Englishfor English speakers
day
Noun
—
A day is a measure of time.
—
24 hours
—
Seven days make one week
—
The time between midnight and the following midnight (or between sunset and sunset in Jewish reckoning)
—
The time between sunrise and sunset, when it is daylight
—
The part of a day spent at work or school
He spent two days at work means that on two days he went to work; he did not spend 48 hours at work.
care
Noun
—
Care is the act of helping someone, especially sick people, the very young or the very old.
He decided not to seek health care from a hospitals.
We take the kids to child care during the week.
—
If you take care of someone, you watch them so that there is no trouble.
You're going to need someone to take care of you when you get older.
We'll be taking real good care of you. I promise.
—
If you take care of a problem, you fix it or arrange it.
Don's worry. Pearl and Edward will take care of things.
We go in, do our job, and take care of what we need to take care of.
—
You say "Take care!" when you are leaving somebody.
That's it. All right. Jim, good to see you. Take care.
—
You say "Take care!" when you want somebody to do something safely.
Go slowly and take care not to touch anything.
Care should be taken when holding eggs.
—
Care is the act of keeping something in a good condition.
I'm caring for the house while they're away.
—
A Care is a worry, concern, or something that you think about often.
I don't have a care in the world.
care
Verb
—
If you don't care about something, you don't think about it often or have a concern for it; it doesn't matter.
I don't care what happens to my car.
—
If you care about something, you think it is important.
He only cares about his car.
—
If you care for somebody, look after
Young children can learn to care for a pet.