Englishfor English speakers
geld
Verb
—
To castrate a male (usually an animal).
nur
noun
—
A hard knot in wood; a knur or knurl.
—
(obsolete) A hard knob of wood used in playing hockey.
Nur
properNoun
—
township in Qira, Hotan, Xinjiang, China
so
Adverb
—
How much; very much.
The box was so wide that the person was not able to take it through the door.
so
Preposition
—
With purpose. Saying the reason why someone does something.
The person locks the door so no one is able to come in and take things.
We help them so that they can get better.
um
Interjection
—
You use um to show that you are thinking and not ready to speak.
We were prepared, um, in our minds, in our heart, for -- for whatever.
What she did isn't so, um, nice.
—
You use um to show that you doubt or are not sure about something somebody said.
Um, I don't think that works.
What? Um, okay. Sure, I guess. I'll tell her.
—
You use um with a falling tone to show that you agree.
"How does Tuesday sound?" "Um, sure. Sounds good!"
—
You use um to get somebody's attention.
Um, excuse me! Are you busy?
—
You use um to bring attention to something that just happened or that was just said.
Um, did you just call me "stupid"?
sich
noun
—
administrative and military centre for Cossacks