Englishfor English speakers
in
Preposition
—
Used to show that something is inside something else.
The cat is in the box.
—
Used to show that someone is at home, or is available.
Is John in?
The Doctor is now in.
—
Used to show movement towards the inside.
The rain came in through the window.
deep
Adjective
—
A hole or body of water is deep if it goes down a long way.
Do not dive into this swimming pool because it is not deep enough.
Some oil wells must be drilled deeper than others to reach the oil.
—
Something is deep if it is far below or inside.
The Earth's iron core is deep beneath its crust.
The Japanese style of poetry called haiku is simple on the surface, but it should also have a deeper emotional meaning.
—
A deep voice has low-pitched tones.
In opera, the bass singer has the deepest voice.
—
With actions that make something smaller, we say deep to mean they make them much smaller.
This furniture store offers deep discounts on beds.
The new budget makes deep spending cuts in education.
—
An idea is called deep if it has an important meaning that is not easy to see.
A: 'I think you like heavy metal music because your parents don't approve of it.' B:'Wow, that's deep!'
water
Noun
—
Water is a clear liquid of the chemical compound Hsub2/subO that all living things need in order to live.
The dog drank the water from his dish
Can I please have a glass of water?
Your plant needs more water as it is about to die.
—
A water is a bottle or glass serving of water.
"I want to order two waters, waiter".
—
Water is mineral water.
—
Water is one of the four basic elements.
—
Water is urine.
—
Water is amniotic fluid.
Right before the woman went into labor, her water broke.
water
Verb
—
If you water something, you add water to soil around plants.
He waters the plants.
—
If you water something, you give water to animals.
He waters the horses.
—
If you water something, you dilute it.
—
If something waters, it fills with water; it secretes water.
His eyes watered as he cut up the onion.