Englishfor English speakers
the
Determiner
—
Used, instead of a, to reference something specific, already known to exist.
Compare "I read a book." and "I read the book."
—
Used with a stress, to show that the word following is special.
Are you the John Smith that I went to school with?
—
Used with an adjective that acts like a noun to mean all of the people concerned
The poor are always with us.
—
Used with superlatives forms of adjectives and adverbs.
You are the best.
night
Noun
—
Night is the opposite of day. It is the time between sunset and sunrise when the sky is dark.
During the day, we'll go hiking on John Doe Mountain. At night, we'll come back to the hotel and get some sleep.
There was a terrible accident in the night that woke all of us up.
the
Determiner
—
Used, instead of a, to reference something specific, already known to exist.
Compare "I read a book." and "I read the book."
—
Used with a stress, to show that the word following is special.
Are you the John Smith that I went to school with?
—
Used with an adjective that acts like a noun to mean all of the people concerned
The poor are always with us.
—
Used with superlatives forms of adjectives and adverbs.
You are the best.
lights
noun
—
The lungs, now chiefly of an animal (being lighter than adjacent parts).
out
Preposition
—
Something that is out is not in.
Polly opened the door and went out.
—
If something using electricity is out, it is turned off or the electricity is not flowing..
Turn the light out before you leave.
The power's out so nothing's working.
I'm trying to find which light went out.
Oh, no! The fire's gone out again.
—
Something that moves out moves from the inside to a place that is not inside.
He took the pen out of his pocket.
Please, close the door as you go out.
If you walk out that door, you can't come back.
The car stopped and out came two men.
—
far away
We live out in the country.
He's about half an hour out of Toronto.
—
If someone is out, they are not in the place where someone is looking for them.
You can't see the doctor now. He is out.
—
to a number of people
We'll give out the books after everyone has arrived.
—
away
Don't throw that out. I'm still using it.
—
If something is out, you can look at or see it.
the sun is out
the flowers are out
—
If something comes out of something, it comes from it.
—
If something is out, it is available for sale.
—
If something is out, it is not in fashion.
—
If someone is out, they are not conscious.
—
If a you are out of something, you had it before but you've used or sold all of it.
—
If mathx/math is made out of mathy/math, mathy/math is the material that mathx/math is made of.
out
Noun
—
If someone is prevented from scoring in baseball, they make an out.
There were two men on base and two outs.
—
A way to escape is an out.
in
Preposition
—
Used to show that something is inside something else.
The cat is in the box.
—
Used to show that someone is at home, or is available.
Is John in?
The Doctor is now in.
—
Used to show movement towards the inside.
The rain came in through the window.
Georgia
—
noun
a state in southeastern United States; one of the Confederate states during the American Civil War
—
noun
one of the British colonies that formed the United States
—
noun
a republic in Asia Minor on the Black Sea separated from Russia by the Caucasus mountains; formerly an Asian soviet but became independent in 1991