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.
work
Verb
—
If you work, you do a job, usually for money.
My father works at Microsoft.
I got to work at 7:30 each morning.
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If you work you are doing something that needs effort.
I worked on my school paper all night long.
—
If somethings works it has done what it was supposed to do.
If my computer didn't work I couldn't type this.
I'm glad our plan worked.
—
How something works is how it does what it does.
I would like to know more about how cars work.
The rules here just do not work that way.
work
Noun
—
Your work is your job.
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Work is effort it takes to do something. That is, its what makes you tired when you do something hard.
Moving heavy logs takes a lot of work.
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Work is force through a distance (force times distance). This is how much energy you used to move something.
—
A work is the product of something, the result of working on it. That is, its something someone has made.
The painting was a great work of art.
Shakespeare wrote many literary works.
with
Preposition
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With is used to show the other people or things present when something happened
I went to school with my brother.
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With is used to describe something added to something else
The cat has a collar with a bell on it.
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With is used to show what thing is used to do something
He hit the nail with a hammer.
—
Used to introduce non-finite and verbless clauses.
With the children so sick, we weren't able to get much work done.
my
Pronoun
—
My things are things that belong to me.
Is this my book, or is it yours?
hands
—
noun
(= custody)
(with 'in') guardianship over; in divorce cases it is the right to house and care for and discipline a child
my fate is in your hands
too much power in the president's hands
your guests are now in my custody
the mother was awarded custody of the children
—
noun
(= work force)
the force of workers available