🇬🇧 Your meaning: English Vocabulary Flash Card
determiner
“Your” is a word we use to show that something belongs to the person, or people, we are talking to. It’s like pointing with words. If I say, “your shoes,” I mean the shoes that belong to you. If I say, “your idea,” I mean the idea that came from you. We put “your” before a noun, like your bag, your cat, your homework, or your sandwich.
Your alarm clock is the villain in the movie of your morning.
Your sandwich is staring at you like, “Are you really going to eat me after all we’ve been through?”
Your hair looks like it had a meeting with a tornado and the tornado won.
Your cat just blinked slowly at you, which is cat language for, “You may continue to serve me, human.”
Your jacket has so many crumbs in the pockets it could probably feed a squirrel family for a week.
A boy finds a red scarf on the bench. He runs to a woman and asks, "Is this your scarf? Your scarf was on the bench." The woman smiles, "Yes, your help is good." He wraps the scarf around her neck. "Now your coat is warm." The woman hugs him and says, "Thank you. Your smile is warm."
🧑🎓 CEFR Level: A1 Beginner
This word is at the A1 level, which means it is one of the first words you learn when starting English. It’s commonly used in everyday conversations and helps you communicate basic ideas like greetings, family, or daily activities.
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