Englishfor English speakers
back
Preposition
—
Toward the rear.
He went back behind the stands.
—
To a place again.
I didn't like it, so I sent it back.
He went back to the same house.
They came back again.
back
Noun
—
The back is the rear part of something; it is the part in the other direction from the front.
I went to the back of the house.
—
The back is the rear part of the human body.
He had a scar on his back.
back
Verb
—
If you back something, you support it.
The Republicans backed the bill.
—
If you back up, you move backward.
He put the car in gear and backed right into the garage door.
wind
Verb
—
If you wind something you wrap it around and make it tight.
You need to wind the string around the stick.
—
If you wind a clock or watch you tighten a spring inside it. This is done by turning knob. The spring powers the clock or watch as it unwinds (stops being tight).
—
If something winds it twists around in different directions.
The road winds for miles.
—
If something winds down, it runs out of power and gets slower. (Like a watch that is unwinding.)
—
How something winds up is how it becomes in the end or after something happens.
I wound up lost after I made the wrong turn.