English > English |
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have a good time |
1. v. To enjoy oneself. |
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Analysis |
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have |
Additional archaic forms are second-person singular present tense hast, third-person singular present tense hath, present participle haveing, and second-person singular past tense hadst. |
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1. v. To possess, own, hold. |
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I have a house and a car. |
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Look what I have here — a frog I found on the street! |
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2. v. To be related in some way to (with the object identifying the relationship). |
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a |
1. art. One; any indefinite example of; used to denote a singular item of a group. |
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There was a man here looking for you yesterday. |
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2. art. Used in conjunction with the adjectives score, dozen, hundred, thousand, and million, as a function word. |
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I've seen it happen a hundred times. |
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3. art. One certain or particular; any single.Brown, Lesley, (2003) |
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good |
1. adj. of people |
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2. adj. Acting in the interest of what is beneficial, ethical, or moral. |
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good intentions |
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3. adj. Competent or talented. |
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a good swimmer |
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time |
1. n. The inevitable progression into the future with the passing of present events into the past. |
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Time stops for nobody. the ebb and flow of time |
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2. n. (physics, usually) A dimension of spacetime with the opposite metric signature to space dimensions; the fourth dimension. |
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Both science-fiction writers and physicists have written about travel through time. |
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3. n. (physics) Change associated with the second law of thermodynamics; the physical and psychological result of increasing entropy. |
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