Englishfor English speakers
get
Verb
—
To start to have; to take. When one person gives something, the other person gets the thing.
The woman goes to the store and gets a new dress.
—
Become.
The problem got worse.
—
You use get to make the passive voice, especially when the thing that happened is bad.
He got hit by a car.
all
Determinative
—
All of something is 100% of it, or the entire amount.
Well you could stay in bed all day on Friday. And I could take the kids to school.
You know, you can't see all of the moon.
"There was a problem." "Yes, I know all about it."
No! You did it all wrong.
Can you tell me all this tomorrow?
I think we all know we have to change.
The shirt is almost all white.
Is that all you can do?
—
All of some things is 100% of them, or every one.
And then you can go and tell all your friends about it.
We have over two hundred men, but not all of them had the problem.
all
Noun
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If you give your all, you give 100% of your energy, attention, etc.
wrong
Adjective
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If something is wrong, it is not right. If something is wrong it may be incorrect, not true, or bad.
That answer is wrong.
"2 + 2 = 5" is wrong.
—
If something is wrong, it is not moral.
What you did was wrong.
wrong
Verb
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If you wrong someone, you do something that hurts a person.
He wrongs you by his actions.
wrong
Noun
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A wrong is an immoral act.
They accused him of wrongs against humanity.