Showing posts with label VOCABULARY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label VOCABULARY. Show all posts

Monday, 7 April 2014

Clothes

Clothes


This is a list of vocabulary items related to clothes

dress
skirt
trousers
jeans
Dress
Skirt
trousers
jeans
shorts
shirt
T-shirt
suite
Shorts
Shirt
T-shirt
Suite
coat
scarf
tie
belt
Coat
Scarf
tie
Belt
handbag
hat
necklace
glasses
Handbag
Hat
Necklace
Glasses
shoes
socks
watch
jacket
Shoes
Socks
Watch
Jacket

Friday, 4 April 2014

Parts of the body

Parts of the body

This is a list of vocabulary items related to the parts of the body.
arm
back
beard
ear
arm
back
beard
ear
elbow
eye
eyebrow
eyelashes
elbow
eye
eyebrow
eyelashes
face
finger
foot
hair
face
finger
foot
hair
hand
leg
mouth
neck
hand
leg
mouth
neck
nose
shoulder
tongue
tooth
nose
shoulder
tongue
tooth
lips
mostache
knee
head
lips
mustache
knee
head

Colors- Colours

Colors in English, Colours in English

What is the difference betwen Color and Colour?

Both words mean the same thing and its spelling depends on the country where the word is written.
The word Color is used in United States.
The word Colour is used in the rest of the English-speaking countries (England, Australia, NZ etc.)
The names of the more common colours in English appear in the chart below:

What is the difference betwen Gray and Grey?

The same as with the difference between color and colour, it depends on the country.
The word Gray is used in United States.
The word Grey is used in the rest of the English-speaking countries (England, Australia, NZ etc.)

Word order with colours

There are three ways that you can use a colour in a sentence to describe something:
1. To Be + Colour. e.g. My car is blue.
2. Colour + Noun. e.g. The blue car is mine.
3. Colour is the Noun. e.g. Blue is the colour of my car.
Did you know that, because colours give us more information about a person or a thing, they areadjectives in English?

Light - Dark - Bright

You can also talk in shades (or intensity) of colour in English by using such expressions as:
Light is the opposite of Dark.
 
Bright: a strong colour that is easy to see.
  • Helen has dark green eyes.
  • His light grey hair made him look very distinguished.
  • Her bright pink lipstick doesn't look good.
The words Light, Dark and Bright are placed before the colour.

Colours + ISH

If you are not exactly sure how to describe a colour, we normally use the suffix -ish.
e.g. Greenish (= approximately green but not exactly green)
  • The sunset is a beautiful pinkish-purplish colour today.
  • His shirt is lightish blue in colour

Typical Things of each Colour

The following is a list of things typically associated with each colour:
Red: Strawberry, Rose, Fire engine, Blood, Heart
Orange: Pumpkin, Carrot, Basketball
Yellow: Cheese, Sun, Butter, Lemon
Green: Grass, Lettuce, Frog, Leaf, Lizard
Blue: Sky, Ocean, Blueberry, Whale
Black: Bat, Night, Tire (tyre), Fly
White: Paper, Sugar, Milk, Snow, Sheep
Pink: Pig, Tongue, Cotton candy (Candy floss)
Brown: Wood, Cigar, Earth, Acorn, Horse
Grey / Gray: Rock, Lead, Dust, Mouse, Elephant
Purple: Bruise, Grapes
How many more things can you add to each colour?
Examples of each color in English