Vocabulary Words | Meanings |
---|---|
fond | loving; liking very much |
food | the things we eat to keep us alive |
fool | a silly; person |
foolish | silly; stupid; not wise |
foot | the part of the body you stand on. The same word also means a measure of 12 inches |
football | a team game in which you kick a ball and try to score goals |
footpath | a path or part of the road where people can walk but vehicles are not allowed |
footprint | the mark someone’s foot leaves in wet sand or soft earth |
footstep | the sound a foot makes when walking |
forbid | to command or order someone not to do something |
force | power; strength |
ford | a place in a river where the water is shallow enough for you to walk or drive through it safely |
fore | in front, before |
forearm | the part of our arm between you wrist and elbow |
forecast | to say that something will happen before it does |
forego | go without, give up |
forehead | the part of your face above your eyes |
foreigh | of another country; strange |
forest | a large are of land where lots of trees are growing close together |
forethought | a thought or plan for the future |
forfeit | something you have to give up because of something you have done |
forge | a blacksmith’s workshop, with a furnace for heating the metal. The same word also means to copy someone else’s handwriting for a dishonest purpose |
forgery | something written or painted which is not genuine; someone else’s handwriting copied for a dishonest purpose |
forget | not to remember |
forget-me-not | a little blue flower |
forgive | to pardon, to stop being cross with someone who has done something wrong |
fork | a tool used to pick up food |
form | shape. The same word also means a class in school, or a paper asking questions which are to be answered |
fort | a strong building made to keep enemies out |
forth | onward; out |
fortnight | fourteen days; two weeks |
fortress | another word for fort |
fortunate | lucky |
fortune | what comes of an animal or plant that has turned to stone after being buried for many millions of years |
forward | towards the front |
foundations | the solid part of a building below ground level |
fowl | a bird, usually a hen |
fox | a wild animal which has a long bushy tail |
fraction | a part of a whole, such as one-half (1/2) or one-third (1/3) |
fragile | delicate; easily broken or damaged |
fragmen | a bit or piece broken off something |
frame | the wood or metal around something, like a window or a picture |
framework | the outline or main parts of something that the rest is built on to |
fraud | dishonesty; a cheating trick |
fraud | dishonesty; a cheating trick |
fray | a fight or quarrel |
fray | a fight or quarrel |
freak | a person, plant or animal whose appearance is not ordinary or normal, such as a white black bird |
free | not a prisoner; able to do or say what you like. The same word also means without payment |
freeze | to become hard because of the cold, as when water turns into ice |
Modal auxiliaries Vs Primary auxiliaries
Primary auxiliaries are be, do, have. They are used to form tenses and to frame short answers.
Modal auxiliaries are will, would, may, might, shall, should, can, could, must, dare, need, used, ought. They are used to express moods.