Englishfor English speakers
finish
Verb
—
If something finishes, it stops and doesn't start again; it comes to the end.
I finish work at 4:30 and I get home at 5:00.
In June of 1992 I had just finished university and I was looking for a job.
She finished off her homework and put it away.
Finish up your lunch quickly, please.
—
If something finishes somebody off, it uses all their energy or it kills them.
That last run around the track completely finished me off.
—
If you finish something up, you use the last of it.
I finished up the milk this morning. There's none left.
—
If you are finished with something, you don't need it anymore.
—
If you finish the surface of something, especially wood, you make it smooth and ready to use.
finish
Noun
—
The finish is the last part or end of something.
As the runners come to the finish, they are side by side.
It was a good day from start to finish.
—
The finish is the way a surface looks after it has been made smooth and ready to use.
The oil gives the wood a smooth, deep finish.
course
Noun
—
In school, a course is a class in a specific subject.
The science course was very difficult.
—
A course is the path that something follows in space or in time.
During the course of the evening, things went from bad to worse.
The economy grew quickly over the course of the next few years.
In the course of testing the drug, they found new uses for it.
One teacher can completely change the course of your life.
We'll have to let the disease take its course.
It is important that we decide now on the future course for the company.
The wind kept blowing the boat off course.
The course of the river has changed over time.
—
For a meal, a course is one part of a meal such as dessert.
We usually do not eat a meal with nine courses.
—
Some games are played on a course.
The game of golf is played on a golf course.
course
Verb
—
If something courses, it runs or flows through something.
Blood courses through the veins and arteries in our bodies.
The oil coursed through the engine.
of
Preposition
—
Made using.
It is a house of cards.
study
Noun
—
A study is a formal effort to learn about something, usually with a written report at the end.
A recent study of New Mexico, completed using national survey data, indicates that many older New Mexicans are returning to school.
study
Verb
—
If you study something, you make an effort to learn it.
We study math at the school.