Englishfor English speakers
closed
Adjective
—
Not open.
The store is closed on the weekends.
—
Not available to the public.
I used a closed source to write the article.
mailbox
—
noun
a private box for delivery of mail
—
noun
(= postbox)
public box for deposit of mail
with
Preposition
—
With is used to show the other people or things present when something happened
I went to school with my brother.
—
With is used to describe something added to something else
The cat has a collar with a bell on it.
—
With is used to show what thing is used to do something
He hit the nail with a hammer.
—
Used to introduce non-finite and verbless clauses.
With the children so sick, we weren't able to get much work done.
lowered
—
adjective
below the surround or below the normal position
with lowered eyes
flag
Noun
—
A flag is a piece of cloth, usually marked with a colourful symbol or sign.
—
A flag flown by a ship is to show the presence on board of the admiral (the leader of a group of ships); the admiral himself; or his flagship.
—
The use of a flag, especially to show the start of a race or other event.
Be ready to start running immediately at the flag.
—
On a computer, a flag is a variable or place in the computer's memory that keeps a true-or-false, yes-or-no value, usually either recording the fact that a certain event has happened or asking for a certain action to happen if it's an action that doesn't always happen.
flag
Verb
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If you mark with a flag, it shows the importance of something.
—
(often with down) To signal to, especially to stop a car that's driving past, etc.
Please flag a taxi down for me.
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When a person flags, the person becomes weak, tired or feeble.
His strength flagged toward the end of the race.
—
To signal or mark something that happened.
The compiler flagged three errors.
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To set the value of a variable in a computer program to true.
Flag the debug option before running the program.