory
of
Preposition
—
Made using.
It is a house of cards.
the
Determiner
—
Used, instead of a, to reference something specific, already known to exist.
Compare "I read a book." and "I read the book."
—
Used with a stress, to show that the word following is special.
Are you the John Smith that I went to school with?
—
Used with an adjective that acts like a noun to mean all of the people concerned
The poor are always with us.
—
Used with superlatives forms of adjectives and adverbs.
You are the best.
right
Adjective
—
When something is right, it is correct.
You did the right thing.
right
Noun
—
When something is to the right of a location, it means the direction 90º clockwise.
He takes a right at the library.
She made a right turn on Oak Street.
—
When you have the right for something, it means that it is an activity allowed by status.
You have the right to remain silent.
Administrators on Wiktionary have the right to block users from editing.
—
An action that is moral.
Two wrongs don’t make a right.
right
Verb
—
When you turn something right, you turn it the right-side-up.
He righted the boat.
—
When you make something right, you correct it.
He tried to right a wrong.
right
Adverb
—
In the direction 90º clockwise.
She turned right.
men
—
noun
(= work force)
the force of workers available