Englishfor English speakers
with
Preposition
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With is used to show the other people or things present when something happened
I went to school with my brother.
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With is used to describe something added to something else
The cat has a collar with a bell on it.
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With is used to show what thing is used to do something
He hit the nail with a hammer.
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Used to introduce non-finite and verbless clauses.
With the children so sick, we weren't able to get much work done.
no
Adverb
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used to disagree or refuse (not accept).
No, I do not fish.
I'm I ready? No, I still have some things to do first.
no
Determinative
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Not any.
There is no water left.
No hot dogs were sold yesterday.
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Not any possibility or allowance of (doing something).
No smoking
There's no stopping her once she gets going.
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Not; not properly, not really; not fully.
My mother's no fool.
Working nine to five every day is no life.
ill
Adjective
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If you are ill you are angry or disturbed.
You are making me ill with your attacks.
intent
Noun
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Your intent is what you have in your mind as you plan, goal, wish, etc.
My original intent was to return it to her, but I was unable to do so.
What he did was wrong, but it will be difficult to prove criminal intent.
The details were hard to understand, but the general intent was clear.
intent
Adjective
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If you are intent on something, you have a strong plan to have or do it, and you won't let other things stop you easily.
They were so intent on fishing, they didn't notice their boat was floating away.
The cat was still, intent on the bird in the garden.