Englishfor English speakers
coordination
Noun
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The ability of the muscles in a body to work together.
Young children lack the coordination to walk or even to pick up small objects.
Alcohol can affect your balance and coordination.
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The planning or timing of actions so that they work together.
The result of opening the new building was a lack of coordination between different departments.
There has been an improvement in coordination of the various government programs to deal with poverty.
and
Conjunction
—
You use and to talk about two things at once.
I like singing and reading.
Mary and Jane went on a holiday together.
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You use and when you are listing a few things and you are now on your last item of the list.
I like singing, reading, cycling and playing soccer.
I used to like this girl from my class as she is pretty, gentle and caring.
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And is used when you are putting two sentences together.
She came into the store, shouted at the cashier, and left.
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Used to show what happened after something else.
The alarm went off and I woke up.
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And is used to join certain numbers together.
Two hundred and thirty-five people went missing after the earthquake.
training
—
noun
activity leading to skilled behavior
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noun
(= breeding)
the result of good upbringing (especially knowledge of correct social behavior)
a woman of breeding and refinement
branch
Noun
—
A part of a tree that grows out from the trunk (center).
Sally scraped her arm on a branch when she fell out of a tree.
—
A part of something that acts like a branch does to its tree.
The study of electricity is a branch of physics.
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One of a series of shops that are owned by the same company in business.
McDonalds has many branches spread throughout the country.