| Fråga   | Svar   | 
        
        |  börja lära sig the black hairs on the back of his hands.  |  |   Each of the fine threads that grow on your head and body is a hair. You can talk about several of these things as hairs.    hair: used as a countable noun |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I washed my hands and combed my hair.  |  |   You talk about all the hairs on your head as your hair, not your hairs.    hair used as an uncountable noun. hair can be a countable or an uncountable noun |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   Your hand is the part of your body at the end of your arm. It includes your fingers and your thumb.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig The man held a letter in his hand.  |  |   You talk about a particular person's hand as his hand, her hand, or my hand, not the hand.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Dad took Mum by the hand.  |  |   However, if you say that someone does something to someone else's hand, you usually use the.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Then a strange thing happened.  |  |   Something that happens takes place without being planned.    happen. happen does not have a passive form. Some verbs which can be used only in the active are: occur, rise, happen, arise, fall, exist, consist (of), depend (on), result (from). |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig The discussions took place in Paris. The crash occurred at night.  |  |   You use happen after words like something, thing, what, or this. After nouns with a more exact meaning, you usually use take place or occur.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig The first meeting took place on 9 January.  |  |   Don't say that a planned event happens. Say that it takes place.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I wonder what's happened to Jeremy?  |  |   When something happens to someone or something, it takes place and affects them.    happen to: in sentences like this, don't use any preposition except to after happen. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Looking after three babies is very hard work.  |  |   If something is hard, it is not easy to do.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Many old people have worked hard all their lives.  |  |   If you work hard or try hard, you do it with a lot of effort.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Nick hardly slept that night.  |  |   Hardly is an adverb that has a totally different meaning from hard. You use hardly to say that something is only just true    hardly: If someone hardly speaks, they do not speak much. If something is hardly surprising, it is not very surprising. |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   If you use an auxiliary verb with hardly, you put it first. You say, for example, I can hardly see.    Don't use not with hardly. Say I hardly knew him. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I hardly ever spoke to them.  |  |   If something hardly ever happens, it almost never happens.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I have to speak to your father.  |  |   If someone has to do something, they must do it.    have to. the other forms of have are has, having, had. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Have a look at this! We had dinner together.  |  |   You can use have in front of a noun phrase to talk about an action.    have: actions and activities |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig The children are having a party.  |  |   You use a progressive form to say that an activity is taking place.    He is having a bath at the moment. |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   You can use have to show that someone owns something.    have: owning things, relationships and appearances |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Do you have any brothers or sisters?  |  |   You also use have to talk about friends and family.  |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   You use have to talk about a person's appearance or character.    Don't use a progressive form when you are talking about owning things, relationships or appearances. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I've got her address. He's got a beard now.  |  |   You can often use have got in spoken English with the same meaning as have. You do not usually pronounce have got, has got, and had got in full. You use 've got, 's got, or 'd got instead.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I've got a rather unusual house. She's got two sisters. He's got a lovely smile.  |  |   Have got is mostly used to talk about owning things, relationships, and appearances.    owning things, relationships, and appearances |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   You often use have got to talk about illnesses.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I have a bath every morning.  |  |   You don't use have got for all meanings of have. Don't use it when you are talking about an event or action. Don't use have got in formal English.    when you don't use have got. American speakers do not usually use have got. Instead they use have. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I haven't got any more paper.  |  |   In negative sentences, not, or usually n't, goes between have and got.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Have you got enough money for a taxi?  |  |   In questions, you put the subject between have and got.  |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   If you can hear a sound, you know about it because it has reached your ears.    hear: use can in sentences like this. say, for example, I can hear a radio. Also, don't use a progressive form. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig She heard another sound. She could hear music in the distance.  |  |   The past tense form and past participle of hear is heard. If you want to say that someone was aware of something in the past, you use heard or could hear.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig He helped us to raise a lot of money. I helped him fix his car.  |  |   If you help someone, you make something easier for them. You can use it with an infinitive, with or without to.    help as a transitive verb. For example, you can say I helped him to move the desk or I helped him move the desk, which means exactly the same. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig My mum helps cook the meals for the children. Dora helped to carry the boxes.  |  |   You can also use help without an object, followed by an infinitive with or without to. If someone helps do something or helps to do it, they help other people to do it.    help as an intransitive verb. Don't use an -ing form after help. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I couldn't help laughing when I saw her face.  |  |   If you cannot help doing something, you cannot stop yourself from doing it.    cannot help. Don't use a to -infinitive after cannot help. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig We can come here at any time.  |  |   You use here to talk about the place where you are.    here. Don't use to in front of here. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Here's your coffee. Here are the addresses that you need.  |  |   You can use here is or here are at the beginning of a sentence when you want to show or give something to someone. You use here is in front of a singular noun and here are in front of a plural noun.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig the high mountains of northern Japan.  |  |   You use high to describe things which measure a long way from the bottom to the top. For example, you talk about a high hill or a high wall.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig a field of tall waving grass.  |  |   You use tall to describe things that are high but not very wide. So, for example, you talk about a tall tree or a tall chimney.  |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   You always use tall when you are talking about people.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig a large room with a high ceiling.  |  |   High also means a long way above the ground. For example, you talk about a high window or a high shelf.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig We hired a car and drove across the island. He rented a car for the weekend.  |  |   If you pay to use something for a short time, you can say that you hire it or rent it. Hire is more common in British English an d rent more common in American English.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig She rents the house with three other women.  |  |   If you pay regularly in order to use something for a long period, you say that you rent it. You do not usually say that you hire it.  |  |  | 
|   The cottage was let to an actress from London.   börja lära sig let: BrE alugar “to let” “aluga-se” |  |   If you rent a building or piece of land from someone, you can say that they let it to you. The past tense form and past participle of let is let.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig The house was rented to a farmer.  |  |   Let is more common in British English. In American English, you use rent.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I can't wait for the summer holidays.  |  |   In British English, you talk about yhe time that you spend away from work or schools as the holiday or the holiddays.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I went to Marrakesh for a holiday.  |  |   You talk about time that you spend away from home enjoying yourself as a holiday.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Where are you going for your holidays?  |  |   When you spend a period of time like this each year, you talk about your holidays.    You usually use a determiner (a word like a, that, your or my) in front of holiday or holidays. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Remember to turn off the gas when you go on holiday.  |  |   If you are on holiday, you do not have to go to school or work, or you are spending some time away from home enjoying yourself.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Harold used to take a vacation at that time.  |  |   The usual American word for a period of time spent away from work or school, or away from home enjoying yourself, is vacation.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig He never did any homework.  |  |   Homework is work that pupils take home to do in the evening or at the weekend. You say that pupils do homework.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig He does most of the housework.  |  |   Housework is work that you do to keep a house clean and tidy.    housework. You use do, not make, with both homework and housework. Both homework and housework are uncountable nouns. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig He hoped she wasn't going to cry. I sat down, hoping they wouldn't notice me.  |  |   If you hope that something is true or will happen, you want it to be true or to happen.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I hope you'll enjoy your stay in Britain. I hope you get well soon.  |  |   You often use I hope to show that you want something to be good or successful. After hope you can use either a future form or the present simple.    I hope. you'll enjoy the film or I hope you enjoy the film. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Will you be home at six? - I hope so. Have you lost the ticket? - I hope not.  |  |   If someone asks you whether something is true, or whether something will happen, you can answer yes by saying I hope so or no by saying I hope not.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig We bought this house because of the garden.  |  |   You use house to talk about the building where you live.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Brody arrived home a little before five. I'll finish the report at home.  |  |   You say I'm going home or She was at home.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig My father works away from home. Dublin will always be home to me.  |  |   Your home is the place where you live or feel that you belong. Home can be used to talk about a person's house or to a town, a region, or a country.    home. Don't use to directly in front of home. Say We went home. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig How do you spell his name? This is how I make a vegetable curry.  |  |   You use how when you are talking about the way something is done.    how: ways of doing things |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig How are you? How is she? All right?  |  |   You use how with be to ask about someone's health.    how: asking about someone's health |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig How was your trip? How was the smoked fish?  |  |   You use how with be to ask someone whether something was good.    how: asking about opinions |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig What's his mother like? What is Fiji like?  |  |   Don't use how to ask for a description of something or someone. For example, if you want a description of someone's boss, say What is your boss like?    what: asking for a description |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Losing at games doesn't matter to some women. Most men, however, can't stand it.  |  |   You use however when you want to add something new and different or unexpected after what you've already said.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig You can do it however you want.  |  |   You also use however to say that it is not important how something is done.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig How ever did you find me?  |  |   Sometimes people use ever after how at the beginning of a question. They do this to show that they are surprised. For example, instead of saying How did you get here?, they say How ever did you get here?    how ever Write how ever as two separate words. |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig I like that dress - how much was it?  |  |   You use how much when you are asking about the price of something. For example. you say How much is that T-shirt?  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig What is his income? What does he earn? or How much does he earn?  |  |   Don't use how much and price in the same sentence. Only use how much with be when you are asking about the price of something. Don't use it to ask about other amounts of money.    Similarly: What is the temperature outside? or What is the population of Tokyo? What is the speed limit? |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   A hundred or one hundred is the number 100.  |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   A thousand or one thousand is the number 1,000.  |  |  | 
| börja lära sig |  |   A million or one million is the number 1,000,000.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig We'll give you a thousand dollars for the story.  |  |   You usually say that there are a hundred/thousand/million things.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig Over one thousand students applied. The total amount was one hundred and forty-nine pounds and thirty pence.  |  |   You say one hundred/thousand/million things when you want to emphasize the nymber, or when you want to be very clear and precise.  |  |  | 
|  börja lära sig There are more than two hundred languages spoken in Nigeria.  |  |   Don't add -s to hundred, thousand or million when you put another number in front of them.  |  |  |