Englishfor English speakers
afraid
Adjective
—
If you are afraid of something, you feel fear, or worry because you think something bad will happen.
I'm afraid of snakes. I can't even go near them.
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.
go
Verb
—
To move; to move away from a place; to move farther from the person who is talking; to move from one place to another place.
I go to the seashore every summer.
Kathy goes to the seashore every summer, too.
I went to the seashore last year.
She's gone to the seashore.
I'm going to the seashore next year.
along
Preposition
—
If one thing happens along with another, they go together.
Along with his daughter, he is studying French.
She gave him a shirt along with the pants.
—
If you go along with something, you agree with or follow it.
We're going to go along with your plan.
—
You use along to show movement from one end of a long thing towards the other end.
Along the road were just a few cars.
They walked to school, and along the way, she told him about her idea.
—
If something was true all along, it true from the beginning.
He knew the real story all along.
—
If two people get along, they are friendly with each other.
I don't go to her house because we don't get along.
with
Preposition
—
With is used to show the other people or things present when something happened
I went to school with my brother.
—
With is used to describe something added to something else
The cat has a collar with a bell on it.
—
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.
that
Determiner
—
Used to show which thing we are talking about; used with things that are not close to the speaker.
Give me that book, not this one.
Give me that, not this.
That dog is hungry.
that
Subordinator
—
used to link a subordinate clause to a main one
You said that you liked me.
Give me the book that I dropped.