Englishfor English speakers
center
Noun
—
The center of something, is the place that is as far from its outside as possible.
The president and his problems continue to take center stage in the news.
She placed a flowers at the center of the table and then hurried off.
—
A center is a building, area, or group of people with a particular purpose.
They have opened a large shopping center in Taipei.
The team was staying at the US Olympic training center.
Recently, Bahrain has become a major international banking center.
Scientists at the Center for Disease Control have found a new virus.
—
The town center is the place in the town where most of the shops are.
—
In politics, the center is the position that is not politically right or left.
—
In sports, a center is a player who plays in the middle of the field, usually an attacker.
center
Verb
—
If you center something, you move it towards the center.
race
Noun
—
A race is when people compete to see who is the fastest at either driving or running.
There was a race to see who could finish first.
—
A race is a group of people that come from the same place and have similar traditions.
—
A race is a group of people with the same physical characteristics, such as skin color, hair color and type, etc.
race
Verb
—
When a person races, he competes with other people to see who can go the fastest.
Tom was hungry, so he raced George down to the ice cream truck.