Englishfor English speakers
no
Adverb
—
used to disagree or refuse (not accept).
No, I do not fish.
I'm I ready? No, I still have some things to do first.
no
Determinative
—
Not any.
There is no water left.
No hot dogs were sold yesterday.
—
Not any possibility or allowance of (doing something).
No smoking
There's no stopping her once she gets going.
—
Not; not properly, not really; not fully.
My mother's no fool.
Working nine to five every day is no life.
thanks
Interjection
—
You say thanks when somebody has helped you or done something nice for you.
"Can I get the door for you?" "Thanks!"
thanks
Noun
—
Thanks are kind words and thoughts for people who did nice things for you.
A special thanks goes to my family.
Many thanks to everyone who helped me.
He is not going to get much thanks from them.
thanks
Preposition
—
because
Thanks to your help, we were able to finish quickly.
We'll be late thanks to the snow.
full
Adjective
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A container is full of things if there are many of the things in the container and no more can go in.
The cup is full of water. If you try to put more water in, the water will fall onto the table.
My life is full of problems.
—
A full moon is when the moon is a round circle because the sun is shining on the side we can see.
I can see the road, because there's a full moon tonight.
—
A person is full when they are satisfied, usually with food.
The meal was so large that I was full all day.
—
Something is full when it is total and completed, does not need any additions