Englishfor English speakers
her
Pronoun
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You use her instead of the name of a person, to talk about a woman or girl. (used in the object or complement position, never as a subject)
This is Susan's book. Give it to her.
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If you say something is her thing, you mean it belongs to a particular woman or girl.
It is her book, not mine,
boyfriend
Noun
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Boyfriend can also simply mean a friend who is male.
dump
Verb
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If you dump something, you get rid of it.
For years the military dumped nuclear waste into local rivers and lakes.
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If you dump something, you put it down carelessly.
She dumped her stuff onto the table.
Giant trucks had begun dumping truckloads of sand on the beach.
He dumped the kids at the park and headed back home.
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If you dump something, you sell it below cost, often in another country.
The Americans have accused Canada of dumping its softwood on the US market.
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If you dump data, you save it from a large computer to a storage device.
dump
Noun
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A dump is a large area for garbage.
2,000 tons of waste arrive in San Francisco's garbage dump every day.
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A dump is the act of emptying something quickly.
They turned off the cement mixer and prepared for the dump.
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A dump is a place where weapons are kept.
The army found a weapons dump near the border.
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A dump is a building or apartment that is dirty and not nice to be in.
Let's get out of here. This place is a dump.
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A dump is the act of saving data from a large computer to a storage device.
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If you take a dump, you push waste out of your anus.
I've gotta go to the toilet and take a dump.
her
Pronoun
—
You use her instead of the name of a person, to talk about a woman or girl. (used in the object or complement position, never as a subject)
This is Susan's book. Give it to her.
—
If you say something is her thing, you mean it belongs to a particular woman or girl.
It is her book, not mine,