Englishfor English speakers
more
Determiner
—
A larger amount.
He does more work than I do.
A lot more than twenty people came to the meeting.
You can have a little more money.
More than one glass was broken.
—
.
I want more soup.
more
Adverb
—
Having a larger amount of a characteristic in a group.
Pat is more intelligent than Terry.
specialized
—
adjective
(= specialised)
developed or designed for a special activity or function
a specialized tool
terms
—
noun
(= footing)
status with respect to the relations between people or groups
on good terms with her in-laws
on a friendly footing
—
noun
(= price, damage)
the amount of money needed to purchase something
the price of gasoline
he got his new car on excellent terms
how much is the damage?
exist
Verb
—
When something exists, it is real, not just an idea.
I can hold the rock, therefore it exists.
There exists a possibility that the mission will fail.
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.
various
Adjective
—
Various ways, types, kinds, etc. are many different ones.
I've made the dish a number of times in various ways. It's never the same.
What are the differences between the various types of bottled water?
various
Determiner
—
You use various to identify more than one thing without saying exactly which ones.
Various books have been taken.
There are various ways to fix the problem.
You have broken various of the rules.
context
Noun
—
Something's context is the situation that it happens in.
Sometime, we can't read someone's writing, but the message can be understood in context because human readers use their knowledge of language and the world to help us.
The actions of a business cannot be fully understood except in the context of a particular organisation.