Englishfor English speakers
a
Determinative
—
A is used when the following word could be any of a certain type.
Compare "A book I saw on the shelf" and "The book I gave you yesterday".
a
Noun
—
A is the first letter of the alphabet.
The letter "a" comes before "b".
—
In some schools, an A is a very high grade.
Ron got an A on his earth science test.
bunch
Noun
—
If you have a bunch of something, you have many of them.
We had to try a bunch of times before we could start the car.
—
A bunch can also mean a group or cluster.
Grapes come in bunches.
bunch
Verb
—
To bunch things is to gather or collect them into a group.
Help me bunch these flowers together so I can make a bouquet.
of
Preposition
—
Made using.
It is a house of cards.
malarkey
—
noun
(= wind, jazz)
empty rhetoric or insincere or exaggerated talk
that's a lot of wind
don't give me any of that jazz