Englishfor English speakers
crossover
Noun
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A crossover is a place where one thing crosses over another.
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A crossover is a blend of two or more styles of music, intended to appeal to a wider audience.
The band's new song had crossover appeal to both country and pop listeners.
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A crossover is an automobile that is a mix of two kinds of automobiles, like the Pontiac Torrent.
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A crossover is a fiction story that borrows places or characters from two or more fictional stories.
base
Noun
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Something's base is its lower part; the solid part that touches the floor or touches the earth and keeps the other parts of the thing up.
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Something's base is its most important part.
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A base is a building for military personnel and material.
base
Adjective
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Rude, unfair, or unkind.
The people who make those sex videos are really base.
base
Verb
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When something or someone is based in a place, they do most of their work in that place.
The airline is based in Toronto, but flies all over the world.
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If you base x on y, you build or make x on, using, or to be like y.
The movie is based on the book.
t
Noun
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The twentieth (20th) letter of the alphabet. It is the second most used letter, after e.
"t" comes after "s" and before "u"
cable
Noun
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A cable is a strong wire or rope that is often made out of metal.
A strong cable held the two trees together.
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A cable can also be a cord that allows information to pass through.
My internet wasn't working because a cable was unplugged.
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Sometimes cable is short for cable television.
Do you have cable or satellite television?
cable
Verb
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To cable something, you use strong wires to attach two things together.
Cable the boats together so that they don't float away.