Englishfor English speakers
I
Pronoun
—
The person who is speaking or writing
I am writing this, and you are reading it.
I
Noun
—
The ninth letter or the alphabet; previous H, next J. I is a vowel.
I
Symbol
—
A symbol meaning first, as in "George I" (which is said as "George the first").
—
The symbol for iodine on the periodic table of elements.
—
The symbol for electrical current.
I
Number
—
This is the roman numeral for one (1). It may be written as I or i.
i
Noun
—
The ninth letter or the alphabet; previous H, next J. I is a vowel.
be
Verb
—
This verb tells us that a thing is present, or in a place.
The book is on the table.
There was someone in the room.
Were you at the party?
—
Happen
The party was on Saturday.
The next meeting will be here.
—
Go somewhere; visit someone (only in the present perfect tense)
I've never been to Disneyland.
—
A verb we use when describing.
The book is blue.
They were sad about losing the match.
John is 35 years old this year.
Im fine.
He'd like to be a doctor.
The film was terrible!
The book is 5 euro.
—
Act like someone or something
Look, Mummy! I'm being a dog! Woof, woof!
—
We use a form of be and a gerund-participle to make progressive verb forms.
He is sitting on the chair.
I've been waiting for half an hour.
They will be leaving on Tuesday.
at
Preposition
—
Used to describe where something is, or when saying something's position
I am at home.
Let's meet at the pub!
—
The time at which something happened or will happen
Breakfast is at 9 o'clock.
At 5pm we went home.
—
Indicating something's state
At half price!
Water boils at high temperatures.
at
Symbol
—
The @ symbol, used to replace at
support@microsoft.com is an email address.
Apples @ £1.50 per kilogram.
all
Determinative
—
All of something is 100% of it, or the entire amount.
Well you could stay in bed all day on Friday. And I could take the kids to school.
You know, you can't see all of the moon.
"There was a problem." "Yes, I know all about it."
No! You did it all wrong.
Can you tell me all this tomorrow?
I think we all know we have to change.
The shirt is almost all white.
Is that all you can do?
—
All of some things is 100% of them, or every one.
And then you can go and tell all your friends about it.
We have over two hundred men, but not all of them had the problem.
all
Noun
—
If you give your all, you give 100% of your energy, attention, etc.
surprised
—
adjective
taken unawares or suddenly and feeling wonder or astonishment
surprised by her student's ingenuity
surprised that he remembered my name
a surprised expression
if
Preposition
—
If is used in a condition:
—
# When something will cause something else
—
#: If it rains, I will get wet.
—
# When a condition is not true
—
#: I'd prefer it if you took your shoes off.
—
# although
—
#: He was a great friend, if a little strange.
—
# When ... occurs (a programming statement).
—
#: If A, then B, else C.
if
Subordinator
—
If is used to report questions and things that are unknown.
She asked if they had arrived yet.
I don't know if I want to go or not.
if
Noun
—
If is a conditional situation.
There are many ifs we need to consider before we start on the plan.