Englishfor English speakers
dance
Verb
—
If you dance, you move your body to music.
He danced with the princess to the music of Mozart.
The performers danced and sang.
dance
Noun
—
Dance is body movement done to music.
He has an interesting dance he does while listening to that song.
—
A dance is an event where people come together to dance.
Are you going to the dance?
at
Preposition
—
Used to describe where something is, or when saying something's position
I am at home.
Let's meet at the pub!
—
The time at which something happened or will happen
Breakfast is at 9 o'clock.
At 5pm we went home.
—
Indicating something's state
At half price!
Water boils at high temperatures.
at
Symbol
—
The @ symbol, used to replace at
support@microsoft.com is an email address.
Apples @ £1.50 per kilogram.
a
Determinative
—
A is used when the following word could be any of a certain type.
Compare "A book I saw on the shelf" and "The book I gave you yesterday".
a
Noun
—
A is the first letter of the alphabet.
The letter "a" comes before "b".
—
In some schools, an A is a very high grade.
Ron got an A on his earth science test.
ball
Noun
—
A ball is a round thing. People often use them to play games.
The croquet ball was hit through the wicket and the game was over.
A ball is hit with a racquet in tennis.
—
A ball is a formal dance.
There is an inaugural ball following the swearing-in of the new President.
Cinderella lost her glass slipper at the Prince's ball.
—
the testicles
John's balls ached because he hadn't had sex in two days.
—
"guts", fortitude, moral strength
John didn't have the balls to quit his job, divorce his wife, and start a new life in Tahiti.
ball
Verb
—
If you ball something up, you make it into a ball shape.
Ball the cookie dough, wrap it in paper, then freeze it.
—
sexual intercourse.