Englishfor English speakers
international
Adjective
—
An international event, situation, idea, etc. includes two or more countries.
In soccer news, France beat Japan in international competition.
—
An international student is a student from country A studying in country B.
The United States has more international students than any other country.
international
Noun
—
An international is a game or contest between two or more countries.
access
Noun
—
If you have access to something, you can use it, look at it, enter it, etc.
As a student, you have access to all our facilities including the library and computers.
We will seek to provide greater access to personal records held by government.
access
Verb
—
If you access something, you get information from it, usually using a computer.
The product enables multiple systems to access a single database.
Users of PCs can access images from the photo CDs using any CD-ROM input device.
authority
Noun
—
To have authority means to have the power to make a decision.
This judge has the authority to throw you in jail.
—
If you are an authority on something, many people think you know very, very much about it.
The Pope is the highest authority in the Catholic church.