Englishfor English speakers
be
Verb
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This verb tells us that a thing is present, or in a place.
The book is on the table.
There was someone in the room.
Were you at the party?
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Happen
The party was on Saturday.
The next meeting will be here.
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Go somewhere; visit someone (only in the present perfect tense)
I've never been to Disneyland.
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A verb we use when describing.
The book is blue.
They were sad about losing the match.
John is 35 years old this year.
Im fine.
He'd like to be a doctor.
The film was terrible!
The book is 5 euro.
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Act like someone or something
Look, Mummy! I'm being a dog! Woof, woof!
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We use a form of be and a gerund-participle to make progressive verb forms.
He is sitting on the chair.
I've been waiting for half an hour.
They will be leaving on Tuesday.
acceptable
Adjective
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When something is acceptable it is capable of being accepted or is worth being accepted.
You ideas are acceptable to the group.
The quality of the work ranged from excellent to acceptable.
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When something is welcome or pleasing, it is acceptable.
Any kind words for my work are acceptable.
as
Preposition
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A word that is used to compare two things that are equal.
As you know, we need more workers.
I baked the cake as my mother used to.
The room looks just as it did when I was a child.
The speech, as he remembered it, was very powerful.
Interesting as it seems, I don't think I'll get it.
He was as big as a mountain.
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A word that is used to show that two things happened at the same time.
Just as I went out, it started to rain.
We sleep as the world turns in darkness.
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A word that is used to show why something happens.
As I couldn't understand French, I didn't watch the film.
as
Adverb
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A word that is used to compare two things that are equal. (Used before adjectives)
You are younger than I am, but nearly as tall.
This is not as good as it was last time.
collateral
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adjective
serving to support or corroborate
collateral evidence
—
adjective
situated or running side by side
collateral ridges of mountains
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adjective
(= indirect)
descended from a common ancestor but through different lines
cousins are collateral relatives
an indirect descendant of the Stuarts
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adjective
accompany, concomitant
collateral target damage from a bombing run
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noun
a security pledged for the repayment of a loan