query | You use a__ to interrupt yourself in order to make a comment on what you are saying .You use and to interrupt yourself in order to make a comment on what you are saying . As Downing claims, and as we noted above, reading is best established when the child has an intimate knowledge of the language. Finally–and I really ought to stop in a minute–I wish to make the following recommendations. |
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word | and |
full-definition | conjunction You use and to link two or more words, groups, or clauses . When he returned, she and Simon had already gone. Between 1914 and 1920 large parts of Albania were occupied by the Italians. I'm going to write good jokes and become a good comedian. I'm 53 and I'm very happy. You use and to link two words or phrases that are the same in order to emphasize the degree of something, or to suggest that something continues or increases over a period of time. Day by day I am getting better and better. We talked for hours and hours. He lay down on the floor and cried and cried. You use and to link two statements about events when one of the events follows the other. I waved goodbye and went down the stone harbour steps. I pulled the door closed and did up my boots on the landing. You use and to link two statements when the second statement continues the point that has been made in the first statement. You could only tell the effects of the disease in the long term, and five years wasn't long enough. The cure for bad teaching is good teachers, and good teachers cost money. You use and to link two clauses when the second clause is a result of the first clause. All through the day crowds arrived and by midnight thousands of people packed the square. You use and to interrupt yourself in order to make a comment on what you are saying . As Downing claims, and as we noted above, reading is best established when the child has an intimate knowledge of the language. Finally–and I really ought to stop in a minute–I wish to make the following recommendations. You use and at the beginning of a sentence to introduce something else that you want to add to what you have just said . Some people think that starting a sentence with and is ungrammatical, but it is now quite common in both spoken and written English. Commuter airlines fly to out-of-the-way places. And business travelers are the ones who go to those locations. You use and to introduce a question which follows logically from what someone has just said. 'He used to be so handsome.'—'And now?'. 'Well, of course, they haven't won a football game.'—'And what would you expect?'. And is used by broadcasters and people making announcements to change a topic or to start talking about a topic they have just mentioned . And now the headlines. Football, and Aston Villa are playing at home today. You use and to indicate that two numbers are to be added together. What does two and two make? And is used before a fraction that comes after a whole number. ...spent five and a half years. ...fourteen and a quarter per cent. You use and in numbers larger than one hundred, after the words 'hundred' or ' thousand ' and before other numbers. We printed two hundred and fifty invitations. ...three thousand and twenty-six pounds. |
cefr-level | A1 |
Tags: oxford5k::cefr-level:a1
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