| Fråga   | Svar   | 
        
        |   This shirt is made from beautiful soft fabric.   börja lära sig fabric: tecido; cloth: pano, tecido |  |   Fabric is cloth that you use for making things like clothes and bags.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Rafael works in a carpet factory.  |  |   Don't confuse fabric and factory. A factory is a building where machines are used to make things.  |  |  | 
|   The report is full of facts and figures.   börja lära sig figure: número, algarismo |  |   A fact is a piece of knowledge or information that is true.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig He tried to hide the fact that he had failed.  |  |   You can talk about a whole situation with the phrase the fact that.    the fact that You must use that in sentences like these. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I don't watch television, in fact, I no longer own a TV.  |  |   You use in fact if you want to give more information about a statement, especially if the new information is surprising.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I wanted everyone to get fair treatment. It's not fair - she's got more than me!  |  |   If you say that something is fair, you mean that everyone is treated in the same way.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig We solved the problem quickly and fairly.  |  |   The adverb form of fair is fairly.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig The information was fairly accurate. I wrote the first part fairly quickly.  |  |   Fairly also has a completely different meaning. It can mean to quite a large degree.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Golf's a bit more expensive. The results were somewhat lower than expected.  |  |   Don't use fairly in front of a comparative form. In conversation, say The train is a bit quicker than the bus. In writing, use The train is somewhat quicker than the bus.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig He felt and hurt his leg. A cup fell on the floor.  |  |   When something or someone falls, they move quickly towards the ground by accident. The past tense form of fall is fell. The past participle is fallen.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig She fell down in the mud. A tree fell over in the storm.  |  |   When you are talking about people or tall objects, you often use fall down or fall over instead of fall.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Rain was beginning to fall.  |  |   When rain or snow falls, it comes down from the sky.  |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   Don't say that someone falls a something. Say She screamed and dropped the tray.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I got knocked over by a car when I was six.  |  |   Don't say that someone falls a person. Say: He bumped into the old lady and knocked her down or He bumped into the old lady and knocked her over.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig There was something familiar about him.  |  |   If someone or something is familiar, you recognize them because you have seen or heard them before.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Her name is familiar to millions of people.  |  |   If something is familiar to you, you know it well.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I am familiar with his work.  |  |   If you are familiar with something, you know or understand it well.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig What is your favourite film? Her favourite writer is Hans Christian Andersen.  |  |   Your favourite thing or person is the one you like more than all the others.    favourite Don't use most with favourite The American spelling of favourite is favorite. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I can feel a pain in my foot.  |  |   If you can feel something, you are aware of it through your body    feel. awareness. The past tense form of feel is felt. Use can in sentences like these. Also, don't use a progressive form. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig The doctor felt his pulse.  |  |   When you feel an object, you touch it in order to find out what it is like.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig The blanket felt soft. How does it feel? Warm or cold?  |  |   The way something feels is the way it seems to you when you hold it or touch it.    impressions. When you use feel like this, don't use a progressive form. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I feel lonely. I'm feeling terrible. She was feeling hungry.  |  |   You can use feel with an adjective to talk about experiencing an emotion or physical sensation. When you use feel like this, you use either a simple or a progressive form.    emotions and sensations. When you use feel in this way, don't use a reflexive pronoun. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I'm having a dinner party for a few close friends. Here are a few ideas that might help you.  |  |   You use a few in front of a plural noun to show that you are talking about a small number of people or things.  |  |  | 
|   I have a few friends/I have few friends.   börja lära sig You mean that you have some friends/you mean that you do not have enough friends and you are lonely. |  |   You can also use few without a in front of a plural noun, but it has a different meaning. It emphasizes that there is only a small amount of something.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig They haven't got many books. I don't have many visitors.  |  |   In conversation, people do not usually use few without a. Instead they use not many. Instead of saying: I have few friends, people usually say: I haven't got many friends or I don't have many friends.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Would you like a little more milk in your tea?  |  |   Don't use few or a few with uncountable nouns.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig The police searched the house and found a gun.  |  |   If you find something you have been looking for, you see it or learn where it is. The past tense form and past participle of find is found.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I think I'm lost - I can't find the bridge.  |  |   If you cannot see the thing you are looking for, you say that you cannot find it or that you can't find it.  |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   You can use find to say that you notice an object somewhere.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I find his behaviour extremely rude. I found it easy.  |  |   You can use find to give your opinion about something. For example, if you think that something is funny, you can say that you find it funny.    find: opinions and feelings. You cannot use find out for any of these meanings. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Have you found out who broke the photocopier? I found out the train times.  |  |   You use find out to talk about learning the facts about something.    find out: obtaining information |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig From the top there is a fine view of the countryside.  |  |   You can use fine to say that something is very good.    fine used to mean very good |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Would you like more milk in your coffee? - No, this is fine.  |  |   You can also use fine to say that something is satisfactory or acceptable.    fine used to mean satisfactory |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig How are you? - Fine, thanks.  |  |   If you say that you are fine, you mean that your health is satisfactory.  |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   When you use fine to mean satisfactory, don't use very in front of it. You can use just instead.  |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   In conversation, you can use fine as an adverb to mean satisfactorily or well.    Don't use finely in sentences like these. |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   You can also use fine to say that something is very thin, or has very thin parts.    fine and finely used to mean very thin |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   You can use finely as an adverb with this meaning.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig The concert finished at midnight.  |  |   When something finishes, it ends.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig She finished her dinner and went to bed.  |  |   When you finish what you are doing, you reach the end of it.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I finished reading your book last night.  |  |   You can say that someone finishes doing something.    Don't use a verb in the infinitive in sentences like this. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig January is the first month of the year.  |  |   The first thing of a kind is the one that comes before all the others.    first used as an adjective |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   If an event happens before other events, you say that it happens first.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig First, mix the eggs and flour. There are two reasons why I'm angry. Firstly you're late, and secondly, you've forgotten your homework. First of all, I'd like to thank you all for coming.  |  |   You can use first, firstly or first of all to introduce the first thing that you want to say or the first thing in a list.    first, firstly and first of all |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig At first I was surprised. At first I thought that the shop was empty, then I saw a man in the corner.  |  |   When you are contrasting something at the beginning of an event with something that happened later, you say at first.    at first. Don't use firstly in sentences like these. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Do all your students call you by your first name?  |  |   Your first name is the name that you were given when you were born, that comes before your surname.  |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   On official forms, forename is sometimes used instead of first name.  |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   In American English, given name is sometimes used instead of first name or forename.  |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   In British English, some people use Christian name instead of first name. However, this can be offensive to people who are not from a Christian family.  |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   If clothes fit you, they are the right size.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig The boots fitted James perfectly. The pants fit him well and were very confortable.  |  |   In British English, the past tense form of fit is fitted. In American English, the past tense form is fit.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig You look great in that dress, it really suits you.  |  |   If clothes make you look attrative, don't say that they fit you. Say that they suit you.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig The book felt to the floor.  |  |   The floor of a room is the flat part that you walk on.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig My office is on the second floor.  |  |   A floor of a building is all the rooms on a particular level. You say that something is on a particular floor.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig In British English, the floor that is level with the ground is called  |  |   the ground floor. The floor above it is called the first floor, the floor above that is the second floor, and so on.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig In American English, the floor that is level with the ground floor is called  |  |   The first floor, the flor above it is the second floor, and so on.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig a house with four storeys.  |  |   Storey is also used for a level of a building. It is usually used to talk about how high a building is.  |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   Don't call the surface of the earth the floor. Call it the ground.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Sorry to disturb you - I forgot my key.  |  |   If you forget something such as a key or an umbrella, you do not remember to take it with you when you go somewhere.    forget. The past tense form of forget is forgot. The past participle is forgotten. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I left my bag on the bus.  |  |   You cannot use the verb forget to say that you have put something somewhere and left it there. Instead you use the verb leave.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I have forgotten his name.  |  |   If you have forgotten something that you knew, you cannot remember it.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig He helped me to forget about my problems.  |  |   If you forget something, or forget about something, you stop thinking about it.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig She forgot to lock her door one day and two men got in. Don't forget to call me.  |  |   If you forget to do something, you do not do it because you do not remember it at the right time.    firget to. Don't use an -ing form in sentences like these. |  |  | 
|   The coffee was free... free school meals.   börja lära sig Pensioners can travel free on the buses. |  |   If something is free, you can have it or use it without paying for it.    no payment. The adverb you use with this meaning is free. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig They spend most of their free time reading. Are you free on Tuesday?  |  |   If you are free at a particular time, you are not busy. Free time is time when you are not busy.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig They are free to bring their friends home at any time.  |  |   You use free as an adjective to describe activities that are not controlled by rules or other people.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig They all express their opinions freely in class.  |  |   Don't use free as an adverb with this meaning. Use freely.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig He's a good friend of mine. A close friend told me about it.  |  |   Your friends are people you know well and like spending time with. You can call a friend who you know very well a good friend or a close friend.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I went to visit an old friend from school.  |  |   If someone has been your friend for a long time, you can call them an old friend.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig You used to be good friends with him, didn't you? I also became friends with Melanie.  |  |   If someone is your friend, you can say that you are friends with them.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig The staff are very friendly and helpful.  |  |   A friendly person is kind and pleasant.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig The women had been friendly to Lyn.  |  |   If you are friendly to someone or friendly towards someone, you are kind and pleasant to them.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig She smiled at him in a friendly way.  |  |   Friendly is never an adverb. He behaved in a friendly way.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig When I told her how I felt, she was very sympathetic.  |  |   Don't confuse friendly and sympathetic. If you have a problem and someone is sympathetic, they show that they care and would like to help you.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig He received a message from his boss.  |  |   When you are talking about the person who wrote you a letter or sent a message to you, you say that the letter or message is from that person.  |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   If you come from a particular place, you were born there, or it is your home.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig How far is the hotel from here?  |  |   You can use from when you are talking about the distance between places.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Breakfast is available from 6 a.m.  |  |   If something happens from a particular time, it begins to happen at that time.  |  |  | 
|   He has been a teacher since 1998.   börja lära sig I have lived here since 1984. |  |   Don't use from to say that something started to happen at a particular time in the past and is still happening now.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig We knocked on the front door.  |  |   The front of a building is the part that faces the street or that has the building's main entrance.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig People were waiting in front of the art gallery.  |  |   If you are between the front of a building and the street, you say that you are in front of the building.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig The hotel is opposite a railway station.  |  |   If there is a street between you and the front of a building, don't say that you are in front of yhe building. Say that you are opposite it.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig stinson has rented a home across from his parents.  |  |   Speakers of American English usually say across from rather than opposite.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Fresh fruit and vegetables provide fibre and vitamins... fruit imported from Australia.  |  |   Fruit is usually an uncountable noun. Oranges, bananas, grapes, and apples are all fruit.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig a table with some fruit on it. I'm going to the market to buy some fruit.  |  |   Don't use fruits to talk about several oranges, bananas, etc. Use some fruit.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig ... a garden full of pear and apple trees. His office was full of people.  |  |   If something is full of things or people, it contains a very large number of them.    full. Don't use any preposition except of after full in sentences like these. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig The course is interesting and it's also fun.  |  |   If something is fun, it is pleasant, enjoyable, and not serious.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig The children had fun at the party.  |  |   If you have fun, you enjoy yourself.    Fun is an uncountable noun. |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   If you want to say that something is very enjoyable, you can say that it is great fun or a lot of fun.  |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   If something is funny, it is amusing and makes you smile or laugh.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Have you noticed anything funny about this plane?  |  |   You can also say that something is funny if it is strange or surprising.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig She arranged the furniture.  |  |   Furniture is the large objects in a room, such as tables and chairs.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Each piece of furniture matched the style of the house.  |  |   Furniture is an uncountable noun. You can talk about a piece of furniture.  |  |  |