Englishfor English speakers
a
Determinative
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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
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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.
hungry
Adjective
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If you feel hungry, you want to eat something and your stomach feels empty.
There are too many poor children who are always hungry.
belly
Noun
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The soft part of the body below the chest.
He got punched in the belly.
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.
no
Adverb
—
used to disagree or refuse (not accept).
No, I do not fish.
I'm I ready? No, I still have some things to do first.
no
Determinative
—
Not any.
There is no water left.
No hot dogs were sold yesterday.
—
Not any possibility or allowance of (doing something).
No smoking
There's no stopping her once she gets going.
—
Not; not properly, not really; not fully.
My mother's no fool.
Working nine to five every day is no life.
ear
Noun
—
A part of the head (or face) used for hearing.
My rabbit has two big ears.
Your shouting hurts my ears!