Englishfor English speakers
reserve
Verb
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If you reserve a room, a table, seat etc. you arrange for it to be kept for you, usually for a particular date and time.
This parking spot is reserved for the general manager.
We had reserved a room at the hotel.
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When you're cooking, if you reserve something, you put it aside to use later.
Cook pasta as directed on package and reserve 1/4 cup of pasta cooking water.
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If you reserve something for a particular situation, you usually don't use it except in that situation.
She spoke to me in a voice usually reserved for young children.
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If you reserve the right to do something, you let people know that these are your legal rights and you may use or defend them.
This program is copyrighted © 2008 by CBS Studios Inc. All Rights Reserved.
reserve
Noun
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Reserves are extra amounts of something that are for the future.
Canada has 179 billion barrels of oil reserves - second only to Saudi Arabia.
The central bank's cash and gold reserves have fallen by 25 percent since June 2001.
This special sugar is your body's quick, easy-access energy reserve.
She always had some water in reserve.
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Reserve is a feeling of holding back, controlling yourself, and not being very friendly.
We listened to all this talk about change with a certain reserve.
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Reserves are extra players on a team, or fighters in an army in case somebody is hurt or needs a rest.
Their best player spent a season on injured reserve after hurting his knee.
She joined the Army Reserve during her time in university.
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A reserve is an area of land or water that is protected from humans.
These lands (such as national parks and nature reserves) supply cities with clean drinking water.
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A reserve (or reservation) is an area of land that belongs to a group of indigenous people, such as a First Nations group in Canada.
a
Determinative
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A is used when the following word could be any of a certain type.
Compare "A book I saw on the shelf" and "The book I gave you yesterday".
a
Noun
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A is the first letter of the alphabet.
The letter "a" comes before "b".
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In some schools, an A is a very high grade.
Ron got an A on his earth science test.
right
Adjective
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When something is right, it is correct.
You did the right thing.
right
Noun
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When something is to the right of a location, it means the direction 90º clockwise.
He takes a right at the library.
She made a right turn on Oak Street.
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When you have the right for something, it means that it is an activity allowed by status.
You have the right to remain silent.
Administrators on Wiktionary have the right to block users from editing.
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An action that is moral.
Two wrongs don’t make a right.
right
Verb
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When you turn something right, you turn it the right-side-up.
He righted the boat.
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When you make something right, you correct it.
He tried to right a wrong.
right
Adverb
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In the direction 90º clockwise.
She turned right.