Englishfor English speakers
we
Pronoun
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The person speaking and other people with him or her.
"Are you and Mia still going?" "No, were finished."
We went to Paris together.
We ought to help.
Let's go. We need to talk to Mark.
We won our football game.
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People in general.
We need to think about other people more.
we
Determiner
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The person speaking and other people with him or her.
We Canadians don't act that way.
have
Verb
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Someone has something if the thing is in their hands. The person is holding or gripping it.
Do you have a spoon, or do you need me to give you one so you can eat the soup?
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If you have uto/u do something, you must do it.
I have to go.
I had to do it.
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Someone has something if the thing is that person's thing: the person owns it; it belongs to the person.
The rich family has a big house.
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If you have you hold something in the mind.
I have a doubt about him.
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If you have you join something.
We have lunch at 13:00.
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You use have to say that you suffer from something or to tell the experience.
I have a defective vision. (I don't see well.)
He had a wonderful time with his friends.
two
Determiner
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The number 2. Two means more than one and less than three.
We have two eyes and two ears.
two
Noun
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The number 2.
One and one is two.
cat
Noun
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A cat is a domestic animal often kept as a pet; it has whiskers and likes to chase mice.
Our pet cat has just had kittens.
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Cats refers to the family of many different wild animals that are related to the domestic cat.
s and tigers are big cats.
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A cat is a short-form for a catfish.
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A cat refers to a person who is a prostitute.
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A cat refers to a catamaran.
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The cat command, a computer program used to read one or more files and output its contents.
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Cat is a short-form for a catapult.
cat
Verb
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If you cat an anchor, you lift it onto the cathead.
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If you cat, you vomit out something.
cat
Adjective
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When something is cat, it is terrible and not good.
The weather these few days has been cat, so we decided to cancel our outing to the beach.