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.
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.
don't
verb
—
do not (negative auxiliary)
—
(nonstandard) does not
—
do not
don't
interjection
—
interjection
don't
noun
—
Something that must not be done (usually in the phrase dos and don'ts).
get
Verb
—
To start to have; to take. When one person gives something, the other person gets the thing.
The woman goes to the store and gets a new dress.
—
Become.
The problem got worse.
—
You use get to make the passive voice, especially when the thing that happened is bad.
He got hit by a car.
it
Pronoun
—
used to refer to an object without identifying or describing it; the object might have been described earlier in the text.
The house was very big. It had many rooms.
—
used to describe the weather
It is very hot today.
I'm staying in because it is raining
—
used to describe a situation in general
I don't like it when people tell me to do something.
It is hard to find a job.
it
Abbreviation
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It can be a short way of writing:
—
# Italy or Italian
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# Information Technology, the use of computers