Englishfor English speakers
give
Verb
—
If you give something to someone else, you had the thing and you let the other person have it. Maybe you use your hands to put the thing in the other person's hands. Usually after that, the thing is the other person's thing.
Give me that book, please; I want to read it.
My mother gave me this stone when I was young
—
If you give a speech, you talk to a group of people.
Women
properNoun
—
4th sura of the Qur'an
equal
Adjective
—
The same in shape, size, or number.
The number of people inside of the store is equal to the number of people outside of the store.
equal
Noun
—
Someone who has the same rights as somebody else.
I'm your teacher, not your equal.
equal
Verb
—
If mathx/math equals mathy/math, mathx/math and mathy/math have the same value.
Two plus two equals four.
pay
Verb
—
If you pay, you give money for something.
Bess worked for eight hours and they paid her a hundred dollars.
pay
Noun
—
Your pay is money you receive for something.
Go to the office to receive your pay.
with
Preposition
—
With is used to show the other people or things present when something happened
I went to school with my brother.
—
With is used to describe something added to something else
The cat has a collar with a bell on it.
—
With is used to show what thing is used to do something
He hit the nail with a hammer.
—
Used to introduce non-finite and verbless clauses.
With the children so sick, we weren't able to get much work done.
men
—
noun
(= work force)
the force of workers available