Englishfor English speakers
the
Determiner
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Used, instead of a, to reference something specific, already known to exist.
Compare "I read a book." and "I read the book."
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Used with a stress, to show that the word following is special.
Are you the John Smith that I went to school with?
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Used with an adjective that acts like a noun to mean all of the people concerned
The poor are always with us.
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Used with superlatives forms of adjectives and adverbs.
You are the best.
wrong
Adjective
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If something is wrong, it is not right. If something is wrong it may be incorrect, not true, or bad.
That answer is wrong.
"2 + 2 = 5" is wrong.
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If something is wrong, it is not moral.
What you did was wrong.
wrong
Verb
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If you wrong someone, you do something that hurts a person.
He wrongs you by his actions.
wrong
Noun
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A wrong is an immoral act.
They accused him of wrongs against humanity.
man
Noun
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A man is a male human.
He was a young man with blue eyes.
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A human being of either sex; a person.
God cares for all races and all man
God made man in his own image
Scientists and biologists think that man and animals evolved over the years, and that man evolved from a "human" species such as "homo erectus" or "neanderthals" and that man first stood up, millions of years ago, but this isn't true
man
Interjection
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You use man to show your surprise or disappointment.
Oh man, I wanted to do the dishes!