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Sausage | Sausage | Sausage is a food made of ground-up or chopped-up meat or meat with other ingredients. It often has spices in it and is covered in a casing. Traditionally, a sausage casing is made of animal intestine, but can sometimes be made of plastic. There are many forms of sausages, including hot dog, pepperoni, bologna, and sal... | simple-english |
Speedwords | #REDIRECT Dutton's Speedwords | simple-english |
Speedword | #REDIRECT Dutton's Speedwords | simple-english |
Slang | Slang, Linguistics terminology | Slang are words that are informal. Usually each generation or social group has its own slang - for example, older people can have trouble understanding the slang of younger people. On the other hand, younger people often understand, but find silly or old-fashioned, the slang of older people. Over time, language tend... | simple-english |
Social contract | Law, Political philosophy, Sociology | A social contract or political contract is a perceived agreement among the people of a state about the rules that will define their government. These rules are usually called laws. Laws help to make sure people have rights and that their rights are protected. One kind of social contract is a constitution. A constitutio... | simple-english |
Social capital | Social sciences, Economics | Social capital is made when people spend time with others and build good relationships. It is the help and worth that a person can get from their ties with other people. Social capital is like real capital. When a person or a group has more capital, it is easier to do things, and life is better. When there is less capi... | simple-english |
Site | A site is a real fixed physical location where something will or has happened or a place where something is. It is used very often in building trades to mean the place where a building will go up. A gravesite is a place where a person will be buried after they die. The words onsite and offsite refer to work that must t... | simple-english |
Subtraction | Arithmetics | Subtraction is the arithmetic operation for finding the difference between two numbers, though it can also be generalized to other mathematical objects such as vectors and matrices. The names of the numbers in a subtraction expression are: \textrm{minuend}-\textrm{subtrahend}=\textrm{difference}. For example, the expre... | simple-english |
String theory | String theory | String theory tries to use math to explain the four known fundamental forces—gravitation, electromagnetism, strong nuclear force, weak nuclear force—together in one theory. This tries to solve the problems of having both classical physics and quantum physics. Einstein wanted a unified field theory, a single theory to e... | simple-english |
Scientist | Scientists, Science occupations | A scientist is a person who studies or has mastered the field in science. A scientist tries to understand how our world, or other things, work. Scientists make observations, ask questions and do extensive research work in finding the answers to many questions. Scientists may work in laboratories for governments, compan... | simple-english |
Soapbox | Communication | A soapbox is a temporary platform used to give a speech. During the 19th century, soap was transported in wooden boxes. When a person had new or unusual ideas, and wanted to talk to a crowd about them, sometimes he or she would stand on an empty soapbox so that everyone could see and hear the talk well. People sometime... | simple-english |
Supernatural | Religion | The word supernatural (from ) is used for things that some people believe are real, but that are not part of nature or can’t be explained by the scientific laws of nature. Because we cannot prove whether these things are real, people often disagree about these things. Some say that we should talk about things without t... | simple-english |
Spirit | Spirituality | A spirit, otherwise referred to as a phantom, is considered to be the part of a being that is not the body. Other words with the same meanings are soul and ghost. When a body is alive, it has a spirit in it. Death is when the spirit separates from the body. Christians believe that spirits exist in Heaven or Hell. (See ... | simple-english |
Seed | Basic English 850 words, Plant anatomy, Biological reproduction | 240px|thumb|Flax seeds 240px|thumb|Seeds of various plants. Row 1: poppy, red pepper, strawberry, apple tree, blackberry, rice, carum, Row 2: mustard, eggplant, physalis, grapes, raspberries, red rice, patchouli, Row 3: figs, lycium barbarum, beets, blueberries, golden kiwifruit, rosehip, basil, Row 4: pink pepper, tom... | simple-english |
Sail | Basic English 850 words, Boats | A sail is a large piece of cloth on the top of some boats. The wind goes around the sail and makes the boat move through the water. The piece that the sail is attached to is called a mast. Some boats have many sails, and some have only one. Usually, small boats have only one sail, and bigger boats have more. Boats with... | simple-english |
Spanish | The word Spanish means: from or about the country of Spain, such as a person from Spain or food from Spain the Spanish language | simple-english |
Sheep | #REDIRECTDomestic sheep | simple-english |
Skin | Basic English 850 words, Skin | The skin is the outer covering of mammals and some other animals. It has many purposes. First of all, it is a defense against the entry of pathogens such as bacteria and parasites. Second, it regulates (keeps in control) the body's temperature. It allows evaporation from its surface, and adjusts it. It is a physical de... | simple-english |
Search engine | Search engines | A search engine is a website that allows users to look up information on the World Wide Web (WWW), part of the Internet. The search engine will achieve this by looking at many web pages to find matches to the user's search inputs. It will return results ranked by relevancy and popularity by the search engine. The most ... | simple-english |
Sabbath in Christianity | Liturgical calendar | Sabbath in Christianity is the day of rest and service to God. The idea of the Sabbath in Christianity comes directly from the idea of the Shabbat in Judaism. The word Sabbath comes from the Hebrew word Shabbat. Like the Shabbat, the Sabbath in Christianity comes from the Genesis story of Creation. But unlike Jews... | simple-english |
Statistics | Statistics, Information, Formal sciences | Statistics is a branch of applied mathematics that deals with collecting, organizing, analyzing, reading and presenting data. Descriptive statistics make summaries of data. Inferential statistics makes predictions. Statistics helps in the study of many other fields, such as science, medicine, economics, psychology, pol... | simple-english |
Speed | Measurement, Physical quantity | It is velocity but without the direction. | simple-english |
Server log | Servers | A server log records what is happening on a server at any time. For example, an HTTP server runs a web site. | simple-english |
Server | Servers | A server is a computer that serves many kinds of information to a user or client machine. Usually a server will only do a few things for many clients. Every type of thing a server does is called a service. Services are used by other computers that are called clients. The relationship between client and server is called... | simple-english |
Simile | Figures of speech, Comparisons | A simile is a figure of speech that compares two different things, usually by using the words 'like' or 'as'. It is used to make a direct and clear comparison between two things .Similes may be confused with metaphors, which do the same kind of thing. Similes use comparisons, with the words 'like' or 'as'. Metaphors us... | simple-english |
State | International law, States | In politics, a state is the government of a country which has control over a geographic area or territory. States have three main features: Control over a geographic area, or territory A people, the population of the state. Institutions which have the power to make laws. There are different forms of government a state ... | simple-english |
Stream | Bodies of water | A stream is a natural flow of water moving across land between banks. It is smaller than a river. The primary meaning of stream is a body of water, confined within a bed and banks, and detectably flowing. Synonyms or related words include river, creek, tributary, run, branch, brook, bourne, wash, and fork. Navigable ... | simple-english |
Solar System | Solar System | 400px|thumb|Planets and dwarf planets of the Solar System. Compared with each other, the sizes are correct, but the distances are not The Solar System is a group of space objects that are held together by gravity, with the Sun in the center. The Sun is a huge ball of hot glowing gas that gives off light and heat. Every... | simple-english |
Saturn | Saturn | Saturn is the sixth planet from the Sun in our solar system. On average, Saturn is about away from the Sun. Saturn takes about 29.5 Earth years to complete one orbit around the Sun. A day on Saturn is much shorter than a day on Earth, lasting only about 10.7 hours. This means that Saturn spins much faster than Earth, ... | simple-english |
Slavery | Slavery, Human rights abuses, Employment, Property, Social classes, Labor, Former good articles | Slavery is when a person is treated as the property of another person. This person is usually called a slave, and the owner is called a slavemaster. It often means that slaves are forced to work, or else they will be punished by the law (if slavery is legal in that place) or by their master. There is evidence that even... | simple-english |
Soul | Death customs, Theology | Many philosophies and religions say that a soul is a supernatural essence of a living human being that lives after death. It is usually said to be immortal. It cannot be discovered by science, because it cannot be tested in any controlled way. Many different opinions exist as to what happens to personal experience afte... | simple-english |
Systeme internationale | #REDIRECT International System of Units | simple-english |
Soap | Cleaning tools | Soap is a chemical compound resulting from the reaction of an alkali (commonly sodium or potassium hydroxide) with a fatty acid. Soaps are the metallic salts of long chain fatty acids. When mixed with water during bathing, cleansing, or washing, they help people and clothes get clean by lowering the chance of dirt and ... | simple-english |
Summary | Writing | A summary is a condensed explanation of an event, story, document, etc.. i.e. "summing up the facts." They are not constrained to any medium or topics. Not to be confused with abstract, which is a summary of a document. There are many different levels of summarization that can be done. The summarizer may choose any len... | simple-english |
Service economy | Economics | A service is a job or work done for someone else. All the service trades form a service economy. Government is perhaps the largest example. Hospitals and the health services generally. Banks and financial services. Motor trade services. All services except actual products such as parts and petrol (which are obviously g... | simple-english |
Sense | Basic English 850 words | There are several meanings of the word sense. This page is for disambiguation - there are more detailed articles on each meaning: When a word has several meanings, one can refer to it as being used "in the sense of..." some context or other. In Simple English for instance we avoid using words in unusual senses. The s... | simple-english |
Synagogue | Synagogues | A synagogue is a place where Jews meet to worship and pray to God. In Hebrew, a synagogue is called beit knesset, which means, a "house of gathering". The word "synagogue" comes from sunagoge, which is a Greek word. In a synagogue, Jews carry out the Jewish services, which consist of prayers, sometimes with special act... | simple-english |
Scarcity | Microeconomics | Scarcity in economics is the lack of various forms of capital. Scarcity can be used to describe an economic situation in economics, or it can be used to describe more general situations. In economics, scarcity is the result of people having "Unlimited Wants and Needs," or always wanting something new, and having "Limit... | simple-english |
Readability | Reading | Readability, or textual difficulty, means how easy or hard a text is to read. Research has shown that two main factors affect the ease with which texts are read. How difficult the words are: this is lexical difficulty. Rare words are less well known than common words. Rare, difficult words are often longer than common,... | simple-english |
Theatre | Theatre | Theatre (British English and also American English), or Theater (mostly American English), has several meanings. The word comes originally from the Greek Theatron, meaning roughly, 'a place for viewing'. In American English, the word 'theater' can mean either a place where films are shown (this is also called a cinema)... | simple-english |
Test | Basic English 850 words, Tests | A test is a structured procedure designed to evaluate whether a subject, claim, or system meets specified criteria. The Concise Oxford English Dictionary defines a test as: "a procedure intended to establish the quality, performance, or reliability of something". Tests can serve multiple purposes. For example, tests ca... | simple-english |
Time horizon | Time | A time horizon is a future point in time when something must be "done" (a "deadline") or will be "over" (a "time limit"). Either way, the matter will be closed when the time horizon is reached. Common time horizons people use are: end of day, usually meaning the working day; end of calendar year and end of fiscal year... | simple-english |
Time limit | Time | A time limit is a time horizon that is imposed on everyone at once. It may be used to try to achieve fairness in some system of ethics. For instance, if poor people and rich people are debating something, a time limit may be imposed so that the rich people cannot keep debating until the poor people have to go to work,... | simple-english |
Taiwan | Taiwan | The Republic of China (ROC; Chinese: 中華民國; pinyin: Zhōnghuá Mínguó), commonly known as Taiwan, is a disputed self-governing region off the coast of mainland China in East Asia. The Republic of China once governed all of China (from 1911 to 1949) but moved to the island of Taiwan after their defeat in a Chinese civil w... | simple-english |
Trademark | Symbols, Intellectual property law, Business, Brands, Brand management | A trademark (or trade mark) is a way for a business to help people identify the products that the business makes from the products made by another business. A trademark can be a name, word, phrase, symbol, logo, design, or picture. It can only be used on things made by the business that owns the trademark. For example,... | simple-english |
Terrestrial ecoregion | #REDIRECT Ecoregion#Terrestrial | simple-english |
Ten Commandments | Old Testament, Religious ethics | The Ten Commandments are a set of rules or laws. The Bible says that God gave them to the people of Israel. The commandments exist in different versions. One version can be found in the Book of Exodus of the Bible. Another version can be found in the Book of Deuteronomy. In the Book of Exodus, the mountain where they w... | simple-english |
Table | Table may mean one of these: | simple-english |
Tree | Basic English 850 words, Trees | A tree is a tall plant with a trunk and branches made of wood. Trees can live for many years. The oldest living tree found is about 5,000 years old. The oldest tree from the UK is about 1,000 years old. The four main parts of a tree are the roots, the trunk, the branches, and the leaves. Trees are a wide variety of pla... | simple-english |
Tragedy (Greek theatre) | Theatrical forms | In theatre, a tragedy as defined by Aristotle is a play that ends badly for the hero or heroine or others. A tragedy is usually about a person who has many good qualities, but also has one poor quality (called a "tragic flaw") that causes trouble for him, and maybe his family or friends. Often in a tragedy, there is on... | simple-english |
Taxonomy | Taxonomy, Biological classification | Taxonomy is a branch of biology. It is about the scientific laws and principles of classifying living things. From one type of taxonomy, many classifications might be produced. The best-known kind of taxonomy is used for the classification of lifeforms (living and extinct). Each organism has a scientific name. This nam... | simple-english |
The Sun | The Sun is the star at the center of the Solar System. The Sun may also mean: The Sun (United Kingdom), a current daily national tabloid The Sun (1792–1806), a defunct British newspaper The Sun (1893–1906), a defunct British newspaper The Sun (magazine), a monthly literary and photography magazine The Sun (Lowell), a d... | simple-english |
Temple | Temples | A temple is a building where people go to practice their religion. In a temple people may perform religious rituals, ceremonies, and pray. Thus, a temple is a general term for a house of worship. Christians usually call their religious buildings churches. Some examples of temples from different religions: Reform Judais... | simple-english |
Theft | Theft | Theft is when one person or group takes from another person, business, or state any object, money, or information without permission and does not intend to return it. A person who has been convicted of theft may be called a thief. However, the practice of engaging in theft is also called stealing. There are many differ... | simple-english |
United Kingdom | United Kingdom, Commonwealth realms, Current monarchies, English-speaking countries, G8 nations, G7 nations | The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, often shortened to the United Kingdom (UK), or just Britain, is a sovereign country in Northwestern Europe. It is a constitutional monarchy of four countries: England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. Although these are called "countries", none of them are ... | simple-english |
Universe | Universe, Reality, Cosmology | The universe is space and everything in it. It is made of billions of stars, planets, and enormous clouds of gas separated by huge voids of space. It is believed that an event called the Big Bang started the expansion of the universe. 300px|WMAP image of the Cosmic Microwave Backround|alt=WMAP image of cosmic backgroun... | simple-english |
USA | #REDIRECT United States | simple-english |
UK | Redirects from acronyms | #REDIRECT United Kingdom | simple-english |
Unit of measurement | Units of measurement | Units of measurement give standards so that the numbers from our measurements refer to the same thing. Measurement is a process that uses numbers to describe a physical quantity. We can measure how big things are, how warm they are, how heavy they are, and many other features. For example, the metre is a standard unit ... | simple-english |
US Foot | #REDIRECT Foot (unit) | simple-english |
United States customary units | Measurement | U.S. customary units are the main defacto official system of units of measurement used to measure things in the United States and U.S. territories (except in Puerto Rico and Guam, where the metric system is also officially used and is dominant). The system of Imperial units, on which the U.S. customary units are based... | simple-english |
US gallon | #REDIRECT United States customary units | simple-english |
US Cup | #REDIRECT United States customary units | simple-english |
US Pound | #REDIRECT United States customary units | simple-english |
Uranus | Uranus | Uranus is the seventh planet from the Sun in our Solar System. Like Neptune, it is an ice giant. It is the third largest planet in the solar system. The planet is made of ice, gases and liquid metal. Its atmosphere has hydrogen, helium and methane. The temperature on Uranus is near the top of its atmosphere. Its small... | simple-english |
University | Colleges and universities | A university is a higher learning institution. The word university comes from the Latin universitas magistrorum et scholarium, roughly meaning "community of teachers and scholars". Students can go to university to get an academic degree. Unlike the schooling they have done before, the courses at university are special... | simple-english |
Value | Basic English 850 words, Economics | Value is how much something is worth. Often the best way to find the value of something is to use the price that it can be sold for. However Oscar Wilde wrote that 'people know the price of everything but the value of nothing'- in other words true value does not depend on money alone. In math, a value is a number which... | simple-english |
Volapük | Constructed languages | Volapük (pronounced in English, in Volapük) is a constructed language created in 1880 by Johann Martin Schleyer. Schleyer was a Catholic priest from Germany. He felt that God had told him in a dream to make an international language. The name "Volapük" comes from the words "vol" (world) and "pük" (language). Volapük ... | simple-english |
Vocabulary | Language, Vocabulary, Linguistics | The vocabulary a person uses is all the words that person knows and uses. In general, a person who is five years old knows about 4,000 to 5,000 words. Adults who have gone to college may know 20,000 words. The number of words in a language is more than the words listed in one dictionary. One dictionary may have a list ... | simple-english |
Vegetable oil | Cooking oils | Vegetable oils are triglyceride oils made from plants. They are used in food and for cooking. In past centuries they were much used as fuel in oil lamps. Some kinds of plant oils that people use are palm oil, maize, olive, peanut, rapeseed, soy, and sunflower. Margarine is an artificial butter made from vegetable oil. | simple-english |
Verb | Grammar | A verb is a kind of word (part of speech) that tells about an action or a state. It is the main part of a sentence: every sentence has a verb. In English, verbs are the only kind of word that changes to show past or present tense. Every language in the world has verbs, but they are not always used in the same ways. Th... | simple-english |
Volume | Physical quantity, Geometry, Size | :This article is about physical object; for meaning from audio field, see loudness. The volume of an object is a measure of the amount of space occupied by that object, and is not to be confused with mass. The volume of a mountain is much larger than the volume of a rock, for instance. By convention, the word volume im... | simple-english |
Venus | Venus, Terrestrial planets | Venus is the second planet from the Sun. Venus is the only planet in the Solar System that has a day longer than a year. The year length of Venus is 225 Earth days. The day length of Venus is 243 Earth days. H2SO4 is a chemical that is poisonous to life. For this it is sometimes known as the Earth's "evil twin". The th... | simple-english |
Vatican City | Vatican City, 1929 establishments in Italy, Microstates, Holy See | Vatican City (; officially Vatican City State, ) (also sometimes referred to as the Vatican) is the smallest country in the world by size, at 0.49 km² and by population. It is also one of the world's three city-states. Its territory is completely surrounded by Italy and it is only one of three countries in the wor... | simple-english |
Velocity | Physical quantity, Velocity, Basic physics ideas, Motion (physics) | Velocity is a measure of how fast something moves in a particular direction. To define it needs both magnitude and direction. If an object moves east at 9 metres per second (9 m/s), then its velocity is 9 m/s to the east. The idea behind this is that speed does not tell us in which direction the object moves ... | simple-english |
Virtual community | Internet culture, Community | A virtual community is a group of people who share an interest, hobby or set of views. The people in it may come from many different places. They talk with each other using technology, such as the Internet, telephone calls, texting, video calls and email. How virtual communities communicate Virtual communities may use ... | simple-english |
World Wide Web | Internet | "The Web" redirects here. For other uses, see Web (disambiguation). The World Wide Web ("WWW" or "the Web", "the Webspace") is the part of the Internet that contains websites and webpages. It was invented in 1989 by Tim Berners-Lee at CERN, Geneva, Switzerland. Sir Tim Berners-Lee created a new markup language called ... | simple-english |
Wiki | Wikis, Software, Internet slang, Information technology | A wiki is a type of website allowing anyone to create and change its pages for free. Content is made by the user for the site, as well as the moderation, cleanup, and improvement to articles. These keep it from being vandalized as well as being full of correct information. The purpose of a wiki is to host information. ... | simple-english |
Website | Websites | A website is a set of webpages that are joined. People look at websites with a computer of some kind, which can sometimes be the computer inside a mobile phone or a television. The websites are kept on computers called web servers. There is almost always a single homepage which has links to other pages that are part of... | simple-english |
Word | Words, Basic English 850 words | A word is something spoken by the mouth that is meaningful. It is usually part of a sentence which makes the meaning clear. Words are also used in writing, which is a relatively modern invention. In alphabetic writing, a word is a collection of letters. The word then communicates a meaning that can also usually be pron... | simple-english |
Web browser | Web browsers | A web browser is a computer program or mobile application for visiting websites on the World Wide Web. Since the late 1990s, most personal computers, mobile phones and other mobile devices have supported web browsers. Web browsers are used to browse websites on the Internet. The first web browser was created in 1990. M... | simple-english |
Web | Web can mean several things Spider webs are woven traps usually used by spiders to catch insects Web is a common short name for the World Wide Web Web is a word for the tissue (biological) between fingers and toes, such as the webbed feet of ducks and other waterfowl, or material with a similar purpose, such as between... | simple-english |
Webpage | Internet | A webpage (or web page) is a document from the internet which can be seen with a web browser. Web pages each have a URL or address, which is how a page is found, and is different for every page. When a webpage is part of a larger group of pages managed by a company, person, or organization, it is part of a website. P... | simple-english |
Wiktionary | Online dictionaries, Wikimedia, Wikis, Websites established in 2002 | Wiktionary is a wiki-based project to develop a multilingual online dictionary, or a group of meanings for words, in the form of a wiki. There are many languages of Wiktionary. Wiktionary is also a thesaurus. Wiktionary is run by the Wikimedia Foundation, which also runs Wikipedia. The English Wiktionary currently has ... | simple-english |
Microsoft Windows | Microsoft operating systems | Microsoft Windows is an operating system for computers made by the United States-based company Microsoft. Windows is the most popular operating system, being used by almost 51% of desktop and laptop computers. Versions are available all over the world especially in the European Union, United States, Canada, Australia, ... | simple-english |
Window | Basic English 850 words, Windows (architecture) | A window is an opening in a wall or roof of a building, in a car etc., to let air and light in. It is usually filled with a sheet of glass. There can be many different shapes and sizes, including rectangular, square, circular, or irregular shapes. Some windows include coloured glass. Windows are usually transparent so ... | simple-english |
Wikimedia | #redirect Wikimedia Foundation | simple-english |
Wine | Basic English 850 words, Wine | 130px| 130px| red and white wine Wine is an alcoholic drink. It is made from the juice of grape. If alcoholic drinks are made from the juice of other fruits (such as plums or blackberries) they may be called "wine". This article only deals with wine made from grapes. Different types of wine There are two main types of ... | simple-english |
WWW | #REDIRECT World Wide Web | simple-english |
Width | Physical quantity | Width or breadth is the side-to-side length, measuring across the object at right angles to the height. For example, the distance between the left side and right side of a chair is its width. Objects have a length and a width in two dimensions or more. In shapes such as rectangles, multiplying the length and the width ... | simple-english |
Water | Natural resources, Water, Basic English 850 words, Refrigerants, Inorganic solvents, Solvents | Water () is a simple chemical compound made of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. It is clear, has no taste or smell, and is almost colorless. All living things need water to survive. Water molecules stick together because of hydrogen bonds. These bonds give water special properties. For example, water has high su... | simple-english |
Want | Psychology, Society, Consumer | A want is a wish or a desire for something. If a person would like to have something, but can choose not to have it, that thing is wanted or can be called a want. To want is not the same as to need, which is when someone must have something. People often talk about needing a thing, when they really just want it. Wants ... | simple-english |
Web server | #REDIRECT Server#Web_server | simple-english |
War | War, Basic English 850 words | War is a situation or a period of fighting between countries or groups of people. A war generally involves the use of weapons, a military organization and soldiers. War is a situation in which a nation enforces its rights by using force. Not every armed conflict is a war. A fight between individuals, between gangs, dru... | simple-english |
Yiddish | Europe, Judaism, Languages, Jewish people, Jewish culture, Jewish history, Germanic languages, Languages of Europe | Yiddish is a language spoken by some Jews. It is a dialect of German that Jews began speaking in 11th-century Europe. It is still used in the United States, especially in New York City, and other countries with surviving Jewish populations. Most Yiddish words come from German and Hebrew. Some Yiddish words come from Sl... | simple-english |
Year | Basic English 850 words, Units of time, Years | The year (symbol: y or a, also known as the annum or annus) is about 365 days (except in a leap year). It is the time it takes the Earth to go completely around (orbit) the sun once. A year is actually almost 365.25 days long, but the Gregorian and Julian calendar has 365 days, except in a leap year, which has 366 days... | simple-english |
You | Basic English 850 words, VOA Special English words | You is a second-person English pronoun. The word can be singular or plural. It is what a person says when he or she is addressing another person in second person. Sometimes, just using the English letter "u" is acceptable, and "ur" for the words "you're" and "your". This is very informal, and is mostly used in texting. | simple-english |
Yard (disambiguation) | The yard is a unit of length. Yard (land), an open space around a building. Yard (sailing), a spar on a traditional sailing ship Brickyard, a place where bricks are made or stored | simple-english |
Chinese language | Chinese language, Tonal languages | The Chinese language is the group of languages used by Chinese people in China and elsewhere. It forms part of a language family called the Sino-Tibetan family of languages. Chinese includes many regional language varieties, the main ones being Mandarin, Wu, Yue and Min, and are not mutually intelligible Many of the re... | simple-english |
0 | Integers | Zero (0, ⁰) is a unique number. If there are zero things, then there is nothing at all. For example, if a person has zero hats, that means they do not have any hats. The Roman numeral for zero is Ↄ or ’. The symbol for the number zero is "0". It is the additive identity of common numbers. This means that if a number is... | simple-english |
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