Englishfor English speakers
asking
—
noun
(= request)
the verbal act of requesting
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.
wrong
Adjective
—
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.
—
If something is wrong, it is not moral.
What you did was wrong.
wrong
Verb
—
If you wrong someone, you do something that hurts a person.
He wrongs you by his actions.
wrong
Noun
—
A wrong is an immoral act.
They accused him of wrongs against humanity.
person
Noun
—
A human.
She is a kind person.
here
Preposition
—
In this place, the current location.
Why are you looking over there for the book? It's right here.