Englishfor English speakers
sie
verb
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(intransitive) To sink; fall; drop.
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(intransitive) To fall, as in a swoon; faint.
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(intransitive, dialectal) To drop, as water; trickle.
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(transitive) To sift.
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(transitive, dialectal) To strain, as milk; filter.
sie
pronoun
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(rare) Gender-neutral subject pronoun, grammatically equivalent to the gendered pronouns he and she
der
interjection
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(Australian) Disdainful indication that something is obvious.
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(Australian) Indication of stupidity.
hand
Noun
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Your hands are the parts of your body at the end of your arms. A hand has four fingers and a thumb.
Mother, I'm afraid, please hold my hand.
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Clock hands are pointed needles that show what time it is.
The long hand is pointing to the 4, which refers to how many hours have passed. The short hand is pointing to the 7, which refers to how many groups of 5 minutes have passed. The time is therefore 4:35.
hand
Verb
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If I hand you something, I give it to you.
Please hand me that tool. I can't reach it.
in
Preposition
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Used to show that something is inside something else.
The cat is in the box.
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Used to show that someone is at home, or is available.
Is John in?
The Doctor is now in.
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Used to show movement towards the inside.
The rain came in through the window.
den
Noun
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A den is a place where a wild animal lives.
The wolf went back to his den to sleep after a day of hunting.
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A den is a small cave in the side of a hill.
mund
noun
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(obsolete) A hand.
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(obsolete) Security, granted by a king or earl, the violation of which was punished by a fine (a mundbyrd).
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(obsolete) Protection; guardianship.