Englishfor English speakers
please
Interjection
—
We say "please" when we want to ask someone politely to do something.
Pass the salt, please.
please
Verb
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Someone pleases someone else when they do what that person likes or wants.
Giving her these flowers will please her.
lie
Verb 1
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If you lie down, your head and whole body are at the same level. You lie down when you want to rest or sleep.
She lay on the bed and went to sleep.
—
If something lies somewhere, it is there and it is not moving.
His dirty shirt was lying on the floor and old socks were everywhere.
lie
Verb 2
—
If you lie, you say or write something that you know is not true.
"How old are you?" he asked. "Twenty-one," she lied. She was actually eighteen years old. Examples given in the old Webster dictionary says, why do you lie to me vs why do you just lie there. In past tense the word "lier" perceived in the new dictionary does not exist. It has been deleted from context to be depicted as "liar" when in fact they are two different existing words that have two different meanings all together. In example, to be a "lier" is to be a noun in context and to be a "liar" would be as a verb form. One depicts a person or being while the other depicts an action.
lie
Noun
—
Something not true, a falsehood, an untruth.
I told a lie.
down
Preposition
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Toward the earth, away from the sky.
What goes up on earth must fall down.
—
Toward the bottom.
—
Towards a smaller price, number, amount, etc.
I'm going to buy a computer once prices go down.
down
Noun
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Down is soft feathers or a covering of soft feathers.
That pillow is full of down.
here
Preposition
—
In this place, the current location.
Why are you looking over there for the book? It's right here.