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find
verb
-
find
,
finding
,
finds
,
found
to
discover
or
locate
something
that
is
lost
,
hidden
,
or
not
yet
known
•
After
searching
for
an
hour
,
he
found
his
missing
wallet
under
the
sofa
.
After
searching
for
an
hour
,
he
found
his
missing
wallet
under
the
sofa
.
•
Use
this
app
to
find
the
nearest
café
.
Use
this
app
to
find
the
nearest
café
.
Old
English
findan
“
come
upon
,
discover
,”
from
Proto-Germanic
*finthan
.
verb
-
find
,
finding
,
finds
,
found
to
experience
or
come
to
hold
a
particular
opinion
or
feeling
about
something
•
I
find
this
movie
hilarious
every
time
I
watch
it
.
I
find
this
movie
hilarious
every
time
I
watch
it
.
•
She
found
the
exam
surprisingly
easy
.
She
found
the
exam
surprisingly
easy
.
noun
something
valuable
,
interesting
,
or
useful
that
has
been
discovered
•
The
ancient
coin
was
an
amazing
find
for
the
archaeologists
.
The
ancient
coin
was
an
amazing
find
for
the
archaeologists
.
•
This
little
café
is
a
real
find
—
cheap
coffee
and
great
cakes
!
This
little
café
is
a
real
find
—
cheap
coffee
and
great
cakes
!
verb
-
find
,
finding
,
finds
,
found
(
law
)
for
a
judge
or
jury
to
decide
or
declare
a
particular
result
after
considering
evidence
•
The
jury
found
the
defendant
guilty
of
fraud
.
The
jury
found
the
defendant
guilty
of
fraud
.
•
The
court
found
that
the
company
had
breached
its
contract
.
The
court
found
that
the
company
had
breached
its
contract
.
fine
adjective
-
fine
,
finer
,
finest
feeling
well
,
satisfactory
,
or
acceptable
•
After
a
good
night
’
s
sleep
,
I
felt
fine
and
ready
for
school
.
After
a
good
night
’
s
sleep
,
I
felt
fine
and
ready
for
school
.
•
Is
it
fine
with
you
if
we
meet
at
three
?
Is
it
fine
with
you
if
we
meet
at
three
?
adjective
-
fine
,
finer
,
finest
of
very
high
quality
or
excellence
•
The
jeweler
displayed
a
necklace
made
of
fine
gold
.
The
jeweler
displayed
a
necklace
made
of
fine
gold
.
•
They
enjoyed
a
glass
of
fine
wine
by
the
fireplace
.
They
enjoyed
a
glass
of
fine
wine
by
the
fireplace
.
adjective
-
fine
,
finer
,
finest
very
thin
,
delicate
,
or
made
of
very
small
pieces
•
She
sifted
the
flour
until
it
became
a
fine
powder
.
She
sifted
the
flour
until
it
became
a
fine
powder
.
•
A
spider
spun
a
web
of
fine
threads
between
the
branches
.
A
spider
spun
a
web
of
fine
threads
between
the
branches
.
noun
money
you
must
pay
as
punishment
for
breaking
a
rule
or
law
•
He
had
to
pay
a
parking
fine
for
leaving
his
car
on
the
sidewalk
.
He
had
to
pay
a
parking
fine
for
leaving
his
car
on
the
sidewalk
.
•
Late
library
books
carry
a
small
fine
.
Late
library
books
carry
a
small
fine
.
verb
-
fine
,
fining
,
fines
,
fined
to
order
someone
to
pay
money
as
a
punishment
•
The
police
fined
him
$100
for
not
wearing
a
seat
belt
.
The
police
fined
him
$100
for
not
wearing
a
seat
belt
.
•
The
school
may
fine
students
who
damage
equipment
.
The
school
may
fine
students
who
damage
equipment
.
finally
adverb
after
a
long
wait
,
effort
,
or
series
of
events
,
at
last
•
After
driving
through
the
night
,
we
finally
saw
the
ocean
glittering
at
dawn
.
After
driving
through
the
night
,
we
finally
saw
the
ocean
glittering
at
dawn
.
•
The
baby
finally
fell
asleep
in
his
crib
after
an
hour
of
gentle
rocking
.
The
baby
finally
fell
asleep
in
his
crib
after
an
hour
of
gentle
rocking
.
from
Middle
English
final
+
-ly
;
influenced
by
Latin
fīnālis
“
last
,
end
”
adverb
used
to
introduce
the
last
point
or
item
in
a
sequence
•
Finally
,
press
the
green
button
to
start
the
washing
machine
.
Finally
,
press
the
green
button
to
start
the
washing
machine
.
•
Finally
,
I
would
like
to
thank
our
volunteers
for
their
hard
work
.
Finally
,
I
would
like
to
thank
our
volunteers
for
their
hard
work
.
same
origin
as
other
sense
:
from
final
+
-ly
final
adjective
coming
at
the
very
end
of
something
,
after
everything
else
•
The
runners
sprinted
hard
on
their
final
lap
around
the
track
.
The
runners
sprinted
hard
on
their
final
lap
around
the
track
.
•
Please
check
the
report
one
more
time
before
we
send
the
final
version
to
the
client
.
Please
check
the
report
one
more
time
before
we
send
the
final
version
to
the
client
.
Late
Middle
English
,
from
Latin
finalis
,
from
finis
‘
end
’.
noun
the
last
game
or
round
in
a
competition
that
decides
the
overall
winner
•
Millions
watched
the
World
Cup
final
on
television
.
Millions
watched
the
World
Cup
final
on
television
.
•
Our
school
basketball
team
reached
the
final
for
the
first
time
.
Our
school
basketball
team
reached
the
final
for
the
first
time
.
Derived
from
the
adjective
,
first
recorded
in
sporting
contexts
in
the
mid-19th
century
.
adjective
decided
and
not
able
to
be
changed
•
The
judge
’
s
decision
is
final
,
so
the
case
cannot
be
reopened
.
The
judge
’
s
decision
is
final
,
so
the
case
cannot
be
reopened
.
•
Once
you
submit
the
online
form
,
your
answers
become
final
and
can
’
t
be
edited
.
Once
you
submit
the
online
form
,
your
answers
become
final
and
can
’
t
be
edited
.
Same
origin
as
Sense
1
.
noun
a
major
examination
taken
at
the
end
of
a
school
or
college
term
•
I
stayed
up
all
night
studying
for
my
biology
final
.
I
stayed
up
all
night
studying
for
my
biology
final
.
•
After
the
math
final
,
the
students
celebrated
with
pizza
.
After
the
math
final
,
the
students
celebrated
with
pizza
.
Originally
U
.
S
.
college
slang
,
first
recorded
in
the
early
20th
century
,
from
“
final
examination
”.
finish
verb
-
finish
,
finishing
,
finishes
,
finished
to
complete
something
so
that
nothing
more
needs
to
be
done
•
I
can't
play
until
I
finish
my
math
homework
.
I
can't
play
until
I
finish
my
math
homework
.
•
The
workers
will
finish
building
the
playground
before
summer
vacation
starts
.
The
workers
will
finish
building
the
playground
before
summer
vacation
starts
.
Middle
English
‘
finisshen
’,
from
Old
French
‘
finiss-
’,
stem
of
‘
finir
’ “
to
end
”,
from
Latin
‘
finire
’,
from
‘
finis
’ “
end
”.
noun
-
finish
,
finishes
the
end
or
last
part
of
something
,
especially
a
race
,
story
,
or
event
•
The
runners
sprinted
toward
the
finish
and
the
crowd
cheered
.
The
runners
sprinted
toward
the
finish
and
the
crowd
cheered
.
•
It
was
an
exciting
movie
from
start
to
finish
.
It
was
an
exciting
movie
from
start
to
finish
.
verb
-
finish
,
finishing
,
finishes
,
finished
to
eat
,
drink
,
or
use
all
of
something
so
nothing
remains
•
She
finished
the
whole
pizza
by
herself
.
She
finished
the
whole
pizza
by
herself
.
•
Could
you
finish
the
milk
so
we
can
recycle
the
bottle
?
Could
you
finish
the
milk
so
we
can
recycle
the
bottle
?
noun
-
finish
,
finishes
a
smooth
,
shiny
,
or
matte
layer
or
quality
that
gives
a
surface
its
final
look
•
The
carpenter
applied
a
clear
finish
to
protect
the
wood
.
The
carpenter
applied
a
clear
finish
to
protect
the
wood
.
•
Choose
a
matte
finish
if
you
don't
want
reflections
on
the
walls
.
Choose
a
matte
finish
if
you
don't
want
reflections
on
the
walls
.
noun
-
finish
,
finishes
the
taste
that
remains
in
your
mouth
for
a
short
time
after
you
swallow
a
drink
such
as
wine
,
coffee
,
or
whisky
•
This
red
wine
has
a
fruity
finish
with
hints
of
cherry
.
This
red
wine
has
a
fruity
finish
with
hints
of
cherry
.
•
The
coffee's
smoky
finish
lingers
pleasantly
on
the
tongue
.
The
coffee's
smoky
finish
lingers
pleasantly
on
the
tongue
.
financial
adjective
connected
with
money
,
banking
,
or
the
management
of
money
•
She
hired
an
accountant
to
give
her
financial
advice
.
She
hired
an
accountant
to
give
her
financial
advice
.
•
After
the
storm
,
many
families
faced
serious
financial
problems
.
After
the
storm
,
many
families
faced
serious
financial
problems
.
From
finance
+
-ial
,
first
recorded
in
the
early
18th
century
to
describe
matters
of
public
revenue
and
later
extended
to
personal
and
business
money
affairs
.
finger
noun
one
of
the
five
long
,
movable
parts
at
the
end
of
your
hand
•
Emma
accidentally
cut
her
finger
while
chopping
carrots
.
Emma
accidentally
cut
her
finger
while
chopping
carrots
.
•
He
raised
one
finger
to
get
the
waiter
’
s
attention
.
He
raised
one
finger
to
get
the
waiter
’
s
attention
.
Old
English
“
finger
”,
of
Germanic
origin
;
related
to
Dutch
“
vinger
”
and
German
“
Finger
”.
noun
a
long
,
narrow
part
that
sticks
out
from
something
,
shaped
like
a
human
finger
•
Thin
fingers
of
smoke
rose
from
the
campfire
.
Thin
fingers
of
smoke
rose
from
the
campfire
.
•
A
narrow
finger
of
land
juts
into
the
lake
.
A
narrow
finger
of
land
juts
into
the
lake
.
verb
to
touch
,
move
,
or
feel
something
with
the
fingers
•
She
gently
fingered
the
soft
fabric
of
the
scarf
.
She
gently
fingered
the
soft
fabric
of
the
scarf
.
•
The
pianist
fingered
the
keys
to
check
the
instrument
before
the
concert
.
The
pianist
fingered
the
keys
to
check
the
instrument
before
the
concert
.
noun
an
informal
measure
of
an
alcoholic
drink
equal
to
the
width
of
one
finger
when
the
glass
is
held
upright
•
Pour
me
two
fingers
of
whiskey
,
please
.
Pour
me
two
fingers
of
whiskey
,
please
.
•
He
measured
a
single
finger
of
rum
before
adding
cola
.
He
measured
a
single
finger
of
rum
before
adding
cola
.
verb
to
point
out
or
name
someone
as
responsible
for
something
bad
,
especially
to
police
•
Witnesses
fingered
the
suspect
after
seeing
the
security
footage
.
Witnesses
fingered
the
suspect
after
seeing
the
security
footage
.
•
The
anonymous
caller
fingered
the
gang
leader
for
the
robbery
.
The
anonymous
caller
fingered
the
gang
leader
for
the
robbery
.
noun
(
slang
)
a
person
who
secretly
gives
information
about
criminals
to
the
police
•
The
gang
suspected
there
was
a
finger
inside
the
crew
.
The
gang
suspected
there
was
a
finger
inside
the
crew
.
•
Detectives
relied
on
a
paid
finger
to
locate
the
stolen
jewels
.
Detectives
relied
on
a
paid
finger
to
locate
the
stolen
jewels
.
finding
noun
the
process
or
act
of
discovering
something
that
was
hidden
or
unknown
•
The
finding
of
fresh
water
saved
the
lost
hikers
.
The
finding
of
fresh
water
saved
the
lost
hikers
.
•
His
quick
finding
of
the
missing
keys
impressed
everyone
.
His
quick
finding
of
the
missing
keys
impressed
everyone
.
Old
English
findan
(
to
come
upon
)
+
-ing
,
giving
a
noun
of
action
meaning
.
noun
a
piece
of
information
or
conclusion
that
someone
gets
after
studying
something
carefully
•
The
scientist
published
her
findings
in
a
respected
medical
journal
.
The
scientist
published
her
findings
in
a
respected
medical
journal
.
•
According
to
the
report
’
s
findings
,
air
pollution
levels
have
dropped
this
year
.
According
to
the
report
’
s
findings
,
air
pollution
levels
have
dropped
this
year
.
From
the
verb
find
+
-ing
,
first
used
in
the
sense
of
a
discovered
fact
in
the
late
19th
century
.
noun
a
formal
decision
or
conclusion
reached
by
a
judge
,
jury
,
or
official
investigation
•
The
jury
’
s
finding
was
that
the
defendant
was
not
guilty
.
The
jury
’
s
finding
was
that
the
defendant
was
not
guilty
.
•
The
police
chief
accepted
the
panel
’
s
finding
of
misconduct
.
The
police
chief
accepted
the
panel
’
s
finding
of
misconduct
.
Legal
use
developed
in
the
15th
century
from
the
broader
sense
of
‘
discovery
’,
focusing
on
what
the
court
‘
finds
’
to
be
true
.
noun
a
small
metal
part
such
as
a
clasp
,
pin
,
or
loop
used
in
making
jewelry
or
crafts
•
She
attached
a
gold
clasp
finding
to
finish
the
bracelet
.
She
attached
a
gold
clasp
finding
to
finish
the
bracelet
.
•
The
kit
includes
various
findings
like
jump
rings
and
earring
hooks
.
The
kit
includes
various
findings
like
jump
rings
and
earring
hooks
.
Specialized
craft
sense
arose
in
the
early
20th
century
from
the
idea
of
pieces
that
are
‘
found
’
ready-made
and
added
to
jewelry
.
finance
noun
the
study
,
activity
,
or
field
of
managing
money
,
investments
,
and
other
financial
resources
•
She
wants
to
study
finance
at
university
.
She
wants
to
study
finance
at
university
.
•
The
company
hired
an
expert
in
finance
to
improve
its
cash
flow
.
The
company
hired
an
expert
in
finance
to
improve
its
cash
flow
.
Late
Middle
English
from
Old
French
,
based
on
Latin
finare
‘
to
settle
a
debt
’,
from
finis
‘
end
,
payment
’.
verb
-
finance
,
financing
,
finances
,
financed
to
provide
the
money
needed
to
pay
for
something
•
The
bank
agreed
to
finance
his
new
restaurant
.
The
bank
agreed
to
finance
his
new
restaurant
.
•
Her
parents
helped
finance
her
college
education
.
Her
parents
helped
finance
her
college
education
.
From
French
financer
,
from
finance
‘
payment
of
a
debt
’.
First
used
in
English
as
a
verb
in
the
late
18th
century
.
finances
noun
the
money
and
financial
situation
that
a
person
,
family
,
or
organization
has
•
Their
finances
improved
after
they
paid
off
their
debt
.
Their
finances
improved
after
they
paid
off
their
debt
.
•
We
need
to
check
our
finances
before
booking
a
holiday
.
We
need
to
check
our
finances
before
booking
a
holiday
.
Same
origin
as
finance
,
with
the
plural
form
used
from
the
18th
century
to
refer
to
money
held
by
individuals
or
groups
.
staff
verb
-
staff
,
staffing
,
staffs
,
staffed
to
provide
a
place
,
organization
,
or
event
with
workers
•
The
company
staffs
its
call
center
with
friendly
operators
.
The
company
staffs
its
call
center
with
friendly
operators
.
•
During
the
festival
,
volunteers
staff
the
ticket
booths
.
During
the
festival
,
volunteers
staff
the
ticket
booths
.
From
the
noun
sense
of
people
as
support
;
first
used
as
a
verb
in
the
late
19th
century
.
stuff
noun
-
stuff
things
,
objects
,
or
material
when
their
exact
names
are
not
important
or
are
unknown
•
Can
you
put
all
this
stuff
back
in
the
box
?
Can
you
put
all
this
stuff
back
in
the
box
?
•
I
don
’
t
know
what
’
s
in
his
backpack
,
but
it
looks
like
a
lot
of
heavy
stuff
.
I
don
’
t
know
what
’
s
in
his
backpack
,
but
it
looks
like
a
lot
of
heavy
stuff
.
From
Middle
English
‘
stoff
’,
borrowed
from
Old
French
‘
estoffe
’
meaning
material
or
provisions
.
verb
to
fill
something
tightly
until
there
is
no
more
space
•
He
stuffed
his
suitcase
with
clothes
for
the
long
trip
.
He
stuffed
his
suitcase
with
clothes
for
the
long
trip
.
•
Sara
stuffed
the
turkey
with
bread
and
herbs
before
roasting
it
.
Sara
stuffed
the
turkey
with
bread
and
herbs
before
roasting
it
.
Originally
meaning
‘
fit
out
,
furnish
’,
from
Old
French
‘
estoffer
’,
of
Germanic
origin
.
define
verb
-
define
,
defining
,
defines
,
defined
to
state
the
exact
meaning
of
a
word
or
phrase
•
The
teacher
asked
the
class
to
define
the
word
“
ecosystem
.”
The
teacher
asked
the
class
to
define
the
word
“
ecosystem
.”
•
Please
define
“
photosynthesis
”
in
one
clear
sentence
.
Please
define
“
photosynthesis
”
in
one
clear
sentence
.
From
Latin
“
dēfīnīre
”
meaning
“
to
set
bounds
,
limit
,
explain
,”
formed
from
“
dē-
” (
completely
)
+
“
fīnīre
” (
to
bound
,
limit
).
verb
-
define
,
defining
,
defines
,
defined
to
describe
something
clearly
so
that
its
nature
,
limits
,
or
purpose
are
understood
•
The
constitution
defines
the
powers
of
each
branch
of
government
.
The
constitution
defines
the
powers
of
each
branch
of
government
.
•
Clear
goals
define
the
direction
of
the
project
.
Clear
goals
define
the
direction
of
the
project
.
verb
-
define
,
defining
,
defines
,
defined
to
make
the
edges
,
shape
,
or
details
of
something
clear
and
noticeable
•
Strong
lighting
defined
the
actor
’
s
silhouette
against
the
backdrop
.
Strong
lighting
defined
the
actor
’
s
silhouette
against
the
backdrop
.
•
The
sculptor
used
fine
tools
to
define
the
statue
’
s
facial
features
.
The
sculptor
used
fine
tools
to
define
the
statue
’
s
facial
features
.
definitely
adverb
without
any
doubt
;
certainly
•
I
will
definitely
call
you
tomorrow
after
work
.
I
will
definitely
call
you
tomorrow
after
work
.
•
The
mountain
hike
was
tough
,
but
it
was
definitely
worth
the
effort
.
The
mountain
hike
was
tough
,
but
it
was
definitely
worth
the
effort
.
interjection
used
to
express
strong
agreement
or
an
emphatic
yes
•
“
Are
you
joining
us
for
pizza
later
?” “
Definitely
!”
“
Are
you
joining
us
for
pizza
later
?” “
Definitely
!”
•
When
asked
if
she
believed
her
team
would
win
,
the
captain
replied
, “
Definitely
.”
When
asked
if
she
believed
her
team
would
win
,
the
captain
replied
, “
Definitely
.”
definition
noun
a
statement
that
explains
the
exact
meaning
of
a
word
,
phrase
,
or
symbol
•
The
teacher
asked
each
student
to
write
a
clear
definition
of
the
term
“
photosynthesis
.”
The
teacher
asked
each
student
to
write
a
clear
definition
of
the
term
“
photosynthesis
.”
•
I
looked
up
the
definition
of
“
culture
”
in
the
dictionary
.
I
looked
up
the
definition
of
“
culture
”
in
the
dictionary
.
Late
Middle
English
,
from
Latin
definitio
(
n-
) ‘
setting
of
boundaries
,
definition
’,
from
definire
‘
to
set
bounds
’.
noun
-
definition
the
level
of
sharpness
,
clarity
,
and
detail
in
a
picture
,
sound
,
or
image
•
This
camera
has
excellent
definition
,
so
your
photos
will
be
very
clear
.
This
camera
has
excellent
definition
,
so
your
photos
will
be
very
clear
.
•
The
new
TV
offers
ultra-high-definition
pictures
that
look
almost
lifelike
.
The
new
TV
offers
ultra-high-definition
pictures
that
look
almost
lifelike
.
Transferred
sense
from
“
definition
”
as
setting
clear
boundaries
,
extended
to
clarity
in
images
and
sounds
in
the
mid-20th
century
.
noun
-
definition
the
act
or
process
of
describing
something
precisely
and
clearly
•
The
clear
definition
of
roles
helped
the
team
work
smoothly
.
The
clear
definition
of
roles
helped
the
team
work
smoothly
.
•
Legal
documents
require
very
precise
definition
of
terms
.
Legal
documents
require
very
precise
definition
of
terms
.
Sense
developed
in
the
17th
century
from
the
Latin
root
meaning
‘
set
boundaries
’,
focusing
on
the
process
rather
than
the
written
statement
.
leaf
verb
-
leaf
,
leafing
,
leaves
,
leafed
(
of
a
plant
or
tree
)
to
put
out
new
leaves
•
The
cherry
trees
will
leaf
in
early
April
,
covering
the
park
in
green
.
The
cherry
trees
will
leaf
in
early
April
,
covering
the
park
in
green
.
•
Once
the
oaks
leaf
out
,
the
forest
becomes
much
shadier
.
Once
the
oaks
leaf
out
,
the
forest
becomes
much
shadier
.
verb
-
leaf
,
leafing
,
leaves
,
leafed
to
turn
the
pages
of
a
book
,
magazine
,
or
document
quickly
,
often
looking
for
something
•
She
leafed
through
the
cookbook
looking
for
a
vegetarian
recipe
.
She
leafed
through
the
cookbook
looking
for
a
vegetarian
recipe
.
•
He
sat
in
the
waiting
room
and
leafed
a
travel
magazine
.
He
sat
in
the
waiting
room
and
leafed
a
travel
magazine
.
golf
verb
To
play
the
sport
of
golf
.
•
They
love
to
golf
together
during
their
vacations
.
They
love
to
golf
together
during
their
vacations
.
•
We
golfed
nine
holes
before
the
rain
started
.
We
golfed
nine
holes
before
the
rain
started
.
Verbal
use
from
the
noun
"
golf
."
Earliest
recorded
18th
century
.
knife
verb
-
knife
,
knifing
,
knifes
,
knifed
to
stab
,
cut
,
or
wound
a
person
or
object
using
a
knife
•
In
the
novel
,
the
villain
threatened
to
knife
the
detective
during
a
tense
confrontation
.
In
the
novel
,
the
villain
threatened
to
knife
the
detective
during
a
tense
confrontation
.
•
With
a
swift
motion
,
she
knifed
open
the
thick
package
to
see
what
was
inside
.
With
a
swift
motion
,
she
knifed
open
the
thick
package
to
see
what
was
inside
.
Verb
sense
developed
from
the
noun
in
Middle
English
,
meaning
“
to
attack
with
a
knife
”.
proof
verb
to
treat
or
cover
something
so
that
it
becomes
resistant
to
water
,
fire
,
etc
.
•
We
need
to
proof
the
tent
before
our
camping
trip
.
We
need
to
proof
the
tent
before
our
camping
trip
.
•
The
laboratory
proofed
the
fabric
against
chemical
spills
.
The
laboratory
proofed
the
fabric
against
chemical
spills
.
Verb
use
comes
from
the
idea
of
‘
making
something
proof
’—
ensuring
it
passes
a
test
of
resistance
.
verb
to
allow
bread
dough
to
rest
so
that
it
rises
before
baking
•
Cover
the
bowl
and
let
the
dough
proof
for
an
hour
.
Cover
the
bowl
and
let
the
dough
proof
for
an
hour
.
•
The
baker
proofed
the
baguette
dough
twice
for
better
texture
.
The
baker
proofed
the
baguette
dough
twice
for
better
texture
.
Baking
sense
arose
in
the
19th
century
from
‘
prove
the
yeast
’—
testing
that
it
was
active
by
letting
dough
rise
.
brief
verb
to
give
someone
information
or
instructions
in
a
short
summary
•
Before
the
flight
,
the
captain
briefed
the
crew
on
safety
procedures
.
Before
the
flight
,
the
captain
briefed
the
crew
on
safety
procedures
.
•
The
spokesperson
will
brief
reporters
after
the
meeting
.
The
spokesperson
will
brief
reporters
after
the
meeting
.
roof
verb
to
put
or
build
a
roof
on
something
;
to
cover
the
top
of
a
building
•
They
hired
experts
to
roof
the
new
house
with
solar
panels
.
They
hired
experts
to
roof
the
new
house
with
solar
panels
.
•
The
shed
was
quickly
roofed
with
corrugated
sheets
before
the
storm
arrived
.
The
shed
was
quickly
roofed
with
corrugated
sheets
before
the
storm
arrived
.
Old
English
“
hrōfian
,”
from
the
noun
“
roof
,”
meaning
“
to
provide
with
a
covering
above
.”
wolf
verb
to
eat
something
very
quickly
and
greedily
,
as
if
extremely
hungry
•
After
the
long
hike
,
they
wolfed
their
sandwiches
in
minutes
.
After
the
long
hike
,
they
wolfed
their
sandwiches
in
minutes
.
•
Slow
down
—
you
don't
have
to
wolf
your
food
.
Slow
down
—
you
don't
have
to
wolf
your
food
.
From
the
noun
'wolf'
,
comparing
the
hurried
way
a
wolf
consumes
prey
.
found
verb
-
find
,
finding
,
finds
,
found
past
tense
and
past
participle
of
find
•
We
finally
found
our
lost
dog
hiding
under
the
porch
.
We
finally
found
our
lost
dog
hiding
under
the
porch
.
•
I
found
a
ten-dollar
bill
in
my
old
coat
pocket
.
I
found
a
ten-dollar
bill
in
my
old
coat
pocket
.
Irregular
past
forms
of
Old
English
findan
"
to
come
upon
,
discover
."