Englishfor English speakers
that
Determiner
—
Used to show which thing we are talking about; used with things that are not close to the speaker.
Give me that book, not this one.
Give me that, not this.
That dog is hungry.
that
Subordinator
—
used to link a subordinate clause to a main one
You said that you liked me.
Give me the book that I dropped.
May
Proper noun
—
May is the fifth (5th) month of the year.
There are 31 days in May.
—
May can be the given name of a girl or woman.
May fell down and hurt her knee.
may
Verb
—
To be allowed to; to have permission to do something
"May I sit here?" "Yes, go ahead. The seat is empty."
You may not smoke, this area is "no smoking".
—
If you say something may happen or may be true, you mean there is a chance that it is true.
He may be lying, but I'm not sure.
It may rain today.
take
Verb
—
If you take an action, you do it.
I took a walk with my dog. = I walked with my dog.
I'm going to take a rest. = I'm going to rest.
I go out after I take a shower. = I'll go out after I shower.
—
If you take something or someone, you bring them from one place to another.
I don't want this. Can you take it away, please?
My son was sick, so I took him to the doctor.
—
If mathx/math takes money, time, etc., you need to use that for mathx/math.
If we go to your house, it will take one hour.
That was fun, and it didn't take too much money.
take
Noun
—
A person's take is his view of something.
What is your take on that recent movie? Did you enjoy it?
—
A take is the reward or profit you get from doing something.
If help you with this task, I [demand you give me part of your take.
—
A take is part of a performance which is recorded without a break.
The director was not happy with the first take, so we had to do it again.
a
Determinative
—
A is used when the following word could be any of a certain type.
Compare "A book I saw on the shelf" and "The book I gave you yesterday".
a
Noun
—
A is the first letter of the alphabet.
The letter "a" comes before "b".
—
In some schools, an A is a very high grade.
Ron got an A on his earth science test.
little
Adjective
—
If something is little, its size is not big.
I just ate a tiny little piece of the cake.
—
A little while, distance, etc. is not long.
Could you just wait a little while more?
—
A little person or animal is young.
Two little boys were fighting on the playground.
little
Determinative
—
Little money, room, help, etc. is a small amount of it; not much.
They understood little or no French.
He was busy and had little time for children.
Try to spend as little of your money as possible.
We saw little of her after the first day.
Little is known about the problem.
The building was destroyed leaving little more than rock and glass.
She's a quiet person with little to say about these things.
This has little to do with him and a lot to do with you.
We saved what little was left.
longer
—
adverb
for more time
can I stay bit longer?
—
noun
(= thirster, yearner)
a person with a strong desire for something
a longer for money
a thirster after blood
a yearner for knowledge