Englishfor English speakers
board
Noun
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A board is a group of people who govern something.
The school board has chosen new textbooks for all the schools.
Bret Stephens is a member of the editorial board of the Wall Street Journal.
School boards are supposed to make sure students get the best education possible.
Copies also should be sent to the chairman of the licensing board.
I have a meeting coming up with the Community Advisory Board.
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A board is a long piece of wood.
The outside of the house was made of wooden boards.
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A board is a flat surface.
The knives should be used on a wooden cutting board only.
He pinned his poster in the center of the bulletin board.
There were two diving boards at the deep end of the pool.
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If something is true across the board, it is true in all cases.
He was number one across the board. Nobody was better.
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If something is on the drawing board, it is being planned.
The designs for the car is still on the drawing board.
I think those students need to go back to the drawing board.
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A message board is a place for people to share ideas publicly, often over the internet.
These days churches are using e-mail, message boards, and blogs to communicate.
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A circuit board is flat, usually green, piece of electronic equipment.
He opened the computer so we could get a look at the circuit board.
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A sounding board is a person or group of people who will listen to your ideas and tell you if they're good or not.
I often discuss company matters with him, and use him as a sounding board.
board
Verb
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If you board a boat, plane, train, or other vehicle, you get onto it.
Sarah boarded the plane.
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If a boat, plane, train, or other vehicle is boarding, passengers are allowed to get on it.
Flight AC002 is now boarding at gate two.
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If you board in a school or in someone's house, you pay to live there.
In Paris, I boarded with a nice family in Le Alle.
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If you board a building or a business up, you close it for a long time.
Number 1 Strand Street was finally cleaned out, boarded up, and offered for sale by the city.
and
Conjunction
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You use and to talk about two things at once.
I like singing and reading.
Mary and Jane went on a holiday together.
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You use and when you are listing a few things and you are now on your last item of the list.
I like singing, reading, cycling and playing soccer.
I used to like this girl from my class as she is pretty, gentle and caring.
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And is used when you are putting two sentences together.
She came into the store, shouted at the cashier, and left.
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Used to show what happened after something else.
The alarm went off and I woke up.
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And is used to join certain numbers together.
Two hundred and thirty-five people went missing after the earthquake.
room
Noun
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A room is a place which is part of a building. Someone is able to see other people who are in the same room.
We need a long, wide room because many people will be at the meeting.
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Room can mean some space; a place with nothing, only air.
I need room to be able to move my arms and not touch people.
room
Verb
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To live in or share a room.
I roomed with Ryan all four years of college.
charge
Verb
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When you charge someone money, you ask them to pay the money for something that you have done for them or sold to them.
We charge ten cents a page for copying.
The shop charged me $5 to deliver the pizza.
The law doesn't limit the size of fees banks can charge.
The price the hotel charges is just too expensive.
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When the police charge someone with a crime, they officially say that the person did something illegal.
A short time later, police arrested the man and charged him with murder.
Many of the people in jail have not been charged with crimes.
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If you charge that something is wrong, you say it is.
Many critics charge that our schools are not doing a good job.
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When you charge something at a store, you put it on credit.
The business man charged all of his meals to his company.
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When you charge at a thing, you run toward it.
The bull charged the man walking in the field.
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When you charge (up) a battery, or when you charge (up) something that has a battery, you put electrical energy into it to be stored.
Oh no! I forgot to charge up the camera and the batteries are dead.
I don't want to leave the house right now, because my cell phone is charging.
charge
Noun
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A charge is a claim the somebody has done something wrong or illegal, especially a claim by police.
He says charges against his son are false.
The police have filed criminal charges against the company.
They will ask the judge to drop the murder charge against Sutherland.
Jowdy denied the charges of lying.
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A charge for something is the price of the thing. It often it is for a service or fee for a period of time.
The charge each month for the phone service is fifty dollars.
The university agreed to let them use the space free of charge.
Credit card companies must list the fees and interest charges separately on your monthly bill.
Do you want to put that on your charge card?
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If someone is in charge of something, they are responsible for it.
Josh is in charge of buying drinks for the party.
He took good care of the children in his charge.
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If someone leads the charge, they are working hard to make some kind of change.
Amazon.com led the charge in making electronic books popular.
These are the workers who have led the charge for employer-paid health care.
Teachers have led the charge against the new tests.
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Your charge is the person that you are responsible for, often a child.
The teacher smiled at his young charges.
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A charge is a movement towards somebody to attack them.
Moriarity then led the charge that pushed Bishop out the door into a hallway.
The game ends with the Eagles fighting off a late charge by the Potomac Braves to win, 63-59.
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A charge is the amount of electrical energy that something holds.
And once you've used up the electric charge, your electric car stops working.
The batteries will slowly lose their charge.
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A charge is the explosive in a gun or a bomb.
When the charge exploded, there was a large hole in the wall.