Englishfor English speakers
along
Preposition
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If one thing happens along with another, they go together.
Along with his daughter, he is studying French.
She gave him a shirt along with the pants.
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If you go along with something, you agree with or follow it.
We're going to go along with your plan.
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You use along to show movement from one end of a long thing towards the other end.
Along the road were just a few cars.
They walked to school, and along the way, she told him about her idea.
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If something was true all along, it true from the beginning.
He knew the real story all along.
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If two people get along, they are friendly with each other.
I don't go to her house because we don't get along.
that
Determiner
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Used to show which thing we are talking about; used with things that are not close to the speaker.
Give me that book, not this one.
Give me that, not this.
That dog is hungry.
that
Subordinator
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used to link a subordinate clause to a main one
You said that you liked me.
Give me the book that I dropped.
lines
noun
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(film, theatre) Words spoken by the actors.
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(fortifications) Dispositions made to cover extended positions, and presenting a front in but one direction to an enemy.
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(shipbuilding) Form of a vessel as shown by the outlines of vertical, horizontal, and oblique sections.
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(education) A school punishment in which a student must repeatedly write out a line of text related to the offence (e.g. "I must be quiet in class") a specified number of times; the lines of text so written out.
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(US) The reins with which a horse is guided by its driver.