TAYLOR SWIFT - LAST CHRISTMAS

 TAYLOR SWIFT - LAST CHRISTMAS

Last Christmas, I gave you my heart
But the very next day, you gave it away
This year to save me from tears
I'll give it to someone special

Once bitten and twice shy
I keep my distance but you still catch my eye
Tell me, baby, do you recognize me?
Well, it's been a year, it doesn't surprise me

Merry Christmas, I wrapped it up and sent it
With a note saying, "I love you", I meant it
Now I know what a fool I've been
But if you kissed me now I know you'd fool me again

Last Christmas, I gave you my heart
But the very next day, you gave it away
This year to save me from tears
I'll give it to someone special

Last Christmas, I gave you my heart
But the very next day, you gave it away
This year to save me from tears
I'll give it to someone special

A crowded room and friends with tired eyes
I'm hiding from you and your soul of ice
My God, I thought you were someone to rely on
Me? I guess I was a shoulder to cry on

A face on a lover with a fire in his heart
A girl undercover but you tore her apart
Maybe this year, maybe this year
I'll give it to someone special

'Cause last Christmas, I gave you my heart
But the very next day, you gave it away
This year to save me from tears
I'll give it to someone special

Last Christmas, I gave you my heart
But the very next day, you gave it away
This year to save me from tears
I'll give it to someone special

And last Christmas
And this year won't be anything like
Anything like

Last Christmas, I gave you my heart
But the very next day, you gave it away
And this year to save me from tears
I'll give it to someone special

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عبارات لالتین استفاده شده در زبان انگلیسی Latin Phrases Used in English

Latin Phrases Used in English

Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?

There are quite a few Latin words and phrases that appear in English, usually in written English but sometimes in spoken English too. Some of them are used more in certain areas such as law, medicine, business etc. Generally, you do not need to learn and use many Latin phrases, but it could help you to recognize them when you see them. Here are some of the most common. (Note that many Latin phrases are used in other - mainly European - languages. So if you speak one of those languages you may be familiar with many if not all of the Latin phrases on this page.)

 

Latin

meaning

example or comment

ad hoc

formed or done for a particular purpose only

An ad hoc committee was set up to oversee the matter.

ad nauseam

repeating or continuing to the point of boredom

The apparent risks of secondary smoking have been debated ad nauseam.

bona fide

genuine; real

Only bona fide members of the club may use the clubhouse.

caveat emptor

let the buyer beware

The principle that the buyer is responsible for checking the quality and suitability of goods before a purchase is made.

circa; c.

around; approximately

The house was built circa 1870.

coitus interruptus

interrupted congress; aborting sexual intercourse prior to ejaculation

Coitus interruptus is the only form of birth control that some religions allow.

compos mentis

in control of the mind (often used ironically)

Please call me back later when I'm compos mentis.

de facto

in fact; in reality

Although the Emperor was the head of state, the de facto ruler of Japan was the Shogun.

ergo

therefore

cogito ergo sum

erratum

error; mistake

Lists of errors from a previous publication are often marked "errata" (the plural, meaning errors).

et cetera; etc

and the rest; and so on; and more

We urgently need to buy medical equipment, drugs et cetera.

ex gratia

from kindness or grace (without recognizing any liability or legal obligation)

They received an undisclosed ex gratia payment.

ex libris

from the books; fromthe library

In the front of a book: Ex Libris John Brown

habeas corpus

a court order instructing that a person under arrest be brought before a judge

The right of habeas corpus has long been regarded as an important safeguard of individual liberty.

in loco parentis

in the place of a parent

Teachers sometimes have to act in loco parentis.

in situ

in its original place

The paintings have been taken to the museum but the statues have been left in situ.

in vitro

(in biology) taking place outside a living organism (for example in a test tube)

in vitro fertilization

inter alia

among other things

The report covers, inter alia, computers, telecommunications and air travel.

per

for each

This petrol station charges $5.00 per gallon.

per annum; p.a.

for each year

The population is increasing by about 2% per annum.

per capita

for each person

The country's annual income is $5000 per capita.

per se

in itself/themselves; intrinsically

These facts per se are not important.

post-mortem

examination of a body after death; autopsy

The post-mortem revealed that she had been murdered.

pro rata

proportional; proportionally

The car rental charge is $50 per day and then pro rata for part of a day.

quid pro quo

favour or advantage given or expected in return for something

Similar to "tit for tat", "give and take" and "You scratch my back and I'll scratch yours."

re

about; concerning; regarding

Re: Unpaid Invoice

I spoke to the manager re your salary increase.

sine qua non

essential condition; thing that is absolutely necessary; "without which not"

Words are a sine qua non of spoken language.

status quo

existing state of affairs

Monarchies naturally wish to maintain the status quo.

terra firma

dry land; the ground as opposed to the air or sea

Shackleton and his men set foot on terra firma after three weeks at sea.

verbatim

in exactly the same words

I had to memorize the text verbatim.

versus; vs.; v.

against

What are the benefits of organic versus inorganic foods?

In the case of Bush versus Gore, the judges decided...

vice versa

the other way round

My telephone serves me, and not vice versa.

persona non grata

unacceptable or unwelcome person

From now on, you may consider yourself persona non grata in this house.

 

 

Some Latin Sayings and Quotations

Carpe diem! "Seize the day!" An exclamation urging someone to make the most of the present time and not worry about the future.

Cogito ergo sum. "I think, therefore I am." French philosopher Descartes' famous formula of 1641 attempting to prove his own existence.

Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori. "It is a sweet and glorious thing to die for one's country." From Horace, Odes III, 2, 13. Used by Wilfred Owen for the title of a poem about World War I, Dulce et Decorum Est.

Festina lente. "Hurry slowly." An oxymoron - similar to "more haste, less speed".

in vino veritas "in wine, truth" (meaning that a drunk man reveals the truth about himself)

Nil desperandum. "Do not despair."

per ardua ad astra "through struggle to the stars" (motto of British Royal Air Force and others)

Quis custodiet ipsos custodes? "Who shall guard the guards?"

quod erat demonstrandum (QED) "which was to be demonstrated" The abbreviation is often written after a mathematical proof.

Tempus fugit. "Time flies."

Veni, vidi, vici. "I came, I saw, I conquered." The message sent by Julius Caesar to the Roman Senate after his battle in 47 BC against King Pharnaces II.

Common Latin Abbreviations

  • A.D. (anno domini): in the year of the Lord
  • ad inf., ad infin. (ad infinitum): to infinity
  • A.M. (ante meridiem): before midday
  • B.A. (Baccalaureus Artium): Bachelor of Arts
  • B.D. (Baccalaureus Divinitatis): Bachelor of Divinity
  • B.L. (Baccalaureus Legum): Bachelor of Law
  • B.Lit. (Baccalaureus Lit[t]erarum): Bachelor of Literature (or Letters)
  • B.M. (Baccalaureus Medicinae): Bachelor of Medicine
  • B.Mus. (Baccalaureus Musicae): Bachelor of Music
  • B.Phil. (Baccalaureus Philosophiae): Bachelor of Philosophy
  • B.S., B.Sc. (Baccalaureus Scientiae): Bachelor of Science
  • c., circ. see circa
  • cf. (confer): compare
  • D.D. (Divinitatis Doctor): Doctor of Divinity
  • D.G. (Dei Gratia): By the grace of God
  • D.Lit. (Doctor Litterarum): Doctor of Literature
  • D.M. (Doctor Medicinae): Doctor of Medicine
  • D.V. (Deo volente): God willing
  • e.g. (exempli gratia): for example
  • et al. (et alii, et alia): and others
  • etc. (et cetera): and the rest, and so forth
  • et seq. (et sequens, et sequentes, et sequentia): and the following
  • id. (idem): the same
  • i.e. (id est): that is
  • lb. (libra): pound
  • M.A. (Magister Artium): Master of Arts
  • M.D. (Medicinae Doctor): Doctor of Medicine
  • M.O. (modus operandi): method of operating
  • N.B. (Nota bene): Note well
  • no. (numero): by number
  • non obst. (non obstante): notwithstanding
  • non seq. (non sequitur): it does not follow
  • p.d. (per diem): by the day
  • p.a. see per annum
  • Ph.D. (Philosophiae Doctor): Doctor of Philosophy
  • P.M. (post meridiem): after midday
  • P.S. (post scriptum): written after
  • Q.E.D. see quod erat demonstrandum
  • R. (rex, regina): King, Queen
  • R.I.P. (Requiescat in pace): Rest in peace
  • vox pop. (vox populi): the voice of the people
  • vs. see versus

دیکشنری مربوط به آب و هوا WEATHER GLOSSARY

A

Absolute humidity The mass of water vapor in a given volume of air. It represents the density of water vapor in the air.

Absolute zero A temperature of -273ºC, -460ºF, or 0ºK. Theoretically, there is no molecular motion at this temperature.

Absorptivity The efficiency of radiation absorption.

Acclimatization The gradual adjustment of the body to new climatic or other environmental conditions, for example, the adjustment to low levels of oxygen at high altitudes.

Accretion The growth of a precipitation particle by the collision of an ice crystal or snowflake with a supercooled liquid droplet that freezes upon impact.

Actual evapotranspiraton The rate of water lost from vegetation and soil, ordinarily at a slower rate than the potential rate.

Actual vapor pressure See vapor pressure.

Adiabatic process A process that takes place without a transfer of heat between the system (such as an air parcel) and its surroundings. In an adiabatic process compression always results in warming, and expansion results in cooling.

Advection The horizontal transfer of any atmospheric property by the wind.

Advection fog Occurs when warm, moist air moves over a cold surface and the air cools to below its dew point.

Aerovane A device that resembles a wind vane with a propeller at one end. Used to indicate wind speed and direction.

Air density Mass per unit volume of air; about 1.275 km per cubic meter at 0ºC and 1000 millibars.

Air mass A large expanse of air having similar temperature and humidity at any given height.

Air pressure The cumulative force exerted on any surface by the molecules composing air.

Albedo The percent of radiation returning from a surface compared to that which strikes it.

Altimeter An instrument that indicates the altitude of an object above a fixed level. Pressure altimeters use an aneroid barometer with a scale graduated in altitude instead of pressure.

Altocumulus A middle cloud, usually white or gray. Often occurs in layers or patches with wavy, rounded masses or rolls.

Altocumulus castellanus An altocumulus showing vertical development, individual cloud elements have towerlike tops, often in the shape of tiny castles.

Altocumulus lenticularis A lens-shaped altocumulus cloud; a mountain-wave cloud generated by the disturbance of horizontal airflow caused by a prominent mountain range.

Altostratus A middle cloud composed of gray or bluish sheets or layers of uniform appearance. In the thinner regions, the sun or moon usually appears dimly visible.

Ambient air The air surrounding a cloud, or the air surrounding rising or sinking air parcels.

Ambient temperature Temperature of the surrounding (ambient) air.

Anemometer An instrument designed to measure wind speed.

Aneroid barometer An instrument designed to measure atmospheric pressure. It contains no liquid.

Annual range of temperature The difference between the warmest and coldest months at any given location.

Anomalies Departures of temperature, precipitation, or other weather elements from long-term averages.

Arctic air A very cold and dry air mass that forms primarily in winter and the northern interior of North America.

Atmospheric window A region of the electromagnetic spectrum from 8 to 12 µm where the atmosphere is transparent to radiation.

Autumnal equinox The equinox at which the sun approaches the Southern Hemisphere and passes directly over the equator. Occurs around September 23.

B

Barograph A recording instrument that provides a continuous trace of air pressure variation with time.

Barometer An instrument that measures atmospheric pressure. The two most common barometers are the mercury barometer and the aneroid barometer.

Beaufort scale A scale of wind strength based on visual assessment of the effects of wind on seas and vegetation.

Black body A hypothetical object that absorbs all of the radiation that strikes it. It also emits radiation at a maximum rate for its given temperature.

Blizzard A severe weather condition characterized by low temperatures and strong winds (greater than 32 mi/hr) bearing a great amount of snow. When these conditions continue after the falling snow has ended, it is termed a ground blizzard.

Bora A cold katabatic wind that originates in Yugoslavia and flows onto the coastal plain of the Adriatic Sea.

Bowen ratio The ratio of energy available for sensible heating to energy available for latent heating.

Boyle's law When the temperature is held constant, the pressure and density of an ideal gas are directly proportional.

C

Ceilometer An instrument that automatically records cloud height.

Centrifugal force A force directed outward, away from the center of a rotating object; equal in magnitude to the centripetal force but in the opposite direction.

Centripetal force An inward-directed force that confines an object to a circular path; equal in magnitude to the centrifugal force but in the opposite direction.

Charles's law With constant pressure, the temperature of an ideal gas is inversely proportional to the density of the gas.

Chinook A warm, dry wind on the eastern side of the Rocky Mountains. In the Alps, the wind is called a Foehn.

Cirrocumulus A high cloud that appears as a white patch of cloud without shadows. It consists of very small elements in the form of grains or ripples.

Cirrostratus A high cloud appearing as a whitish veil that may totally cover the sky. Often produces halo phenomena.

Cirrus A high cloud composed of ice crystals in the form of thin, white, featherlike clouds in patches, filaments, or narrow bands.

Climate The accumulation of daily and seasonal weather events over a long period of time. A description of aggregate weather conditions; the sum of all statistical weather information that helps describe a place or region.

Cloud base The lowest portion of a cloud.

Cloudburst Any sudden and heavy rain shower.

Cloud cover The amount of the sky obscured by clouds when observed at a particular location.

Cloud deck The top of a cloud layer, usually viewed from an aircraft.

Cloud seeding The introduction of artificial substances (usually silver iodide or dry ice) into a cloud for the purpose of either modifying its development or increasing its precipitation.

Coalescence The merging of cloud droplets into a single larger droplet.

Cold fog See Supercooled cloud.

Cold front The leading edge of a cold air mass.

Condensation Process by which water changes phase from a vapor to a liquid.

Condensation nuclei Small particles in the atmosphere that serve as the core of tiny condensing cloud droplets. These may be dust, salt, or other material.

Conduction The transfer of heat by molecular activity from one substance to another, or through a substance. Transfer is always from warmer to colder regions.

Continental air mass An air mass that forms over land; it is normally relatively dry.

Continental Climate A climate lacking marine influence and characterized by more extreme temperatures than in marine climates: therefore, it has a relatively high annual temperature range for its latitude.

Continental polar air Relatively dry air mass that develops over the northern interior of North America; very cold in winter and mild in summer.

Continental tropical air Warm, dry air mass that forms over the subtropical deserts of the south-western United States.

Contrail (condensation trail) A cloudlike streamer frequently seen forming behind aircraft flying in clear, cold, humid air.

Convection Motions in a fluid that result in the transport and mixing of the fluid's properties. In meteorology, convection usually refers to atmospheric motions that are predominantly vertical, such as rising air currents due to surface heating. The rising of heated surface air and the sinking of cooler air aloft is often called free convection. (Compare with forced convection.)

Convective condensation level (CCL) The level above the surface marking the base of a cumiliform cloud that is forming due to surface heating and rising thermals.

Convergence An atmospheric condition that exists when the winds cause a horizontal net inflow of air into a specified region.

Cooling degree-day A form of degree-day used in estimating the amount of energy necessary to reduce the effective temperature of warm air. A cooling degree-day is a day on which the average temperature is one degree above a desired base temperature.

Coriolis effect A deflective force arising from the rotation of the earth on its axis; affects principally synoptic-scale and global-scale winds. Winds are deflected to the right of the initial direction in the Northern Hemisphere, and to the left in the Southern Hemisphere.

Crepuscular rays Alternating light and dark bands of light that appear to fan out from the sun's position, usually at twilight.

Cumulonimbus An exceptionally dense and vertically developed cloud, often with a top in the shape of an anvil. The cloud is frequently accompanied by heavy showers, lightning, thunder, and sometimes hail. It is also known as a thunderstorm cloud.

Cumulus A cloud in the form of individual, detached domes or towers that are usually dense and well defined. It has a flat base with a bulging upper part that often resembles cauliflower. Cumulus clouds of fair weather are called cumulus humilis. Those that exhibit much vertical growth are called cumulus congestur or towering cumulus.

Cumulus Congestus An upward building convective cloud with vertical development between that of a cumulus cloud and a cumulonimbus.

Cup anemometer An instrument used to monitor wind-speed. Wind rotation of cups generates and electric current calibrated in wind speed.

Cutoff high Anticyclonic circulation system that separates from the prevailing westerly airflow and therefore remains stationary.

Cutoff low Cyclonic circulation system that separates from the prevailing westerly airflow and therefore remains stationary.

D

Daily range of temperature The difference between the maximum and minimum temperatures for any given day.

Degree days Computed from each day's mean temperature (max+min/2). For each degree that a day's mean temperature is below or above a reference temperature is counted as one degree day.

Density The ratio of the mass of a substance to the volume occupied by it.

Deposition A process that occurs in subfreezing air when water vapor changes directly to ice without becoming a liquid first. (Also called sublimation in meteorology.)

Deposition nuclei Tiny particles in the atmosphere that serve as the core of tiny ice crystals as water vapor changes to the solid form. These are also called ice nuclei.

Desert One of two types of dry climate-the driest of the dry climates.

Dew Water that has condensed onto objects near the ground when their temperatures have fallen below the dew point of the surface air.

Dew point (dew-point temperature) The temperature to which air must be cooled (at constant pressure and constant water vapor content) for saturation to occur. When the dew point falls below freezing it is called the frost point.

Diffraction The bending of light around objects, such as cloud and fog droplets, producing fringes of light and dark or colored bands.

Diffuse insolation Solar radiation that is scattered or reflected by atmospheric components (clouds, for example) to the earth's surface.

Direct insolation Solar radiation that is transmitted directly through the atmosphere to the earth's surface without interacting with atmospheric components.

Divergence An atmospheric condition that exists when the winds cause a horizontal net outflow of air from a specific region.

Downbursts A severe localized downdraft that can be experienced beneath a severe thunderstorm. (Compare Microburst)

Downdraft Downward moving air, usually within a thunderstorm cell.

Drainage basin A fixed geographical region from which a river and its tributaries drain water.

Drizzle Small drops between 0.2 and 0.5 mm in diameter that fall slowly and reduce visibility more than light rain.

Drought A period of abnormally dry weather sufficiently long enough to cause serious effects on agriculture and other activities in the affected area.

Dry adiabatic rate The rate of change of temperature in a rising or descending unsaturated air parcel. The rate of adiabatic cooling or warming is 10ºC per 1000 m (5.5ºF per 1000 ft).

Dry climate A climate in which yearly precipitation is not as great as the potential loss of water by evaporation.

Dust devil (or whirlwind) A small but rapidly rotating wind made visible by the dust, sand, and debris it picks up from the surface. It develops best on clear, dry, hot afternoons.

E

Eddy A small volume of air (or any fluid) that behaves differently from the larger flow in which it exists.

Effective emissivity A correction factor, dependent on the radiational characteristics of the earth -atmosphere system, that permits application of black body radiation laws to the earth-atmosphere system

Emissivity The fractional amount of radiation emitted by a given object or substance in comparison to the amount emitted by a perfect emitter.

Emittance The rate at which a black body radiates energy across all wave-lengths.

Entrainment The mixing of environmental air into a preexisting air current or cloud so that the environmental air becomes part of the current or cloud.

Environmental lapse rate The rate of decrease of temperature with elevation. It is most often measured with a radiosonde.

Equilibrium vapor pressure The necessary vapor pressure around liquid water that allows the water to remain in equilibrium with its environment. Also called saturation vapor pressure.

Equinox The time when the sun crosses the plane of the earth's equator occurring about March 21 and September 22.

Evaporation The process by which a liquid changes into a gas.

Evapotranspiration Vaporization of water through direct evaporation from wet surfaces and the release of water vapor by vegetation.

Evaporation fog Fog produced when sufficient water vapor is added to the air by evaporation. The two common types are steam fog, which forms when cold air moves over warm water, and frontal fog, which forms as warm raindrops evaporate in a cool air mass.

Exosphere The outermost portion of the atmosphere.

F

Fall Freeze date The date of occurrence in the fall of the first minimum at or below a temperature threshold.

Fall streaks Falling ice crystals that evaporate before reaching the ground.

Foehn See Chinook.

Fog A cloud with its base at the earth's surface. It reduces visibility to below 1 km.

Forced convection On a small scale, a form of mechanical stirring taking place when twisting eddies of air are able to mix.

Free convection Convection triggered by intense solar heating of the earth's surface.

Freeze A condition occurring over a widespread area when the surface air temperature remains below freezing for a sufficient time to damage certain agricultural crops. A freeze most often occurs as cold air is advected into a region, causing freezing conditions to exist in a deep layer of surface air. Also called advection frost.

Freeze free season The number of days between the last spring freeze date and the first fall freeze date.

Freezing rain and freezing drizzle Rain or drizzle that falls in liquid form and then freezes upon striking a cold object or ground. Both can produce a coating of ice on objects which is called glaze.

Front The transition zone between two distinct air masses.

Frontal fog See Evaporation fog.

Frost (also called hoarfrost) A covering of ice produced by deposition (sublimation) on exposed surfaces when the air temperature falls below the frost point (the dew point is below freezing).

Frost point See Dew point.

Frozen dew The transformation of liquid dew into tiny beads of ice when the air temperature drops below freezing.

Funnel cloud A rotating conelike cloud that extends down-ward from the base of a thunderstorm. When it reaches the surface it is called a tornado.

G

Geostrophic wind A theoretical horizontal wind blowing in a straight path, parallel to the isobars or contours, at a constant speed. The geostrophic wind results when the Coriolis force exactly balances the horizontal pressure gradient force.

Glaciation The conversion of all the supercooled liquid water in a cloud into ice crystals, thus reducing the growth rate of ice crystals and hail.

Glaciated cloud A cloud or portion of a cloud where only ice crystals exist.

Glaze A coating of ice on objects formed when supercooled rain freezes on contact. A storm that produces glaze is called an icing storm.

Glory Colored rings that appear around the shadow of an object.

Graupel See Snow pellets

Green flash A small, green color that occasionally appears on the upper part of the sun as it rises or sets.

Ground fog See Radiation fog.

Growing degree-day A form of the degree-day used as a guide for crop planting and for estimating crop maturity dates.

Growing season The number of days between the last spring freeze date and the first fall freeze date.

H

Haboob A dust or sandstorm that forms as cold downdrafts from a thunderstorm turbulently lift dust and sand into the air.

Hail Solid precipitation in the form of chunks or balls of ice with diameters greater than 5 mm. The stones fall from cumulonimbus clouds.

Hailstones Transparent or partially opaque particles of ice that range in size from that of a pea to that of golf balls.

Hair hygrometer An instrument used to monitor relative humidity by measuring the changes in the length of human hair that accompany humidity variations.

Halos Rings or arcs that encircle the sun or moon when seen through an ice crystal cloud or a sky filled with falling ice crystals. Halos are produced by refraction of light.

Haze Fine dry or wet dust or salt particles dispersed through a portion of the atmosphere. Individually these are not visible but cumulatively they will diminish visibility.

Heat A form of energy transferred between systems by virtue of their temperature differences.

Heat capacity The ratio of the heat absorbed (or released) by a system to the corresponding temperature rise (or fall).

Heat index (HI) An index that combines air temperature and relative humidity to determine an apparent temperature-how hot it actually feels.

Heat of fusion Heat released when water changes phase from liquid to solid; 80 calories per gram

Heat of melting Heat required to change the phase of water from solid to liquid; 80 calories per gram.

Heating degree-day A form of the degree-day used as an index for fuel consumption. Needed on days when average air temperature falls below 69 ºF (18 ºC); computed by subtracting the day's average temperature from 65 ºF.

Heat lightning Distant lightning that illuminates the sky but is too far away for its thunder to be heard.

Heiligenschein A faint white ring surrounding the shadow of an observer's head on a dew-covered lawn.

Heterosphere The atmosphere above 80 km (50 mi) where gases are stratified, with concentrations of the heavier gases decreasing more rapidly with altitude than concentrations of the lighter gases.

High inversion fog A fog that lifts above the surface but does not completely dissipate because of a strong inversion (usually subsidence) that exists above the fog layer.

Highland climate Complex pattern of climate conditions associated with mountains. Highland climates are characterized by large differences that occur over short distances.

Hoarfrost Fernlike crystals of ice that form by deposition of water vapor on twigs, tree branches, and other vegetation.

Homosphere The atmosphere up to 80 km (50 mi) in which the proportionality of principal gaseous constituents, such as oxygen and nitrogen, is constant.

Humid continental climate A relatively severe climate characteristic of broad continents in the middle latitudes between approximately 40 and 50º north latitude. This climate is not found in the southern hemisphere, where the middle latitudes are dominated by the oceans.

Humid Subtropical Climate A climate generally located on the eastern side of a continent and characterized by hot, sultry summers and cool winters.

Hurricane A severe tropical cyclone having winds in excess of 64 knots (74 mi/hr).

Hydrograph An instrument that provides a continuous trace of relative humidity with time.

Hygrometer An instrument designed to measure the air's water vapor content. The sensing part of the instrument can be hair (hair hygrometer), a plate coated with carbon (electrical hygrometer), or an infrared sensor (infrared hygrometer).

Hypothermia The deterioration in one's mental and physical condition brought on by a rapid lowering of human body temperature.

I

Ice Cap Climate A climate that has no monthly means above freezing and supports no vegetative cover except in a few scattered high mountain areas. This climate, with its perpetual ice and snow, is confined largely to the ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica.

Ice fog A type of fog composed of tiny suspended ice particles that forms at very low temperatures.

Ice nuclei Particles that act as nuclei for the formation of ice crystals in the atmosphere.

Ice pellets See Sleet

Indian summer An unseasonably warm spell with clear skies near the middle of autumn. Usually follows a substantial period of cool weather.

Infrared radiation Electromagnetic radiation with wavelengths between about 0.7 and 1000 µm. This radiation is longer than visible radiation but shorter than microwave radiation.

Insolation The incoming solar radiation that reaches the earth and the atmosphere.

Intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ) The boundary zone separating the northeast trade winds of the Northern Hemisphere from the southeast trade winds of the Southern Hemisphere.

Inversion An increase in air temperature with height.

Ion An electrically charged atom, molecule, or particle.

Ionosphere An electrified region of the upper atmosphere where fairly large concentrations of ions and free electrons exist.

Iridescence Brilliant spots or borders of colors, most often red and green, observed in clouds up to about 30º from the sun.

Isobar A line connecting points of equal pressure

Isotach A line connecting points of equal wind speed.

Isotherm A line connecting points of equal wind temperature.

J

January thaw A period of relatively mild weather around January 20 to 23 that occurs primarily in New England; an example of a singularity in the climatic record.

Jet stream Relatively strong winds concentrated within a narrow band in the atmosphere.

K

Katabatic wind Any wind blowing downslope. Usually cold.

L

Lake breeze A wind blowing onshore from the surface of a lake.

Lake-effect snows Localized snowstorms that form on the downwind side of a lake. Such storms are common in late fall and early winter near the Great Lakes as cold, dry air picks up moisture and warmth from the unfrozen bodies of water.

Land breeze A coastal breeze that blows from land to sea, usually at night.

Lapse rate The rate at which an atmospheric variable (usually temperature) decreases with height. (See Environmental lapse rate.)

Latent heat The heat that is either released or absorbed by a unit mass of a substance when it undergoes a change of state, such as during evaporation, condensation, or sublimation.

Lenticular cloud A cloud in the shape of a lens.

Lightning A visible electrical discharge produced by thunderstorms.

Longwave radiation A term most often used to describe the infrared energy emitted by the earth and the atmosphere.

M

Magnetosphere The region around the earth in which the earth's magnetic field plays a dominant part in controlling the physical processes that take place.

Mammatus clouds Clouds that look like pouches hanging from the underside of a cloud.

Marine climate A climate dominated by the ocean, because of the moderating effect of water, sites having this climate are considered relatively mild.

Maritime air mass An air mass that originates over the ocean. These air masses are relatively humid.

Maritime polar air Cool, humid air mass that forms over the cold ocean waters of the North Pacific and North Atlantic.

Maritime tropical air Warm, humid air mass that forms over tropical and subtropical oceans.

Mean annual temperature The average temperature at any given location for the entire year.

Mesoscale The scale of meteorological phenomena that ranges in size from a few km to about 100 km. It includes local winds, thunderstorms, and tornadoes.

Mesosphere The atmospheric layer between the stratosphere and the thermosphere. Located at an average elevation between 50 and 80 km above the earth's surface.

Meteorology The study of the atmosphere and atmospheric phenomena as well as the atmosphere's interaction with the earth's surface, oceans, and life in general.

Microburst A strong localized downdraft less than 4 km wide that occurs beneath severe thunderstorms. A strong downdraft greater than 4 km across is called a downburst.

Microclimate The climate structure of the air space near the surface of the earth.

Microscale The smallest scale of atmospheric motions.

Millibar(mb) A unit for expressing atmospheric pressure. Sea level pressure is normally close to 1013 mb.

Mirage A refraction phenomenon that makes an object appear to be displaced from its true position. When an object appears higher than it actually is, it is called a superior image. When an object appears lower than it actually is, it is an inferior mirage.

Mist Very thin fog in which visibility is greater than 1.0 km (0.62 mi).

Mistral A katabatic wind that flows from the Alps down the Rhone River Valley of France to the Mediterranean coast.

Mixing ratio The ratio of the mass of water vapor in a given volume of air to the mass of dry air.

Moist adiabatic rate The rate of change of temperature in a rising or descending saturated air parcel. The rate of cooling or warming varies but a common value of 6ºC per 1000 m (3.3ºF per 1000 ft) is used.

Molecular viscosity The small-scale internal fluid friction that is due to the random motion of the molecules within a smooth-flowing fluid, such as air.

Mountain and valley breeze A local wind system of a mountain valley that blows downhill (mountain breeze) at night and uphill (valley breeze) during the day.

N

Nacreous clouds Clouds of unknown composition that have a soft, pearly luster and that form at altitudes about 25 to 30 km above the earth's surface. They are also called mother-of-pearl clouds.

Nimbostratus A dark, gray cloud characterized by more or less continuously falling precipitation. It is not accompanied by lightning, thunder, or hail.

Noctilucent clouds Wavy, thin, bluish-white clouds that are best seen at twilight in polar latitudes. They form at altitudes about 80 to 90 km above the surface.

Nocturnal inversion See Radiation inversion.

O

Offshore breeze A breeze that blows from the land out over the water. Opposite of an onshore breeze.

Onshore breeze A breeze that blows from the water onto the land. Opposite of an offshore breeze.

Orographic uplift The lifting of air over a topographic barrier. Clouds that form in this lifting process are called orographic clouds.

Orographic precipitation Rainfall or snowfall from clouds, induced by topographic uplift.

P

Permafrost A layer of soil beneath the earth's surface that remains frozen throughout the year.

Photodissociation The splitting of a molecule by a photon.

Photon A discrete quantity of energy that can be thought of as a packet of electromagnetic radiation traveling at the speed of light.

Pileus cloud A smooth cloud in the form of a cap. Occurs above, or is attached to, the top of a cumuliform cloud.

Polar air mass A cold air mass that forms in a high-latitude source region.

Polar climates Climates in which the mean temperature of the warmest month is below 10ºC; climates that are too cold to support the growth of trees.

Potential energy The energy that a body possesses by virtue of its position with respect to other bodies in the field of gravity.

Potential evapotranspiration (PE) The amount of moisture that, if it were available, would be removed from a given land area by evaporation and transpiration.

Potential temperature The temperature that a parcel of dry air would have if it were brought dry adiabatically from its original position to a pressure of 1000 mb.

Precipitable water vapor The depth of water that would result if all the vapor in the atmosphere above a location were condensed into liquid water.

Precipitation Any form of water particles-liquid or solid-that falls from the atmosphere and reaches the ground.

Prevailing wind The wind direction most frequently observed during a given period.

Probability forecast A forecast of the probability of occurrence of one or more of a mutually exclusive set of weather conditions.

Psychrometer An instrument used to measure the water vapor content of the air. It consists of two thermometers (dry bulb and wet bulb). After whirling the instrument, the dew point and relative humidity can be obtained with the aid of tables.

Pyranometer An instrument that measures the amount of radiation.

Q R

Radar An instrument useful for remote sensing of meteorological phenomena. It operates by sending radio waves and monitoring those returned by such reflecting objects as raindrops within clouds.

Radiant energy (radiation) Energy propagated in the form of electromagnetic waves. These waves do not need molecules to propagate them, and in a vacuum they travel at nearly 300,000 km per sec.

Radiation fog Fog produced over land when radiational cooling reduces the air temperature to or below its dew point. It is also known as ground fog and valley fog.

Radiation inversion An increase in temperature with height due to radiational cooling of the earth's surface. Also called a nocturnal inversion.

Radiosonde A balloon-borne instrument that measures and transmits pressure, temperature, and humidity to a ground-based receiving station.

Rain Precipitation in the form of liquid water drops that have diameters greater than that of drizzle.

Rain gage A device-usually a cylindrical container-for measuring rain-fall.

Rain Shadow The region on the leeside of a mountain where the precipitation is noticeable less than on the windward side.

Rawinsonde An instrument carried by weather balloons to measure the temperature, humidity, pressure, and winds of the atmosphere.

Reflection The process whereby a surface turns back a portion of the radiation that strikes it.

Refraction The bending of light as it passes from one medium to another

Refractive index The ratio of the speed of light in a vacuum to its speed in a transparent medium.

Relative humidity The ratio of the amount of water vapor actually in the air compared to the amount of water vapor the air can hold at the particular temperature and pressure. The ratio of the air's actual vapor pressure to its saturation vapor pressure.

Rime ice A white, granular deposit of ice formed by the freezing of water drops when they come in contact with an object.

S

Santa Ana The local name given a foehn wind in southern California.

Saturation vapor pressure The maximum amount of water vapor necessary to keep moist air in equilibrium with a surface of pure water or ice. It represents the maximum amount of water vapor that the air can hold at any given temperature and pressure. (See Equilibrium vapor pressure.)

Scattering The process by which small particles in the atmosphere deflect radiation from its path into different directions.

Scintillation The apparent twinkling of a star due to its light passing through regions of differing air densities in the atmosphere.

Sea breeze A coastal local wind that blows from the ocean onto the land. The leading edge of the breeze is termed a sea breeze front.

Sea level pressure The atmospheric pressure at mean sea level.

Semiarid See Steppe.

Sensible heat transfer Movement of heat from one place to another as a consequence of conduction or convection or both.

Sensible temperature The sensation of temperature that the human body feels in contrast to the actual temperature of the environment as measured with a thermometer.

Shear See wind shear.

Sheet lightning A fairly bright lightning flash from distant thunderstorms that illuminates a portion of the cloud.

Shortwave radiation A term most often used to describe the radiant energy emitted from the sun, in the visible and near ultraviolet wavelengths.

Shower Intermittent precipitation from a cumuliform cloud, usually of short duration but often heavy.

Sleet A type of precipitation consisting of transparent pellets of ice 5 mm or less in diameter. Same as ice pellets.

Smog Originally smog meant a mixture of smoke and fog. Today, smog means air that has restricted visibility due to pollution, or pollution formed in the presence of sunlight-photochemical smog.

Snow Solid precipitation in the form of minute ice flakes that occur below 0ºC.

Snowflake An aggregate of ice crystals that falls from a cloud

Snow flurries Light showers of snow that fall intermittently.

Snow grains Precipitation in the form of very small, opaque grains of ice. The solid equivalent of drizzle.

Snow pellets White, opaque, approximately round ice particles between 2 and 5 mm in diameter that form in a cloud either from the sticking together of ice crystals or from the process of accretion.

Snow rollers A cylindrical spiral of snow shaped somewhat like a child's muff and produced by the wind.

Snow squall (shower) An intermittent heavy shower of snow that greatly reduces visibility.

Solstice Either of the two times of the year when the sun is the greatest distance from the celestial equator, occurring about June 22 and December 22. See winter solstice and summer solstice.

Southern oscillation The reversal of surface air pressure at opposite ends of the tropical Pacific Ocean that occur during El Nino events.

Specific heat The ratio of the heat absorbed (or released) by the unit mass of the system to the corresponding temperature rise (or fall).

Specific humidity The ratio of the mass of water vapor in a given parcel to the total mass of air in the parcel.

Spontaneous nucleation (freezing) The freezing of pure water without the benefit of any nuclei.

Spring freeze date The date of occurrence in the spring of the last minimum at or below a temperature threshold.

Squall line Any nonfrontal line or band of active thunderstorms.

Station pressure The actual air pressure computed at the observing station.

Steam fog See Evaporation fog.

Steppe One of the two types of dry climate. A marginal and more humid variant of the desert that separates it from bordering humid climates. Steppe also refers to the short-grass vegetation associated with this semiarid climate.

Storm surge An abnormal rise of the sea along a shore. Primarily due to the winds of a storm, especially a hurricane.

Stratocumulus A low cloud, predominantly stratiform with low, lumpy, rounded masses, often with blue sky between them.

Stratopause The boundary between the stratosphere and the mesosphere.

Stratosphere The layer of the atmosphere above the troposphere and below the mesosphere (between 10 km and 50 km), generally characterized by an increase in temperature with height.

Stratus A low, gray cloud layer with a rather uniform base whose precipitation is most commonly drizzle.

Subarctic climate A climate found north of the humid continental climate and south of the polar climate and characterized by bitterly cold winters and short cool summers. Places within this climatic realm experience the highest annual temperature ranges on earth.

Sublimation The process whereby ice changes directly into water vapor without melting. In meteorology, sublimation can also mean the transformation of water vapor into ice. (See Deposition.)

Subsidence The slow sinking of air, usually associated wit high-pressure areas.

Subsidence inversion A temperature inversion produced by the adiabatic warming of a layer of sinking air.

Summer solstice Approximately June 22 in the Northern Hemisphere when the sun is highest in the sky and directly overhead at latitude 23.5º N, the Tropic of Cancer.

Sundog A colored luminous spot produced by refraction of light through ice crystals that appears on either side of the sun. Also called parhelion.

Sun pillar A vertical streak of light extending above (or below) the sun. It is produced by the reflection of sunlight of ice crystals.

Supersaturated air A condition that occurs in the atmosphere when the relative humidity is greater that 100 percent.

Surface inversion See Radiation inversion

Synoptic scale The typical weather map scale that shows features such as high- and low-pressure areas and fronts over a distance spanning a continent. Also called the cyclonic scale.

T

Taiga The northern coniferous forest; also a name applied to the subarctic climate.

Temperature The degree of hotness or coldness of a substance as measured by a thermometer. It is also a measure of the average speed or kinetic energy of the atoms and molecules in a substance.

Temperature inversion An extremely stable air layer in which temperature increases with altitude, the inverse of the usual temperature profile in the troposphere.

Terminal velocity The constant speed obtained by a falling object when the upward drag on the object balances the downward force of gravity.

Thermal A small, rising parcel of warm air produced when the earth's surface is heated unevenly.

Thermograph A recording instrument that gives a continuous trace of temperature with time.

Thermometer An instrument used to measure temperature.

Thermosphere The atmospheric layer above the mesosphere. It extends from 90 km to outer space.

Thunder The sound due to rapidly expanding gases along the channel of a lightning discharge.

Tipping bucket rain gage A device that accumulates rainfall in increments of 0.01 in. by containers that alternately fill and empty (tip).

Tornado An intense, rotating column of air that protrudes from a cumulonimbus cloud in the shape of a funnel or a rope and touches the ground. (See Funnel cloud.)

Trade winds The winds that occupy most of the tropics and blow from the subtropical highs to the equatorial low.

Transpiration The release of water vapor to the atmosphere by plants.

Tropical air mass A warm-to-hot air mass that forms in the subtropics.

Tropical depression A mass of thunderstorms and clouds generally with a cyclonic wind circulation of between 20 and 34 knots

Tropical disturbance An organized mass of thunderstorms with a slight cyclonic wind circulation of less than 20 knots.

Tropical storm Organized thunderstorms with a cyclonic wind circulation between 35 and 64 knots.

Tropopause The boundary between the troposphere and the stratosphere.

Troposphere The layer of the atmosphere extending from the earth's surface up to the tropopause (about 10 km above the ground).

Tundra Climate Found almost exclusively in the northern hemisphere or at high altitudes in many mountainous regions. A treeless climatic realm of sedges, grasses, mosses, and lichens that is dominated by a long, bitterly cold winter.

Turbulence Any irregular or disturbed flow in the atmosphere that produces gusts and eddies.

Twilight The time immediately before sunrise and after sunset when the sky remain illuminated.

Typhoon A hurricane that forms in the western Pacific Ocean.

U

Ultraviolet radiation Electromagnetic radiation with wave-lengths longer than X-rays but shorter than visible light.

Upslope fog Fog formed as moist, stable air flows upward over a topographic barrier.

Upslope precipitation Precipitation that forms due to moist, stable air gradually rising along an elevated plain. Upslope precipitation is common over the western Great Plains, especially east of the Rock Mountains.

Upwelling The rising of water (usually cold) toward the surface from the deeper regions of a body of water.

Urban heat island The increased air temperatures in urban areas as contrasted to the cooler surrounding rural areas.

V

Valley breeze See Mountain breeze.

Valley fog See Radiation fog.

Vapor pressure The pressure exerted by the water vapor molecules in a given volume of air.

Vernal equinox The equinox at which the sun approaches the Northern Hemisphere and passes directly over the equator. Occurs around March 20.

Virga Precipitation that falls from a cloud but evaporates before reaching the ground. (See Fall streaks.)

Virtual temperature An adjustment applied to the real air temperature to account for a reduction in air density due to the presence of water vapor.

Viscosity The resistance of fluid flow.

Visibility The greatest distance an observer can see and identify prominent objects.

Visible light That portion of the electromagnetic spectrum from 0.4 to 0.7 µm wavelengths that is visible.

Vorticity A measure of the spin of a fluid, usually small air parcels. Absolute vorticity is the combined vorticity due to the earth's rotation and the vorticity due to the air's circulation relative to the earth. Relative vorticity is due to the curving of the air flow and wind shear.

W

Warm front The leading edge of a warm air mass.

Water balance The comparison of actual and potential evapotranspiration with the amount of precipitation, usually on a monthly basis.

Water budget Balance sheet for the inputs and outputs of water to and from the various global water reservoirs.

Water equivalent The depth of water that would result from the melting of a snow sample. Typically about 10 inches of snow will melt to 1 inch of water, producing a water equivalent of 10 to 1.

Weather The state of the atmosphere in terms of such variables as temperature, cloudiness, precipitation, and radiation.

Weighing bucket rain gage A device that is calibrated so that the weight of rainfall is recorded directly in terms of rainfall in millimeters or in inches.

Wet-bulb depression The difference in degrees between the air temperature (dry-bulb temperature) and the wet-bulb temperature.

Wet-bulb temperature The lowest temperature that can be obtained by evaporating water into the air.

White frost Ice crystals that form on surfaces instead of dew when the dew point is below freezing.

Wind chill equivalent temperature A theoretical air temperature at which the heat loss from exposed skin under calm conditions is equivalent to the heat loss at the actual air temperature and under the actual wind speeds.

Wind-chill factor The cooling effect of any combination of temperature and wind, expressed as the loss of body heat. Also called wind-chill index.

Wind shear A difference in wind speed or direction between two wind currents in the atmosphere.

Wind Vane An instrument used to determine wind direction.

Windsock A large, conical, open bag designed to indicate wind direction and relative speed; usually used at small airports.

Winter solstice Approximately December 22 in the Northern Hemisphere when the sun is lowest in the sky and directly overhead at latitude 23.5ºS, the Tropic of Capricorn.

X
Y
Z

کلمات مربوط به  وضع آب و هوا WEATHER VOCABULARIES

 

 

Weather (rain, raining, rainy)

عبارات گرامری آنچه مدرسان زبان باید بدانند ENGLISH GRAMMAR TERMS

This glossary of English grammar terms relates to the English language. Some terms here may have additional or extended meanings when applied to other languages. For example, "case" in some languages applies to pronouns and nouns. In English, nouns do not have case and therefore no reference to nouns is made in its definition here.

Term

Definition

active voice

one of two voices in English; a direct form of expression where the subject performs or "acts" the verb; see also passive voice
eg: "Many people eat rice"

adjective

part of speech that typically describes or "modifies" a noun
eg: "It was a big dog."

adjective clause

seldom-used term for relative clause

adjunct

word or phrase that adds information to a sentence and that can be removed from the sentence without making the sentence ungrammatical
eg: I met John at school.

adverb

word that modifies a verb, an adjective or another adverb
eg: quickly, really, very

adverbial clause

dependent clause that acts like an adverb and indicates such things as time, place or reason
eg: Although we are getting older, we grow more beautiful each day.

affirmative

statement that expresses (or claims to express) a truth or "yes" meaning; opposite of negative
eg: The sun is hot.

affix

language unit (morpheme) that occurs before or after (or sometimes within) the root or stem of a word
eg: un- in unhappy (prefix), -ness in happiness (suffix)

agreement
(also known as "concord")

logical (in a grammatical sense) links between words based on tense, case or number
eg: this phone, these phones

antecedent

word, phrase or clause that is replaced by a pronoun (or other substitute) when mentioned subsequently (in the same sentence or later)
eg: "Emily is nice because she brings me flowers."

appositive

noun phrase that re-identifies or describes its neighbouring noun
eg: "Canada, a multicultural country, is recognized by its maple leaf flag."

article

determiner that introduces a noun phrase as definite (the) or indefinite (a/an)

aspect

feature of some verb forms that relates to duration or completion of time; verbs can have no aspect (simple), or can have continuous or progressive aspect (expressing duration), or have perfect or perfective aspect (expressing completion)

auxiliary verb
(also called "helping verb")

verb used with the main verb to help indicate something such as tense or voice
eg: I do not like you. She has finished. He can swim.

bare infinitive

unmarked form of the verb (no indication of tense, mood, person, or aspect) without the particle "to"; typically used after modal auxiliary verbs; see also infinitive
eg: "He should come", "I can swim"

base form

basic form of a verb before conjugation into tenses etc
eg: be, speak

case

form of a pronoun based on its relationship to other words in the sentence; case can be subjective, objective or possessive
eg: "I love this dog", "This dog loves me", "This is my dog"

causative verb

verb that causes things to happen such as "make", "get" and "have"; the subject does not perform the action but is indirectly responsible for it
eg: "She made me go to school", "I had my nails painted"

clause

group of words containing a subject and its verb
eg: "It was late when he arrived"

comparative,
comparative adjective

form of an adjective or adverb made with "-er" or "more" that is used to show differences or similarities between two things (not three or more things)
eg: colder, more quickly

complement

part of a sentence that completes or adds meaning to the predicate
eg: Mary did not say where she was going.

compound noun

noun that is made up of more than one word; can be one word, or hyphenated, or separated by a space
eg: toothbrush, mother-in-law, Christmas Day

compound sentence

sentence with at least two independent clauses; usually joined by a conjunction
eg: "You can have something healthy but you can't have more junk food."

concord

another term for agreement

conditional

structure in English where one action depends on another ("if-then" or "then-if" structure); most common are 1st, 2nd, and 3rd conditionals
eg: "If I win I will be happy", "I would be happy if I won"

conjugate

to show the different forms of a verb according to voice, mood, tense, number and person; conjugation is quite simple in English compared to many other languages
eg: I walk, you walk, he/she/it walks, we walk, they walk; I walked, you walked, he/she/it walked, we walked, they walked

conjunction

word that joins or connects two parts of a sentence
eg: Ram likes tea and coffee. Anthony went swimming although it was raining.

content word

word that has meaning in a sentence, such as a verb or noun (as opposed to a structure word, such as pronoun or auxiliary verb); content words are stressed in speech
eg: "Could you BRING my GLASSES because I've LEFT them at HOME"

continuous
(also called "progressive")

verb form (specifically an aspect) indicating actions that are in progress or continuing over a given time period (can be past, present or future); formed with "BE" + "VERB-ing"
eg: "They are watching TV."

contraction

shortening of two (or more) words into one
eg: isn't (is not), we'd've (we would have)

countable noun

thing that you can count, such as apple, pen, tree (see uncountable noun)
eg: one apple, three pens, ten trees

dangling participle

illogical structure that occurs in a sentence when a writer intends to modify one thing but the reader attaches it to another
eg: "Running to the bus, the flowers were blooming." (In the example sentence it seems that the flowers were running.)

declarative sentence

sentence type typically used to make a statement (as opposed to a question or command)
eg: "Tara works hard", "It wasn't funny"

defining relative clause
(also called "restrictive relative clause")

relative clause that contains information required for the understanding of the sentence; not set off with commas; see also non-defining clause
eg: "The boy who was wearing a blue shirt was the winner"

demonstrative pronoun
demonstrative adjective

pronoun or determiner that indicates closeness to (this/these) or distance from (that/those) the speaker
eg: "This is a nice car", "Can you see those cars?"

dependent clause

part of a sentence that contains a subject and a verb but does not form a complete thought and cannot stand on its own; see also independent clause
eg: "When the water came out of the tap..."

determiner

word such as an article or a possessive adjective or other adjective that typically comes at the beginning of noun phrases
eg: "It was an excellent film", "Do you like my new shirt?", "Let's buy some eggs"

direct speech

saying what someone said by using their exact words; see also indirect speech
eg: "Lucy said: 'I am tired.'"

direct object

noun phrase in a sentence that directly receives the action of the verb; see also indirect object
eg: "Joey bought the car", "I like it", "Can you see the man wearing a pink shirt and waving a gun in the air?"

embedded question

question that is not in normal question form with a question mark; it occurs within another statement or question and generally follows statement structure
eg: "I don't know where he went," "Can you tell me where it is before you go?", "They haven't decided whether they should come"

finite verb

verb form that has a specific tense, number and person
eg: I work, he works, we learned, they ran

first conditional

"if-then" conditional structure used for future actions or events that are seen as realistic possibilities
eg: "If we win the lottery we will buy a car"

fragment

incomplete piece of a sentence used alone as a complete sentence; a fragment does not contain a complete thought; fragments are common in normal speech but unusual (inappropriate) in formal writing
eg: "When's her birthday? - In December", "Will they come? - Probably not"

function

purpose or "job" of a word form or element in a sentence
eg: The function of a subject is to perform the action. One function of an adjective is to describe a noun. The function of a noun is to name things.

future continuous
(also called "future progressive")

tense* used to describe things that will happen in the future at a particular time; formed with WILL + BE + VERB-ing
eg: "I will be graduating in September."

future perfect

tense* used to express the past in the future; formed with WILL HAVE + VERB-ed
eg: "I will have graduated by then"

future perfect continuous

tense* used to show that something will be ongoing until a certain time in the future; formed with WILL HAVE BEEN + VERB-ing
eg: "We will have been living there for three months by the time the baby is born"

future simple

tense* used to describe something that hasn't happened yet such as a prediction or a sudden decision; formed with WILL + BASE VERB
eg: "He will be late", "I will answer the phone"

gerund

noun form of a verb, formed with VERB-ing
eg: "Walking is great exercise"

gradable adjective

adjective that can vary in intensity or grade when paired with a grading adverb ; see also non-gradable adjective
eg: quite hot, very tall

grading adverb

adverb that can modify the intensity or grade of a gradable adjective
eg: quite hot, very tall

hanging participle

another term for dangling participle

helping verb

another term for auxiliary verb

imperative

form of verb used when giving a command; formed with BASE VERB only
eg: "Brush your teeth!"

indefinite pronoun

pronoun does not refer to any specific person, thing or amount. It is vague and "not definite".
eg: anything, each, many, somebody

independent clause
(also called "main clause")

group of words that expresses a complete thought and can stand alone as a sentence; see also dependent clause
eg: "Tara is eating curry.", "Tara likes oranges and Joe likes apples."

indirect object

noun phrase representing the person or thing indirectly affected by the action of the verb; see also direct object
eg: "She showed me her book collection", "Joey bought his wife a new car"

indirect question

another term for embedded question

indirect speech
(also called "reported speech")

saying what someone said without using their exact words; see direct speech
eg: "Lucy said that she was tired"

infinitive

base form of a verb preceded by "to"**; see also bare infinitive
eg: "You need to study harder", "To be, or not to be: that is the question"

inflection

change in word form to indicate grammatical meaning
eg: dog, dogs (two inflections); take, takes, took, taking, taken (five inflections)

interjection

common word that expresses emotion but has no grammatical value; can often be used alone and is often followed by an exclamation mark
eg: "Hi!", "er", "Ouch!", "Dammit!"

interrogative

(formal) sentence type (typically inverted) normally used when asking a question
eg: "Are you eating?", "What are you eating?"

interrogative pronoun

pronoun that asks a question.
eg: who, whom, which

intransitive verb

verb that does not take a direct object; see also transitive verb
e.g. "He is working hard", "Where do you live?"

inversion

any reversal of the normal word order, especially placing the auxiliary verb before the subject; used in a variety of ways, as in question formation, conditional clauses and agreement or disagreement
eg: "Where are your keys?","Had we watched the weather report, we wouldn't have gone to the beach", "So did he", "Neither did she"

irregular verb
see irregular verbs list

verb that has a different ending for past tense and past participle forms than the regular "-ed"; see also regular verb
eg: buy, bought, bought; do, did, done

lexicon, lexis

all of the words and word forms in a language with meaning or function

lexical verb

another term for main verb

linking verb

verbs that connect the subject to more information (but do not indicate action), such as "be" or "seem"

main clause

another term for independent clause

main verb
(also called "lexical verb")

any verb in a sentence that is not an auxiliary verb; a main verb has meaning on its own
eg: "Does John like Mary?", "I will have arrived by 4pm"

modal verb
(also called "modal")

auxiliary verb such as can, could, must, should etc; paired with the bare infinitive of a verb
eg: "I should go for a jog"

modifier

word or phrase that modifies and limits the meaning of another word
eg: the house => the white house, the house over there, the house we sold last year

mood

sentence type that indicates the speaker's view towards the degree of reality of what is being said, for example subjunctive, indicative, imperative

morpheme

unit of language with meaning; differs from "word" because some cannot stand alone
e.g. un-, predict and -able in unpredictable

multi-word verb

verb that consists of a basic verb + another word or words (preposition and/or adverb)
eg: get up (phrasal verb), believe in (prepositional verb), get on with (phrasal-prepositional verb)

negative

form which changes a "yes" meaning to a "no" meaning; opposite of affirmative
eg: "She will not come", "I have never seen her"

nominative case

another term for subjective case

non-defining relative clause
(also called "non-restrictive relative clause")

relative clause that adds information but is not completely necessary; set off from the sentence with a comma or commas; see defining relative clause
eg: "The boy, who had a chocolate bar in his hand, was still hungry"

non-gradable adjective

adjective that has a fixed quality or intensity and cannot be paired with a grading adverb; see also gradable adjective
eg: freezing, boiling, dead

non-restrictive relative clause

another term for non-defining relative clause

noun

part of speech that names a person, place, thing, quality, quantity or concept; see also proper noun and compound noun
eg: "The man is waiting", "I was born in London", "Is that your car?", "Do you like music?"

noun clause

clause that takes the place of a noun and cannot stand on its own; often introduced with words such as "that, who or whoever"
eg: "What the president said was surprising"

noun phrase (NP)

any word or group of words based on a noun or pronoun that can function in a sentence as a subject, object or prepositional object; can be one word or many words; can be very simple or very complex
eg: "She is nice", "When is the meeting?", "The car over there beside the lampost is mine"

number

change of word form indicating one person or thing (singular) or more than one person or thing (plural)
eg: one dog/three dogs, she/they

object

thing or person affected by the verb; see also direct object and indirect object
eg: "The boy kicked the ball", "We chose the house with the red door"

objective case

case form of a pronoun indicating an object
eg: "John married her", "I gave it to him"

part of speech

one of the classes into which words are divided according to their function in a sentence
eg: verb, noun, adjective

participle

verb form that can be used as an adjective or a noun; see past participle, present participle

passive voice

one of two voices in English; an indirect form of expression in which the subject receives the action; see also active voice
eg: "Rice is eaten by many people"

past tense
(also called "simple past")

tense used to talk about an action, event or situation that occurred and was completed in the past
eg: "I lived in Paris for 10 years", "Yesterday we saw a snake"

past continuous

tense often used to describe an interrupted action in the past; formed with WAS/WERE + VERB-ing
eg: "I was reading when you called"

past perfect

tense that refers to the past in the past; formed with HAD + VERB-ed
eg: "We had stopped the car"

past perfect continuous

tense that refers to action that happened in the past and continued to a certain point in the past; formed with HAD BEEN + VERB-ing
eg: "I had been waiting for three hours when he arrived"

past participle

verb form (V3) - usually made by adding "-ed" to the base verb - typically used in perfect and passive tenses, and sometimes as an adjective
eg: "I have finished", "It was seen by many people", "boiled eggs"

perfect

verb form (specifically an aspect); formed with HAVE/HAS + VERB-ed (present perfect) or HAD + VERB-ed (past perfect)

person

grammatical category that identifies people in a conversation; there are three persons: 1st person (pronouns I/me, we/us) is the speaker(s), 2nd person (pronoun you) is the listener(s), 3rd person (pronouns he/him, she/her, it, they/them) is everybody or everything else

personal pronoun

pronoun that indicates person
eg: "He likes my dogs", "They like him"

phrasal verb

multi-word verb formed with a verb + adverb
eg: break up, turn off (see phrasal verbs list)
NB: many people and books call all multi-word verbs "phrasal verbs" (see multi-word verbs)

phrase

two or more words that have a single function and form part of a sentence; phrases can be noun, adjective, adverb, verb or prepositional

plural

of a noun or form indicating more than one person or thing; plural nouns are usually formed by adding "-s"; see also singular, number
eg: bananas, spoons, trees

position

grammatically correct placement of a word form in a phrase or sentence in relation to other word forms
eg: "The correct position for an article is at the beginning of the noun phrase that it describes"

positive

basic state of an adjective or adverb when it shows quality but not comparative or superlative
eg: nice, kind, quickly

possessive adjective

adjective (also called "determiner") based on a pronoun: my, your, his, her, its, our, their
eg: "I lost my keys", "She likes your car"

possessive case

case form of a pronoun indicating ownership or possession
eg: "Mine are blue", "This car is hers"

possessive pronoun

pronoun that indicates ownership or possession
eg: "Where is mine?", "These are yours"

predicate

one of the two main parts (subject and predicate) of a sentence; the predicate is the part that is not the subject
eg: "My brother is a doctor", "Who did you call?", "The woman wearing a blue dress helped me"

prefix

affix that occurs before the root or stem of a word
eg: impossible, reload

preposition

part of speech that typically comes before a noun phrase and shows some type of relationship between that noun phrase and another element (including relationships of time, location, purpose etc)
eg: "We sleep at night", "I live in London", "This is for digging"

prepositional verb

multi-word verb that is formed with verb + preposition
eg: believe in, look after

present participle

-ing form of a verb (except when it is a gerund or verbal noun)
eg: "We were eating", "The man shouting at the back is rude", "I saw Tara playing tennis"

present simple (also called "simple present")

tense usually used to describe states and actions that are general, habitual or (with the verb "to be") true right now; formed with the basic verb (+ s for 3rd person singular)
eg: "Canada sounds beautiful", "She walks to school", "I am very happy"

present continuous (also called "present progressive")

tense used to describe action that is in process now, or a plan for the future; formed with BE + VERB-ing
eg: "We are watching TV", "I am moving to Canada next month"

present perfect

tense that connects the past and the present, typically used to express experience, change or a continuing situation; formed with HAVE + VERB-ed
eg: "I have worked there", "John has broken his leg", "How long have you been in Canada?"

present perfect continuous

tense used to describe an action that has recently stopped or an action continuing up to now; formed with HAVE + BEEN + VERB-ing
eg: "I'm tired because I've been running", "He has been living in Canada for two years"

progressive

another term for continuous

pronoun

word that replaces a noun or noun phrase; there are several types including personal pronouns, relative pronouns and indefinite pronouns
eg: you, he, him; who, which; somebody, anything

proper noun

noun that is capitalized at all times and is the name of a person, place or thing
eg: Shakespeare, Tokyo, EnglishClub.com

punctuation

standard marks such as commas, periods and question marks within a sentence
eg: , . ? ! - ; :

quantifier

determiner or pronoun that indicates quantity
eg: some, many, all

question tag

final part of a tag question; mini-question at end of a tag question
eg: "Snow isn't black, is it?"

question word

another term for WH-word

reciprocal pronoun

pronoun that indicates that two or more subjects are acting mutually; there are two in English - each other, one another
eg: "John and Mary were shouting at each other", "The students accused one another of cheating"

reduced relative clause
(also called "participial relative clause")

construction similar to a relative clause, but containing a participle instead of a finite verb; this construction is possible only under certain circumstances
eg: "The woman sitting on the bench is my sister", "The people arrested by the police have been released"

reflexive pronoun

pronoun ending in -self or -selves, used when the subject and object are the same, or when the subject needs emphasis
eg: "She drove herself", "I'll phone her myself"

regular verb
see regular verbs list

verb that has "-ed" as the ending for past tense and past participle forms; see also irregular verb
eg: work, worked, worked

relative adverb

adverb that introduces a relative clause; there are four in English: where, when, wherever, whenever; see also relative pronoun

relative clause

dependent clause that usually starts with a relative pronoun such as who or which, or relative adverb such as where
eg: "The person who finishes first can leave early" (defining), "Texas, where my brother lives, is big" (non-defining)

relative pronoun

pronoun that starts a relative clause; there are five in English: who, whom, whose, which, that; see also relative adverb

reported speech

another term for indirect speech

restrictive relative clause

another term for defining relative clause

second conditional

"if-then" conditional structure used to talk about an unlikely possibility in the future
eg: "If we won the lottery we would buy a car"

sentence

largest grammatical unit; a sentence must always include a subject (except for imperatives) and predicate; a written sentence starts with a capital letter and ends with a full stop/period (.), question mark (?) or exclamation mark (!); a sentence contains a complete thought such as a statement, question, request or command
eg: "Stop!", "Do you like coffee?", "I work."

series

list of items in a sentence
eg: "The children ate popsicles, popcorn and chips"

singular

of a noun or form indicating exactly one person or thing; singular nouns are usually the simplest form of the noun (as found in a dictionary); see also plural, number
eg: banana, spoon, tree

split infinitive

situation where a word or phrase comes between the particle "to" and the verb in an infinitive; considered poor construction by some
eg: "He promised to never lie again"

Standard English (S.E.)

"normal" spelling, pronunciation and grammar that is used by educated native speakers of English

structure word

word that has no real meaning in a sentence, such as a pronoun or auxiliary verb (as opposed to a content word, such as verb or noun); structure words are not normally stressed in speech
eg: "Could you BRING my GLASSES because I've LEFT them at HOME"

subject

one of the two main parts (subject and predicate) of a sentence; the subject is the part that is not the predicate; typically, the subject is the first noun phrase in a sentence and is what the rest of the sentence "is about"
eg: "The rain water was dirty", "Mary is beautiful", "Who saw you?"

subjective case
also called "nominative"

case form of a pronoun indicating a subject
eg: Did she tell you about her?

subjunctive

fairly rare verb form typically used to talk about events that are not certain to happen, usually something that someone wants, hopes or imagines will happen; formed with BARE INFINITIVE (except past of "be")
eg: "The President requests that John attend the meeting"

subordinate clause

another term for dependent clause

suffix

affix that occurs after the root or stem of a word
eg: happiness, quickly

superlative, superlative adjective

adjective or adverb that describes the extreme degree of something
eg: happiest, most quickly

SVO

subject-verb-object; a common word order where the subject is followed by the verb and then the object
eg: "The man crossed the street"

syntax

sentence structure; the rules about sentence structure

tag question

special construction with statement that ends in a mini-question; the whole sentence is a tag question; the mini-question is a question tag; usually used to obtain confirmation
eg: "The Earth is round, isn't it?", "You don't eat meat, do you?"

tense

form of a verb that shows us when the action or state happens (past, present or future). Note that the name of a tense is not always a guide to when the action happens. The "present continuous tense", for example, can be used to talk about the present or the future.

third conditional

"if-then" conditional structure used to talk about a possible event in the past that did not happen (and is therefore now impossible)
eg: "If we had won the lottery we would have bought a car"

transitive verb

action verb that has a direct object (receiver of the action); see also intransitive verb
eg: "The kids always eat a snack while they watch TV"

uncountable nouns
(also called "mass nouns" or "non-count")

thing that you cannot count, such as substances or concepts; see also countable nouns
eg: water, furniture, music

usage

way in which words and constructions are normally used in any particular language

V1, V2, V3

referring to Verb 1, Verb 2, Verb 3 - being the base, past and past participle that students typically learn for irregular verbs
eg: speak, spoke, spoken

verb

word that describes the subject's action or state and that we can change or conjugate based on tense and person
eg: (to) work, (to) love, (to) begin

voice

form of a verb that shows the relation of the subject to the action; there are two voices in English: active, passive

WH-question

question using a WH-word and expecting an answer that is not "yes" or "no"; WH-questions are "open" questions; see also yes-no question
eg: Where are you going?

WH-word
(also called "question word")

word that asks a WH-question; there are 7 WH-words: who, what, where, when, which, why, how

word order

order or sequence in which words occur within a sentence; basic word order for English is subject-verb-object or SVO

yes-no question

question to which the answer is yes or no; yes-no questions are "closed" questions; see also WH-question
eg: "Do you like coffee?"

zero conditional

"if-then" conditional structure used when the result of the condition is always true (based on fact)
eg: "If you dial O, the operator comes on"

* note that technically English does not have a real future tense
** some authorities consider the base form of the verb without "to" to be the true infinitive

 

لیست کامل کشورها و ملیت ها THE COMPLETE LIST OF COUNTRIES AND NATIONALITIES

Countries & Nationality

This chart lists many of the countries or nations in the world, with the following information:

  • Name of country
  • Adjective used for that country (also describes nationality)
  • Noun used for a person from that country

Look at these example sentences:

She comes from France. She is French. Her nationality is French. She is a Frenchwoman. She drives a French car. She speaks French.

Country

Adjective

Person

Afghanistan

Afghan

an Afghan

Albania

Albanian

an Albanian

Algeria

Algerian

an Algerian

Andorra

Andorran

an Andorran

Angola

Angolan

an Angolan

Argentina

Argentinian

an Argentinian

Armenia

Armenian

an Armenian

Australia

Australian

an Australian

Austria

Austrian

an Austrian

Azerbaijan

Azerbaijani

an Azerbaijani

Bahamas

Bahamian

a Bahamian

Bahrain

Bahraini

a Bahraini

Bangladesh

Bangladeshi

a Bangladeshi

Barbados

Barbadian

a Barbadian

Belarus

Belorussian or Byelorussian

a Belorussian or a Byelorussian

Belgium

Belgian

a Belgian

Belize

Belizian

a Belizian

Benin

Beninese

a Beninese

Bhutan

Bhutanese

a Bhutanese

Bolivia

Bolivian

a Bolivian

Bosnia-Herzegovina

Bosnian

a Bosnian

Botswana

Botswanan

a Tswana

Brazil

Brazilian

a Brazilian

Britain

British

a Briton

Brunei

Bruneian

a Bruneian

Bulgaria

Bulgarian

a Bulgarian

Burkina

Burkinese

a Burkinese

Burma (official name Myanmar)

Burmese

a Burmese

Burundi

Burundian

a Burundian

Cambodia

Cambodian

a Cambodian

Cameroon

Cameroonian

a Cameroonian

Canada

Canadian

a Canadian

Cape Verde Islands

Cape Verdean

a Cape Verdean

Chad

Chadian

a Chadian

Chile

Chilean

a Chilean

China

Chinese

a Chinese

Colombia

Colombian

a Colombian

Congo

Congolese

a Congolese

Costa Rica

Costa Rican

a Costa Rican

Croatia

Croat or Croatian

a Croat or a Croatian

Cuba

Cuban

a Cuban

Cyprus

Cypriot

a Cypriot

Czech Republic

Czech

a Czech

Denmark

Danish

a Dane

Djibouti

Djiboutian

a Djiboutian

Dominica

Dominican

a Dominican

Dominican Republic

Dominican

a Dominican

Ecuador

Ecuadorean

an Ecuadorean

Egypt

Egyptian

an Egyptian

El Salvador

Salvadorean

a Salvadorean

England

English

an Englishman, an Englishwoman

Eritrea

Eritrean

an Eritrean

Estonia

Estonian

an Estonian

Ethiopia

Ethiopian

an Ethiopian

Fiji

Fijian

a Fijian

Finland

Finnish

a Finn

France

French

a Frenchman, a Frenchwoman

Gabon

Gabonese

a Gabonese

Gambia, the

Gambian

a Gambian

Georgia

Georgian

a Georgian

Germany

German

a German

Ghana

Ghanaian

a Ghanaian

Greece

Greek

a Greek

Grenada

Grenadian

a Grenadian

Guatemala

Guatemalan

a Guatemalan

Guinea

Guinean

a Guinean

Guyana

Guyanese

a Guyanese

Haiti

Haitian

a Haitian

Holland (also Netherlands)

Dutch

a Dutchman, a Dutchwoman

Honduras

Honduran

a Honduran

Hungary

Hungarian

a Hungarian

Iceland

Icelandic

an Icelander

India

Indian

an Indian

Indonesia

Indonesian

an Indonesian

Iran

Iranian

an Iranian

Iraq

Iraqi

an Iraqi

Ireland, Republic of

Irish

an Irishman, an Irishwoman

Israel

Israeli

an Israeli

Italy

Italian

an Italian

Jamaica

Jamaican

a Jamaican

Japan

Japanese

a Japanese

Jordan

Jordanian

a Jordanian

Kazakhstan

Kazakh

a Kazakh

Kenya

Kenyan

a Kenyan

Korea see North Korea, South Korea

Kuwait

Kuwaiti

a Kuwaiti

Laos

Laotian

a Laotian

Latvia

Latvian

a Latvian

Lebanon

Lebanese

a Lebanese

Liberia

Liberian

a Liberian

Libya

Libyan

a Libyan

Liechtenstein

-

a Liechtensteiner

Lithuania

Lithuanian

a Lithuanian

Luxembourg

-

a Luxembourger

Macedonia

Macedonian

a Macedonian

Madagascar

Malagasay or Madagascan

a Malagasay or a Madagascan

Malawi

Malawian

a Malawian

Malaysia

Malaysian

a Malaysian

Maldives

Maldivian

a Maldivian

Mali

Malian

a Malian

Malta

Maltese

a Maltese

Mauritania

Mauritanian

a Mauritanian

Mauritius

Mauritian

a Mauritian

Mexico

Mexican

a Mexican

Moldova

Moldovan

a Moldovan

Monaco

Monégasque or Monacan

a Monégasque or a Monacan

Mongolia

Mongolian

a Mongolian

Montenegro

Montenegrin

a Montenegrin

Morocco

Moroccan

a Moroccan

Mozambique

Mozambican

a Mozambican

Myanmar see Burma

-

-

Namibia

Namibian

a Namibian

Nepal

Nepalese

a Nepalese

Netherlands, the (see Holland)

Dutch

a Dutchman, a Dutchwoman, or a Netherlander

New Zealand

-

a New Zealander

Nicaragua

Nicaraguan

a Nicaraguan

Niger

Nigerien

a Nigerien

Nigeria

Nigerian

a Nigerian

North Korea

North Korean

a North Korean

Norway

Norwegian

a Norwegian

Oman

Omani

an Omani

Pakistan

Pakistani

a Pakistani

Panama

Panamanian

a Panamanian

Papua New Guinea

Papua New Guinean or Guinean

a Papua New Guinean or a Guinean

Paraguay

Paraguayan

a Paraguayan

Peru

Peruvian

a Peruvian

the Philippines

Philippine

a Filipino

Poland

Polish

a Pole

Portugal

Portuguese

a Portuguese

Qatar

Qatari

a Qatari

Romania

Romanian

a Romanian

Russia

Russian

a Russian

Rwanda

Rwandan

a Rwandan

Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabian or Saudi

a Saudi Arabian or a Saudi

Scotland

Scottish

a Scot

Senegal

Senegalese

a Senegalese

Serbia

Serb or Serbian

a Serb or a Serbian

Seychelles, the

Seychellois

a Seychellois

Sierra Leone

Sierra Leonian

a Sierra Leonian

Singapore

Singaporean

a Singaporean

Slovakia

Slovak

a Slovak

Slovenia

Slovene or Slovenian

a Slovene or a Slovenian

Solomon Islands

-

a Solomon Islander

Somalia

Somali

a Somali

South Africa

South African

a South African

South Korea

South Korean

a South Korean

Spain

Spanish

a Spaniard

Sri Lanka

Sri Lankan

a Sri Lankan

Sudan

Sudanese

a Sudanese

Suriname

Surinamese

a Surinamer or a Surinamese

Swaziland

Swazi

a Swazi

Sweden

Swedish

a Swede

Switzerland

Swiss

a Swiss

Syria

Syrian

a Syrian

Taiwan

Taiwanese

a Taiwanese

Tajikistan

Tajik or Tadjik

a Tajik or a Tadjik

Tanzania

Tanzanian

a Tanzanian

Thailand

Thai

a Thai

Togo

Togolese

a Togolese

Trinidad and Tobago

Trinidadian
Tobagan/Tobagonian

a Trinidadian
a Tobagan/Tobagonian

Tunisia

Tunisian

a Tunisian

Turkey

Turkish

a Turk

Turkmenistan

Turkmen or Turkoman

a Turkmen or a Turkoman

Tuvali

Tuvaluan

a Tuvaluan

Uganda

Ugandan

a Ugandan

Ukraine

Ukrainian

a Ukrainian

United Arab Emirates (UAE)

-

-

United Kingdom (UK)

British

a Briton

United States of America (USA)

-

a citizen of the USA

Uruguay

Uruguayan

a Uruguayan

Uzbekistan

Uzbek

an Uzbek

Vanuata

Vanuatuan

a Vanuatuan

Vatican City

-

-

Venezuela

Venezuelan

a Venezuelan

Vietnam

Vietnamese

a Vietnamese

Wales

Welsh

a Welshman, a Welshwoman

Western Samoa

Western Samoan

a Western Samoan

Yemen

Yemeni

a Yemeni

Yugoslavia

Yugoslav

a Yugoslav

Zaire

Zaïrean

a Zaïrean

Zambia

Zambian

a Zambian

Zimbabwe

Zimbabwean

a Zimbabwean

 

تقویم تعطیلات و مناسبات Calendar of Holidays and Events

Calendar of Holidays and Events

This calendar lists many of the more popular holidays and events worldwide. Note that some events do not always fall on exactly the same date each year so you may need to check further for the year in question.

Date

Holiday or Event

Description

January 1

New Year's Day

On New Year's Day people make resolutions, such as quitting smoking or starting a new diet. See also New Year's Eve (December 31).

Second Monday of January

Coming of Age Day (Japan)

This event celebrates all of the citizens who are 20 year's old. In Japan, 20 is the age when adolescents officially become adults and can legally smoke, drink, and vote. The young people gather in formal wear at government buildings and listen to many important speakers. They also receive money.

Begins January or early February

Chinese New Year

This is a two week festival beginning on the first day of the lunar year. Just prior to the holiday, families clean their houses carefully in order to bring good luck into their homes. Families gather for a reunion dinner on New Year's Eve. Lucky amounts of money are distributed to family members in red envelopes. Each day honours something different, such as parents, gods, or wealth.

February 14

Valentine's Day

Couples celebrate their love by exchanging cards, chocolate, flowers, and other gifts. Many go on romantic dates. Children give Valentine's cards to friends and relatives.

Saturday before Ash Wednesday (7 weeks before Easter), Mardis Gras (last day of Carnival)

Carnival and Mardis Gras

A two-week festival before the Christian period of Lent, celebrated annually in many parts of the world, especially Rio de Janeiro. The festivities include colourful street parties, parades, and dancing. New Orleans is famous for its Mardis Gras parties.

March 17

St. Patrick's Day

Traditionally an Irish celebration. People with Irish roots (or not) worldwide wear green and drink Irish beer and eat Irish food on this day. Parties and parades feature Irish music and dancing.

March/April (15th day of Hebrew month Nisan)

Passover

7-day Jewish holiday marking the birth of a free Jewish nation. As told in the Book of Exodus, the Children of Israel were freed from Pharaoh and began to follow God. Many Jews avoid eating or having bread products in the home during this time. This is symbolic of the Jews leaving Egypt so quickly that their bread did not have time to rise.

Late March or early April

Good Friday, Easter

Christian holiday honouring the crucifixion of Jesus (Good Friday) and celebrating the resurrection (Easter Sunday). Also a commercial holiday in which children search for chocolate and gifts left by the Easter Bunny.

April 1

April Fool's Day

Friends, relatives, and co-workers play tricks and practical jokes on each other. Media outlets sometimes publish or broadcast elaborate April Fool's Day hoaxes. One of the most famous was the BBC's Swiss Spaghetti Harvest hoax.
Watch Swiss Spaghetti Harvest video
UN To Ban "Unnecessary" Languages

May 5

Cinco de Mayo (Mexico, US)

Annual celebration of Mexico's victory over France in the Battle of Puebla. The battle became a symbol of Mexican unity. Festivities include parades, parties, and dancing with Mexican food and mariachi music.

June 23-24

Midsummer's Eve and Day, (primarily Sweden, Finland, Denmark, Russia)

Often considered the beginning of summer holidays. Celebrated with lakeside bonfires, parties, and dancing around a maypole.

July 1

Canada Day

Canadians honour their country and celebrate independence with fireworks, parades, and parties. Most people wear red and sport the maple leaf emblem.

July 6-14

Fiestas of San Fermin: Running of the Bulls (Spain)

Annual 9-day festival in Pamplona, Spain, which is famous for the running of the bulls. The event has prompted worldwide attention since being mentioned in Hemmingway's novel, The Sun Also Rises.

July or August, depending on lunar calendar

Raksha Bandan (India)

Hindu celebration among brothers and sisters. Sisters tie a special bracelet around their brothers wrists to demonstrate love and honour. Brothers offer gifts to sisters and promise to protect and care for them.

August 9

Women's Day (South Africa)

National holiday acknowledging August 9, 1956 when 20,000 women marched to the government buildings in Pretoria to protest the law that required black women to carry passes.

Mid September-Mid October (10th day of Hebrew month Tishrei)

Yom Kippur

Annual Jewish holiday, also known as the Day of Atonement. Jewish people fast for 25 hours, and refrain from working. They spend much of the day in prayer. Many Jews wear white on this day to symbolize the freedom they acquire as their sins against God are forgiven. Leather shoes are forbidden.

Falls between Mid-September and Mid October

Mid Autumn Festival, a.k.a Moon Festival (China)

Families unite to watch the full moon rise and to eat moon cakes. Couples enjoy evening romance under the light of the full moon.

Two weeks between late September and early October

Oktoberfest (Germany)

The world's largest fair. The mayor of Munich taps a keg of beer to start the festival each year. Beer and traditional German food is served. Party goers enjoy traditional music and dancing.

October 31

Halloween

Children carve pumpkins and decorate homes with spooky scenes. After dark they dress up in costumes and go door to door collecting candy from neighbours. Adults have costume parties.

November 1

All Saint's Day (Day of the Dead)

Originally celebrated the death of martyrs and saints. Today All Saint's Day is often the day families honour deceased relatives by bringing flowers and other offerings to graves.

November 5

Guy Fawkes Night (UK), a.k.a Bonfire Night

Commemorates the failure of the Gunpowder Plot of 1605; an attempt by Guy Fawkes and other conspirators to blow up the parliament houses in Westminister. The celebration includes fireworks and bonfires. A dummy of Guy Fawkes is typically burnt.

Fourth Thursday of November (US), Second Monday of October (Canada)

Thanksgiving Day

Marks the end of harvest. This is a time to give thanks for food, and is celebrated by large feasts (especially turkey, pumpkin pie, and fall vegetables) and family get togethers. Other countries such as Korea (Chusok in mid August) celebrate the harvest at other times of the year.

December 25

Christmas Day

Traditionally a Christian holiday celebrating the birth of Jesus Christ. Now also a commercial holiday with card and gift exchanges throughout December. Children wait for Santa Claus to bring gifts. Houses, businesses and streets are decorated with trees, lights and other Christmas symbols. People sing Christmas carols.

December 31

New Year's Eve

Citizens gather in urban centres or friends' homes on the last evening of the year to count down to midnight together. New Year's Eve parties often include dancing, listening to rock bands and watching fireworks after the clock strikes twelve. See also New Year's Day (January 1).

 

Hajj

This is the Muslim pilgrimage (special journey) to Mecca in Saudi Arabia. All Muslims are expected to make the pilgrimage at least once during their lifetime. Also called Haj or Hadj. Originally from the Arabic "al-hajj", meaning "The Great Pilgrimage". It takes place during the 12th month of the Islamic lunar year, which does not coincide with the Gregorian calendar above (in fact it falls about 11 days earlier each year in the Gregorian calendar).

 

واژگان مربوط به کریسمس Christmas Vocabulary

Christmas Vocabulary

advent

the arrival of someone or something important

Advent

the coming (or second coming) of Jesus Christ; the month leading up to Christmas

angel

a spiritual being acting as a messenger of God (usually shown as a human being with wings)

berry

a small round fruit

Bethlehem

the small town in the Middle East believed to be the birthplace of Jesus Christ

candle

a cylinder of wax with a central wick (like string) which burns to produce light

chimney

a vertical pipe in a house that allows smoke and gases to escape from a fireplace (Father Christmas traditionally enters a house through its chimney)

Christ

the title of Jesus (also used as His name)

Christian

a person who believes in Christianity; also an adjective

Christianity

the religion based on the teachings and person of Jesus Christ

Christmas

the annual Christian festival celebrating the birth of Jesus Christ (Christmas Day is on 25 December)

Christmas cake

a rich fruit cake covered with white icing, eaten at Christmas

Christmas card

a greetings card that people send to friends and family at Christmas

Christmas carol

a religious song or popular hymn that people sing at Christmas

Christmas Day

25 December, the birthday of Jesus Christ

Christmas Eve

the evening or day before Christmas Day (24 December)

Christmas holidays

the holiday period for about a week before and after Christmas Day

Christmas present

a gift or present given at Christmas

Christmas tree

an evergreen tree (often a spruce) that people decorate with lights and ornaments at Christmas

cracker

a decorated paper tube that makes a sharp noise ("crack!") and releases a small toy when two people pull it apart

decoration

something that adds beauty; ornament

egg-nog

a traditional Christmas drink made of alcohol with beaten eggs and milk

Father Christmas

an imaginary being who brings presents for children on the night before Christmas Day (also known as Santa Claus) - traditionally an old man with a red suit and white beard

fireplace

a partly enclosed space in a house where people light a fire for warmth

frankincense

a gum used for incense, one of the gifts that the three wise men gave to Jesus

gold

a yellow precious metal, one of the gifts that the three wise men gave to Jesus

holly

an evergreen plant with prickly dark green leaves and red berries

Jesus

the name of Christ, the central figure of Christianity (believed by Christians to be the Son of God)

Joseph

the husband of Mary (the mother of Jesus)

magi

the wise men from the East who brought gifts for the baby Jesus

manger

a trough for food for horses or cattle (used by Mary as a cradle or bed for Jesus)

Mary

the mother of Jesus

mistletoe

a parasitic plant with white berries, traditionally used as a Christmas decoration

myrrh

a gum used for perfume or incense, one of the gifts that the three wise men gave to Jesus

nativity

the birth of a person

the Nativity

the birth of Jesus Christ

nativity play

a play that people perform at Christmas based on the birth of Jesus

new year

the start of a year; the period just before and after 1 January

New Year's Day

1 January

New Year's Eve

31 December

ornament

an object that adds beauty to something; a decoration

present

a thing given to somebody as a gift.

reindeer

a deer with large antlers found in some cold climates (believed to pull the sleigh for Santa Claus or Father Christmas)

Santa Claus

an imaginary being who brings presents for children on the night before Christmas Day (also known as Father Christmas) - traditionally an old man with a red suit and white beard (Santa Claus may be based in part on the historical figure of Saint Nicholas.)

shepherd

a person who looks after sheep

sleigh

a sledge or light cart on runners pulled by horses or reindeer over snow and ice

snow

water vapour from the sky that falls as white flakes and covers the ground

star

a bright point in the night sky which is a large, distant incandescent body like the sun

the star of Bethlehem

the star that announced the birth of Jesus and guided the wise men to find Him

tinsel

a decoration consisting of thin strips of shiny metal foil, traditionally used at Christmas

turkey

a bird like a large chicken, traditionally eaten at Christmas

white Christmas

a Christmas with snow on the ground

Xmas

abbreviation or informal term for Christmas

Christmas Expressions

  • Merry Christmas!
  • Happy Christmas
  • Happy New Year!
  • Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!
  • Wishing you a prosperous New Year
  • All the best for the coming year
  • Seasons Greetings!

 

British/North American Vocabulary

British/North American Vocabulary

Here are some of the main differences in vocabulary between British and North American English.

British

Canadian

American

anywhere

anywhere

anyplace

autumn

autumn/fall

fall

barrister

lawyer

attorney

beeper, pager

pager

beeper

bill (restaurant)

bill

check

biscuit

cookie

cookie

block of flats

apartment block

apartment building

bonnet

hood

hood

boot (of car)

trunk (of car)

trunk (of automobile)

car

car

automobile

caravan

trailer

trailer

chemist

drugstore

drugstore

chest of drawers

dresser

bureau

chips

French fries/chips

French fries

chocolate bar

chocolate bar

candy bar

the cinema

movies

the movies

clothes peg

clothes peg

clothespin

coffin

coffin

casket

condom

condom

rubber

crisps

potato chips

potato chips

crossroads

intersection

intersection

cupboard

cupboard

closet

cutlery

cutlery

silverware

diversion

diversion, detour

detour

drawing-pin

thumbtack

thumbtack

driving licence

driver's licence

driver's license

dummy (for babies)

soother

pacifier

dustbin

garbage can, trash can

ashcan, garbage can, trashcan

dustman

garbageman

garbage collector

engine

engine

motor

estate agent

real estate agent

realtor

film

movie

movie

flat

apartment

apartment

flat tyre

flat tire

flat

flyover

overpass

overpass

galoshes

galoshes

toe rubbers

gear-lever

gearshift

gearshift

Girl Guide

Girl Guide

Girl Scout

ground floor

ground floor, main floor

first floor

handbag

handbag

purse

holiday

holiday

vacation

jam

jam

jelly

jeans

jeans

blue jeans

jug

jug

pitcher

lift

elevator

elevator

lorry

truck

truck

luggage

luggage

baggage

mad

crazy

crazy

main road

main road, main thoroughfare

highway

maize

corn

corn

maths

math

math

mobile (phone)

cellular

cellphone

motorbike

motorbike, motorcycle

motorcycle

motorway

highway, thoroughfare

freeway, expressway

motorway

freeway

freeway

napkin

serviette, table napkin

napkin

nappy

diaper

diaper

naughts and crosses

tick-tack-toe

tic-tack-toe

pants

shorts

shorts

pavement

sidewalk, pavement

sidewalk

pet hate

pet peeve

pet peeve

petrol

gas, gasoline

gas, gasoline

The Plough

Big Dipper

Big Dipper

pocket money

pocket money

allowance

post

mail, post

mail

postbox

mailbox, post-box

mailbox

postcode

postal code

zip code

postman

mailman, letter carrier

mailman

pub

bar, pub

bar

public toilet

bathroom

rest room

puncture

flat

flat

railway

railway

railroad

return (ticket)

return

round-trip

reverse charge

collect call, reverse the charges

call collect

ring road

ring road

beltway

road surface

road surface, asphalt

pavement

roundabout

roundabout

traffic circle

rubber

eraser

eraser

rubbish

garbage, trash, refuse

garbage, trash

rubbish-bin

garbage can, trashcan

garbage can, trashcan

saloon (car)

sedan (car)

sedan (automobile)

shop

shop, store

store

single (ticket)

one-way (ticket)

one-way

solicitor

lawyer

attorney

somewhere

somewhere

someplace

spanner

wrench

wrench

spirits

spirits

hard liquor

sweets

candy, sweets

candy

tap (indoors)

tap (indoors)

faucet

tap (outdoors)

tap (outdoors)

spigot

taxi

taxi

cab

tea-towel

dish-towel

dish-towel

telly, TV

TV

TV

third-party insurance

third-party insurance

liability insurance

timetable

schedule

schedule

tin

tin can

can

toll motorway

toll highway

turnpike

torch

flashlight

flashlight

trousers

pants

pants

tube (train)

subway, metro

subway

underground (train)

subway, metro

subway

underpants

shorts

shorts

van

truck

truck

vest

undershirt

undershirt

waistcoat

vest

vest

wallet

wallet

billfold

wellington boots

rubber boots

rubbers

whisky

whisky, scotch

whiskey, scotch

windscreen

windshield

windshield

zip

zipper

zipper

 

استعاره چیست ؟ ALL ABOUT METAPHOR

Metaphor

pronounced: MET-uh-for

 

All the world's a stage,
And all the men and women merely players
They have their exits and their entrances

William Shakespeare

A metaphor is a figure of speech that says that one thing is another different thing. This allows us to use fewer words and forces the reader or listener to find the similarities.

The word metaphor comes from the Greek word metapherin (meaning "transfer").

The simplest form of metaphor is: "The [first thing] is a [second thing]."

Look at this example:

  • Her home was a prison.

In the above sentence, we understand immediately that her home had some of the characteristics of a prison. Mainly, we imagine, she could not leave her home. She was trapped inside. Why it was a prison we do not know, but that would be clear from the context--perhaps her husband forced her to stay at home, perhaps she was afraid of the outside. We don't know, but the rest of the story would tell us. What is important here is that in five simple words we understand a lot about her environment, how she felt and how she behaved. In this sentence, "prison" is a metaphor.

Look at another example:

  • George is a sheep.

What is one characteristic of sheep? They follow each other. So we can imagine that George is a follower, not a leader. In this sentence "sheep" is a metaphor.

Metaphors are very common in everyday language. But poets also like to use metaphors. In the following famous verse (from The Highwayman by Alfred Noyes), can you spot three metaphors in the first three lines?

The wind was a torrent of darkness among the gusty trees,
The moon was a ghostly galleon tossed upon cloudy seas,
The road was a ribbon of moonlight over the purple moor,
And the highwayman came riding--
Riding--riding--
The highwayman came riding, up to the old inn-door.

Look at these examples of metaphors with sample sentences and meanings:

Metaphor example

Metaphorical sense

Original sense

I'm not an angel, but I wouldn't behave like that.

exemplary person

a spiritual being believed to be a messenger of God

America is a melting pot.

place where different peoples, styles and cultures are mixed together

a container in which metals or other materials are melted and mixed

John is a real pig when he eats.

greedy person

a four-legged animal kept for meat (pork)

My father is a rock.

very strong or reliable person

a hard, mineral material made of stone

How could she marry a snake like that!

traitor

a long, limbless reptile (eg: cobra, python, viper)

The policeman let him off with a yellow card.

warning

(in soccer) a yellow card that the referee shows to players when cautioning them

All the above metaphors (the simplest form) are nouns. But there are other ways of making metaphors, for example with verbs or adjectives. Here are some examples:

Metaphor example

Original sense of the word (example)

The committee shot her ideas down one by one.

Anti-aircraft guns shoot down planes.

The private detective dug up enough evidence to convince the police to act.

Dogs like to bury bones and dig them up later.

He broke into her conversation.

Burglars break into buildings.

The new movie was very popular. People flocked to see it.

Birds flock together before they migrate.

His head was spinning with ideas.

Some computer hard drives spin at over 10,000 revolutions per minute.

Reading that book kindled my interest in politics.

You need to start with twigs and small branches when you kindle a camp fire.

Tim lost his job after a heated argument with his boss.

We have a heated swimming pool.

The new car's sexy design increased sales for the company.

Some women think that lipstick makes them look sexy.

He was dressed rather vulgarly in a loud checked suit.

I can't hear you because the radio is too loud.

It wasn't long before their relationship turned sour.

Sour food has an acid taste like lemon or vinegar.

Difference Between Metaphor and Simile
Both similes and metaphors link one thing to another. A simile usually uses "as" or "like". A metaphor is a condensed simile, a shortcut to meaning, which omits "as" or "like." A metaphor creates a relationship directly and leaves more to the imagination. With simile A is like B. With metaphor A is B.

simile

metaphor

Your eyes are like the sun.

You are my sunshine.

He eats like a pig.
He lives like a pig.

He is a pig.

Dead Metaphors
In the phrase "to grasp the concept" the physical action "to grasp" is used as a metaphor for "to understand" (which is non-physical). But this phrase has been used so often that most English speakers do not have an image of the physical action in their mind. This metaphor has died; it is a "dead metaphor".

Mixed Metaphors
The awkward use of two or more different metaphors at the same time is normally best avoided. It creates conflicting images in the reader or listener's mind, reduces each metaphor's impact, and generally causes confusion. Look at this example:

  • America is a melting pot where new ideas are kindled.

 

تشبیه چیست ؟  ALL ABOUT SIMILE

Simile

pronounced: SIM-i-lee

 

It's been a hard day's night,
and I've been working like a dog

The Beatles

A simile is a figure of speech that says that one thing is like another different thing. We can use similes to make descriptions more emphatic or vivid.

We often use the words as...as and like with similes.

Common patterns for similes, with example sentences, are:

  • something [is*] AS adjective AS something
    His skin was as cold as ice.
    It felt as hard as rock.
    She looked as gentle as a lamb.
  • something [is*] LIKE something
    My love is like a red, red rose.
    These cookies taste like garbage.
    He had a temper (that was) like a volcano.
  • something [does**] LIKE something
    He eats like a pig.
    He smokes like a chimney.
    They fought like cats and dogs.

* stative verb: be, feel, smell, taste etc
** action verb

Here are some more examples of well known similes:

[is] AS adjective AS something

meaning

as blind as a bat

completely blind

as cold as ice

very cold

as flat as a pancake

completely flat

as gentle as a lamb

very gentle

as light as a feather

very light

as old as the hills

very old

as sharp as a knife

very sharp

as strong as a bull

very strong

as white as snow

pure white

as wise as an owl

very wise

Longer list of AS...AS similes

[is] LIKE something

possible meaning (depending on context)

like a rose

beautiful

like a volcano

explosive

like garbage

disgusting

like an animal

inhuman

like spaghetti

entangled

like dewdrops

sweet and pure

like golddust

precious

like a tip

very untidy (tip = garbage dump)

like a dream

wonderful, incredible

like stars

bright and beautiful

[does] LIKE something

meaning

to drink like a fish

to drink a lot

to eat like a bird

to eat very little

to eat like a horse

to eat a lot

to eat like a pig

to eat impolitely

to fight like cats and dogs

to fight fiercely

to sing like an angel

to sing beautifully

to sleep like a log

to sleep well and soundly

to smoke like a chimney

to smoke heavily, all the time

to soar like an eagle

to fly high and free

to work like a dog

to work very hard

Note that with the AS...AS pattern, the first AS is sometimes suppressed, for example:

  • His skin was cold as ice.

The above patterns of simile are the most common, but there are others made with adverbs or words such as than and as if, for example:

  • He ran as fast as the wind.
  • He is larger than life.
  • They ran as if for their lives.

Similes can include other figures of speech. For example, "He ran like greased lightning" is a simile that includes hyperbole (greased lightning).

Similes often make use of irony or sarcasm. In such cases they may even mean the opposite of the adjective used. Look at these examples:

  • His explanation was as clear as mud. (not clear at all since mud is opaque)
  • The film was about as interesting as watching a copy of Windows download. (long and boring)
  • Watching the show was like watching paint dry. (very boring)

Similes are often found (and they sometimes originate) in poetry and other literature. Here are a few examples:

  • A woman without a man is like a fish without a bicycle - Irina Dunn
  • Dawn breaks open like a wound that bleeds afresh - Wilfred Owen
  • Death has many times invited me: it was like the salt invisible in the waves - Pablo Neruda
  • Guiltless forever, like a tree - Robert Browning
  • Happy as pigs in mud - David Eddings
  • How like the winter hath my absence been - William Shakespeare
  • As idle as a painted ship upon a painted ocean - Samuel Taylor Coleridge
  • Jubilant as a flag unfurled - Dorothy Parker
  • So are you to my thoughts as food to life - William Shakespeare
  • Yellow butterflies flickered along the shade like flecks of sun - William Faulkner

Popular songs, too, make use of simile:

  • A woman needs a man like a fish needs a bicycle - U2
  • Cheaper than a hot dog with no mustard - Beastie Boys
  • I must do what's right, as sure as Kilimanjaro rises like Olympus above the Serengeti - Toto
  • It's been a hard day's night, and I've been working like a dog - The Beatles
  • Like A Rolling Stone - Bob Dylan
  • Like a bat outta [out of] hell - Meat Loaf
  • My heart is like an open highway - Jon Bon Jovi
  • These are the seasons of emotion and like the winds they rise and fall - Led Zeppelin
  • Thick as a Brick - Jethro Tull
  • You are as subtle as a brick to the small of my back - Taking Back Sunday

Caution: Many similes are clichés (phrases that are overused and betray a lack of original thought). You should use well know similes with care, but it is certainly useful to know them so that you can understand language that contains them.

 

Informal Contractions

Informal Contractions

Informal contractions are short forms of other words that people use when speaking casually. They are not exactly slang, but they are a little like slang.

For example, "gonna" is a short form of "going to". If you say "going to" very fast, without carefully pronouncing each word, it can sound like "gonna".

Please remember that these are informal contractions. That means that we do not use them in "correct" speech, and we almost never use them in writing. (If you see them in writing, for example in a comic strip, that is because the written words represent the spoken words or dialogue.) We normally use them only when speaking fast and casually, for example with friends. Some people never use them, even in informal speech.

It is probably true to say that informal contractions are more common in American English.

Also note that, unlike normal contractions, we do not usually use apostrophes (') with informal contractions when written.

On the right are some common informal contractions, with example sentences. Note that the example sentences may be a little artificial because when we use a contraction we may also use other contractions in the same sentence, or even drop some words completely. For example:

  • What are you going to do? >>
  • Whatcha going to do? >>
  • Whatcha gonna do?

or

  • Do you want a beer?
  • Do you wanna beer?
  • D'you wanna beer?
  • D'ya wanna beer?
  • Ya wanna beer?
  • Wanna beer?

These informal contractions are not "correct" English. Do not use them in a written exam, for example, except in appropriate situations.

  • ain't = am not/are not/is not
    I ain't sure.
    You ain't my boss.
  • ain't = has not/have not
    I ain't done it.
    She ain't finished yet.
  • gimme = give me
    Gimme your money.
    Don't gimme that rubbish.
    Can you gimme a hand?
  • gonna = going to
    Nothing's gonna change my love for you.
    I'm not gonna tell you.
    What are you gonna do?
  • gotta = (have) got a
    I've gotta gun.
    I gotta gun.
    She hasn't gotta penny.
    Have you gotta car?
  • gotta = (have) got to
    I've gotta go now.
    I gotta go now.
    We haven't gotta do that.
    Have they gotta work?
  • kinda = kind of
    She's kinda cute.
  • lemme = let me
    Lemme go!
  • wanna = want to
    I wanna go home.
  • wanna = want a
    I wanna coffee.
  • whatcha = what are you
    Whatcha going to do?
  • whatcha = what have you
    Whatcha got there?
  • ya = you
    Who saw ya?

 

Other Contractions

Other Contractions

Here are some more examples showing some very common contractions.

Short form

Long form

Example

here's

here is

Here's your meal.

there'll

there will

There'll be nobody here tomorrow.

there's

there is

There's a taxi!

that's

that is

That's my car!

that'll

that will

That'll be $10, please.

how's

how is?

How's your wife?

what'll

what will?

What'll people think?

what's

what is?

What's the matter?

when's

when is?

When's the wedding?

where's

where is?

Where's the cinema?

who's

who is?

Who's your teacher?

who'd

who would?

Who'd like ice-cream?

who'll

who will?

Who'll be there?

Negative Contractions

Negative Contractions

Notes

With the verb "to be", two negative forms are possible - we aren't or we're not etc.

In questions, am not is contracted to aren't, for example: I'm late, aren't I?

Short form

Long form

aren't

are not

can't

cannot, can not

couldn't

could not

daren't

dare not

didn't

did not

doesn't

does not

don't

do not

hasn't

has not

haven't

have not

hadn't

had not

isn't

is not

mayn't

may not

mightn't

might not

mustn't

must not

needn't

need not

oughtn't

ought not

shan't

shall not

shouldn't

should not

wasn't

was not

weren't

were not

won't

will not

wouldn't

would not

Positive Contractions

Positive Contractions

Notes

Be careful. Some contractions can have two or three meanings. For example, he'd can be he had or he would. It depends on the rest of the sentence. Look at these examples:

  • He'd like to go. (He would like to go.)
  • He'd finished when I arrived. (He had finished when I arrived.)

The contraction 's (= is or has) is not used only with pronouns. It can also be used with nouns, names, question words and words like "here" and "there", for example: The train's late. John's arrived. Where's the phone? Here's your change. There's a policeman.

Short form

Long form

I'm

I am

I've

I have

I'll

I will/I shall

I'd

I would/I should/I had

you're

you are

you've

you have

you'll

you will

you'd

you had/you would

he's

he has/he is

he'll

he will

he'd

he had/he would

she's

she has/she is

she'll

she will

she'd

she had/she would

it's

it has/it is

it'll

it will

we're

we are

we've

we have

we'll

we will

we'd

we had/we would

they're

they are

they've

they have

they'll

they will

they'd

they had/they would

WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN SAY AND TELL تفاوت های  SAY و TELL

Say or Tell?

Say and tell have similar meanings. They both mean to communicate verbally with someone. But we often use them differently.

The simple way to think of say and tell is:

  • You say something
  • You tell someone something

You say something

You tell someone something

Ram said that he was tired.

Ram told Jane that he was tired.

Anthony says you have a new job.

Anthony tells me you have a new job.

Tara said: "I love you."

Tara told John that she loved him.

But, of course, it is not always so easy. Here are a few rules to help you.

Personal object
We usually follow tell with a personal object (the person that we are speaking to). We usually use say without a personal object:

  • She told me that she loved John.
  • She said that she loved John.
  • He told everybody that he had to leave.
  • He said that he had to leave.

Say "to someone"
With say, we sometimes use "to someone":

  • He said to me that he was tired.
  • Tara said to Ram that he had done very well.
  • Anthony said to her, "I hope you come soon."
  • "I'd like to sleep," she said to him quietly.

Direct speech
We can use say with direct speech. We use tell only with direct speech that is an instruction or information:

  • Amanda said, "Hello John. How are you?"
  • "That's great'" she said.
  • He told her: "Open the door quietly."
  • She told me, "I have never been to England."

We can use say with direct questions, but we cannot use tell:

  • She said: "Do you love me?"
  • The policeman said to the prisoner, "Where were you at 8pm?"

Reported speech
We can use say and tell to talk about reported information:

  • She said that it was raining.
  • She told me that she would call at 2pm.

We cannot use say or tell to talk about reported questions. We must use ask (or a similar verb):

  • She asked if I had ever been there.
  • They asked what I wanted to eat.
  • She asked where he lived.
  • He asked if she wanted to go home.

Orders, advice
We use tell + object + infinitive for orders or advice:

  • She told him to sit down.
  • They told me not to wait.
  • Tell Neil to have a holiday and forget her.

Phrases
Here are a few fixed phrases with tell. We cannot use say with these phrases:

  • tell (someone) a story
  • tell (someone) a lie
  • tell (someone) the truth
  • tell the future (= to know what the future will bring)
  • tell the time (= know how to read a clock)

Right and wrong
Read these examples of correct and incorrect usage:

We cannot...

These are NOT possible...

These are possible...

say someone to do something

Tara said Jo to go away.

Tara told Jo to go away.

say someone something

Panita said me that she was hungry.

Panita told me that she was hungry.

tell something

He told that he likes coffee.

He said that he likes coffee.

tell to someone

Tookta told to me that she was coming.

Tookta told me that she was coming.

Tookta said to me that she was coming.

say a lie

Siriluck always says lies.

Siriluck always tells lies.

tell somebody "direct speech"
(except instructions and information)

Ram told Nok: "Let's turn on the TV."

Ram said to Nok: "Let's turn on the TV."

(Ram told Nok, "Turn on the TV.")

(Ram told Nok: "I was born in 1985.")

say or tell a reported question

She said if I wanted to come.

She asked if I wanted to come.

Tookta told what I wanted to do.

Took asked what I wanted to do.

پسوندها به همراه معنی و مثال SUFFIXES ,MEANING AND EXAMPLE

suffix

grammatical change

example
original word

example
suffixed word

-s

plural

dog

dogs

-en

plural (irregular)

ox

oxen

-s

3rd person singular present

like

he likes

-ed

past tense
past participle

work

he worked
he has worked

-en

past participle (irregular)

eat

he has eaten

-ing

continuous/progressive

sleep

he is sleeping

-er

comparative

big

bigger

-est

superlative

big

the biggest

Derivational suffixes

With derivational suffixes, the new word has a new meaning, and is usually a different part of speech. But the new meaning is related to the old meaning - it is "derived" from the old meaning.

We can add more than one suffix, as in this example:

derive (verb) + tion = derivation (noun) + al = derivational (adjective)

There are several hundred derivational suffixes. Here are some of the more common ones:

suffix

making

example
original word

example
suffixed word

-ation

nouns

explore
hesitate

exploration
hesitation

-sion

persuade
divide

persuasion
division

-er

teach

teacher

-cian

music

musician

-ess

god

goddess

-ness

sad

sadness

-al

arrive

arrival

-ary

diction

dictionary

-ment

treat

treatment

-y

jealous
victor

jealousy
victory

-al

adjectives

accident

accidental

-ary

imagine

imaginary

-able

tax

taxable

-ly

brother

brotherly

-y

ease

easy

-ful

sorrow
forget

sorrowful
forgetful

-ly

adverbs

helpful

helpfully

-ize

verbs

terror
private

terrorize
privatize

-ate

hyphen

hyphenate

 

پیشوندها به همراه مثال و معنی PREFIXES ,MEANING AND EXAMPLE

Prefix

Meaning

Examples

a-

also an-

not, without

atheist, anaemic

a-

to, towards

aside, aback

in the process of, in a particular state

a-hunting, aglow

a-

of

anew

completely

abashed

ab-

also abs-

away, from

abdicate, abstract

ad-

also a-, ac-, af-, ag- al-, an-, ap-, at- as-, at-

movement to, change into, addition or increase

advance, adulterate, adjunct, ascend, affiliate, affirm, aggravate, alleviate, annotate, apprehend, arrive, assemble, attend

ante-

before, preceding

antecedent, ante-room

anti-

also ant-

opposing, against, the opposite

anti-aircraft, antibiotic, anticlimax, Antarctic

be-

all over, all around

bespatter, beset

completely

bewitch, bemuse

having, covered with

bejewelled

affect with (added to nouns)

befog

cause to be (added to adjectives)

becalm

com-

also co-, col-, con-, cor-

with, jointly, completely

combat, codriver, collude, confide, corrode

contra-

against, opposite

contraceptive

counter-

opposition, opposite direction

counter-attack, counteract

de-

down, away

descend, despair, depend, deduct

completely

denude, denigrate

removal, reversal

de-ice, decamp

dia-

also di-

through, across

diagonal

dis-

also di-

negation, removal, expulsion

disadvantage, dismount, disbud, disbar

en-

also em-

put into or on

engulf, enmesh

bring into the condition of

enlighten, embitter

intensification

entangle, enrage

ex-

also e-, ef-

out

exit, exclude, expand

upward

exalt, extol

completely

excruciate, exasperate

previous

ex-wife

extra-

outside, beyond

extracurricular

hemi-

half

hemisphere

hyper-

beyond, more than, more than normal

hypersonic, hyperactive

hypo-

under

hypodermic, hypothermia

in-

also il-, im-

not, without

infertile, inappropriate, impossible

also il-, im-, ir-

in, into, towards, inside

influence, influx, imbibe

infra-

below

infrared, infrastructure

inter-

between, among

interact, interchange

intra-

inside, within

intramural, intravenous

non-

absence, negation

non-smoker, non-alcoholic

ob-

also oc-, of-, op-

blocking, against, concealing

obstruct, occult, offend, oppose

out-

surpassing, exceeding

outperform

external, away from

outbuilding, outboard

over-

excessively, completely

overconfident, overburdened, overjoyed

upper, outer, over, above

overcoat, overcast

peri-

round, about

perimeter

post-

after in time or order

postpone

pre-

before in time, place, order or importance

pre-adolescent, prelude, precondition

pro-

favouring, in support of

pro-African

acting for

proconsul

motion forwards or away

propulsion

before in time, place or order

prologue

re-

again

repaint, reappraise, reawake

semi-

half, partly

semicircle, semi-conscious

sub-

also suc-, suf-, sug-, sup-, sur-, sus-

at a lower position

submarine, subsoil

lower in rank

sub-lieutenant

nearly, approximately

sub-tropical

syn-

also sym-

in union, acting together

synchronize, symmetry

trans-

across, beyond

transnational, transatlantic

into a different state

translate

ultra-

beyond

ultraviolet, ultrasonic

extreme

ultramicroscopic

un-

not

unacceptable, unreal, unhappy, unmanned

reversal or cancellation of action or state

unplug, unmask

under-

beneath, below

underarm, undercarriage

lower in rank

undersecretary

not enough

underdeveloped

 

صفات بی قاعده Irregular Adjectives (comparative, superlative)

Irregular Adjectives (comparative, superlative)

The regular way to make comparative/superlative adjectives is to add -er/-est or to use more/most. A small number of adjectives, however, are irregular and some of these can be regular or irregular. The most important ones are listed here:

Adjective

Comparative

Superlative

Example

good

better

the best

irregular

Tara is the best athlete in the school.

well (healthy)

better

the best

irregular

He is still in hospital, but he is better than he was last week.

bad

worse

the worst

irregular

You are the worst driver I have ever known.

far

further

the furthest

irregular

My house is the furthest one.

far

farther

the farthest

regular

My house is the farther one.

old (people in a family)

elder

the eldest

irregular

Ram is my elder brother.

old (general use)

older

the oldest

regular

Your teacher is older than my teacher.

 

حروف ندا و کاربرد آنها INTERJECTIONS

Interjections

Hi! That's an interjection. :-)

"Interjection" is a big name for a little word. Interjections are short exclamations like Oh!, Um or Ah! They have no real grammatical value but we use them quite often, usually more in speaking than in writing. When interjections are inserted into a sentence, they have no grammatical connection to the sentence. An interjection is sometimes followed by an exclamation mark (!) when written.

Here are some interjections with examples:

interjection meaning example
ah expressing pleasure "Ah, that feels good."
expressing realization "Ah, now I understand."
expressing resignation "Ah well, it can't be heped."
expressing surprise "Ah! I've won!"
alas expressing grief or pity "Alas, she's dead now."
dear expressing pity "Oh dear! Does it hurt?"
expressing surprise "Dear me! That's a surprise!"
eh asking for repetition "It's hot today." "Eh?" "I said it's hot today."
expressing enquiry "What do you think of that, eh?"
expressing surprise "Eh! Really?"
inviting agreement "Let's go, eh?"
er expressing hesitation "Lima is the capital of...er...Peru."
hello, hullo expressing greeting "Hello John. How are you today?"
expressing surprise "Hello! My car's gone!"
hey calling attention "Hey! look at that!"
expressing surprise, joy etc "Hey! What a good idea!"
hi expressing greeting "Hi! What's new?"
hmm expressing hesitation, doubt or disagreement "Hmm. I'm not so sure."
oh, o expressing surprise "Oh! You're here!"
expressing pain "Oh! I've got a toothache."
expressing pleading "Oh, please say 'yes'!"
ouch expressing pain "Ouch! That hurts!"
uh expressing hesitation "Uh...I don't know the answer to that."
uh-huh expressing agreement "Shall we go?" "Uh-huh."
um, umm expressing hesitation "85 divided by 5 is...um...17."
well expressing surprise "Well I never!"
introducing a remark "Well, what did he say?"