Englishfor English speakers
we
Pronoun
—
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.
—
People in general.
We need to think about other people more.
we
Determiner
—
The person speaking and other people with him or her.
We Canadians don't act that way.
split
Verb
—
If a group of people splits or is split, the people don't agree, so the group becomes more than one group.
Female voters overall are evenly split between Obama (48%) and McCain (47%).
A year after splitting with his wife, he's back in New Zealand.
—
If you split something, you separate, cut, or break it into different parts.
East and West Germany were split apart at the end of World War II.
She split the wood in half.
They split into two teams.
The two agreed to split the bill.
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If you split your skin, you cut it by hitting it.
—
If you split, you leave.
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A splitting headache is a very painful headache.
split
Noun
—
A split between two groups is a strong disagreement.
Time brought about the split between Moscow and Beijing.
—
A split in something, is a place where it breaks into two or where there is a long thing opening.
The split in the wood had grown wider over the years.
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If you do the splits, you spread your legs so that your feet are pointing away from each other.
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A kind of ice cream dessert.
up
Preposition
—
Toward the top or toward the sky.
The balloon went up.
up
Adjective
—
In a high position.
The flag is up.
—
.
It was an up day.
—
optimistic.
He is feeling up.
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Put in trust, entrusted.
It is up to you.
—
ing, occurring.
What’s up?
They act like something is up.
—
.
Something is up with him.
—
Planning, plotting mischief.
He is up to something.
—
ed.
It is all up with them.
up
Noun
—
State of being up, often with down.
Life has its ups and downs.
up
Verb
—
Increase, increment.
We upped the dosage.