Englishfor English speakers
Rocco
properNoun
—
male given name
and
Conjunction
—
You use and to talk about two things at once.
I like singing and reading.
Mary and Jane went on a holiday together.
—
You use and when you are listing a few things and you are now on your last item of the list.
I like singing, reading, cycling and playing soccer.
I used to like this girl from my class as she is pretty, gentle and caring.
—
And is used when you are putting two sentences together.
She came into the store, shouted at the cashier, and left.
—
Used to show what happened after something else.
The alarm went off and I woke up.
—
And is used to join certain numbers together.
Two hundred and thirty-five people went missing after the earthquake.
his
Pronoun
—
If you say something is his thing, you mean it belongs to a particular man or boy.
It is his book, not mine.
—
His is used, instead of the name of an object, to refer to something belonging to a man or boy.
It isn't my book, it is his.
Brothers
noun
—
, but may include female individuals