Englishfor English speakers
go
Verb
—
To move; to move away from a place; to move farther from the person who is talking; to move from one place to another place.
I go to the seashore every summer.
Kathy goes to the seashore every summer, too.
I went to the seashore last year.
She's gone to the seashore.
I'm going to the seashore next year.
through
Preposition
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To go through is to go into one side of something and come out the other side.
The thief came in through the window.
She pushed the thread through the hole in the needle.
hard
Adjective
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If something is hard, it is not soft.
I kicked the wall and hurt my foot. The wall is hard.
—
If something is hard, it takes a lot of work to do or understand.
Only two people passed the test because it was so hard.
—
If something is hard, it is sudden and sharp.
He took a hard hit to his arm.
—
If a drink is hard, it is strong.
Hard liquor
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If something is hard, it cannot be questioned; it is not questionable.
Hard evidence
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If someone is hard, they are severe; they are unfriendly.
hard
Adverb
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If something is done hard, it is done with a lot of effort.
He works hard, all day and all night.
hard
Noun
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A hard is a beach or slope that is firm that is a good place to take a boat out of the water.
times
Preposition
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multiplied by
"Three times two is nine" is written: 3 × 2 = 9.