Englishfor English speakers
switch
Verb
—
If you switch something, you change it to something else.
He switched his book with mine.
We switched to a cheaper brand of coffee.
When they didn't seem to understand, he switched to French.
Jump ten times, switch legs and repeat.
I just switched jobs, and at my new job I don't have insurance.
When his team was losing, he switched sides.
—
If you switch a light or machine on, you change something so that it has power and can work.
She sat up in bed and switched on the light.
—
If you switch a light or machine off, you change something so that it doesn't have power and can't work.
I switched off the computer and went to bed.
—
If you switch over to something, you change to it, often with no plan to change back to the first thing.
We used to watch CNN, but we've switched over to BBC World News.
It was difficult when I switched over from writing to acting.
—
If you switch gears, you change the way you think or act to match a particular situation.
When I come home from work, it takes me a while to switch gears.
—
If you switch with somebody, you do something that they usually do and they do the thing that you usually do.
Sibyl couldn't work on Tuesday, so I switched with her.
—
If you switch a machine to a particular setting or function, you set it to work that way.
She switched the TV to another channel.
She switched the plane to automatic pilot.
switch
Noun
—
A switch is what you use to turn lights or other machines and equipment on and off.
The light switch is on the wall behind the door.
Where's the on/off switch on this printer?
—
A switch is a change from one thing to another.
It's often difficult for older people to make the switch to living alone.
—
A switch is a place on the track where trains can chose between two tracks.
—
A switch is a networking device that connects networks together by sending data (packets) only to the devices that need them.
Switches are more efficient than hubs because they understand which device needs the data that other devices send them.
—
A switch is a thin stick.
die
Verb
—
If a person or animal dies, it stops living.
My father died last year in a car crash, I really miss him.
The song is about her brother who died young at the age of ten.
Many more people die of heart attacks than from violence.
She died from being sick.
—
If something dies, it stops existing.
The idea died once the money was all gone.
Rock and roll will never die.
—
If a machine dies, it stops working.
The car died suddenly on the highway.
My computer died on me over the weekend.
—
If you're dying for something, you want it very much.
I'm dying for a chance to meet him.
die
Noun
—
A die is a piece of metal or other hard material used to shape, cut, or mold a product.
die
Noun
—
A die is a cube, each side of which is marked with a different number of spots from 1 to 6.
Frau
—
noun
a German courtesy title or form of address for an adult woman
Im
noun
—
(galaxy) irregular galaxy with no coherent structure