Englishfor English speakers
keep
Verb
—
When you keep something for someone, you make something safe.
I will keep your money for you.
—
When you keep something, you do not give it back.
Keep the change.
—
When you keep safe, happy, quiet, etc, you stay that way.
Keep quiet.
keep
Noun
—
A keep is a special safe area of a castle.
The king lived in the keep during the battle.
taking
—
noun
(= pickings)
the act of someone who picks up or takes something
the pickings were easy
clothing could be had for the taking
—
adjective
(= fetching, winning)
very attractive; capturing interest
a fetching new hairstyle
something inexpressibly taking in his manner
a winning personality
them
Pronoun
—
Other people; not you or the people you are talking to.
I saw my friends and said, "hi" to them.
—
Things.
I made a lot of things. This is one of them.
—
You use them to talk about one person, if you don't know who that person is.
If somebody comes, help them.
for
Preposition
—
shows that something belongs to something else, or has a specific function
This cake is for you.
This is a net for catching fish.
—
For is used to show the reason for something
He was angry, for he had never been called such terrible names before.
for
Subordinator
—
For introduces a clause with a subject and a to-infinitive
It's not good for you to be too relaxed.
five
Determiner
—
(ordinal fifth) The number 5.
We have five toes on each foot.
five
Noun
—
The number 5.
plus three is five.
days
—
noun
(= years)
the time during which someone's life continues
the monarch's last days
in his final years