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.
order
Noun
—
Order is when things are where they should be.
I need to take some time to put my things in order.
—
The order of some things means which thing is first, which one is second, which one is last, etc.
The children will take turns in order of age.
order
Verb
—
To order something is to ask someone to sell it to you.
At the restaurant, she ordered chicken and potatoes.
—
To order someone to do something is to tell the person that they must do it.
The father ordered his children to be quiet.
that
Determiner
—
Used to show which thing we are talking about; used with things that are not close to the speaker.
Give me that book, not this one.
Give me that, not this.
That dog is hungry.
that
Subordinator
—
used to link a subordinate clause to a main one
You said that you liked me.
Give me the book that I dropped.
we
Pronoun
—
The person speaking and other people with him or her.
"Are you and Mia still going?" "No, were finished."
We went to Paris together.
We ought to help.
Let's go. We need to talk to Mark.
We won our football game.
—
People in general.
We need to think about other people more.
we
Determiner
—
The person speaking and other people with him or her.
We Canadians don't act that way.