bar |
a long piece of solid material used to support something, hold something together, or keep something outside or inside. |
dark |
having little or no light. |
famous |
recognized by or well known to the public. |
golf |
a game played on a large outdoor course with small holes in the ground spaced far apart. Players use a set of special clubs to hit a small white ball into each of the series of holes. There are nine or eighteen holes in a golf course. The object of the game is to get the ball into each hole using as few strokes as possible. |
group |
a collection of people, things, or ideas that are in one place or have important things in common. |
know |
to have information in your mind that comes from what you have learned or can see. |
magnet |
an object that has the power to pull certain metals toward itself. |
musician |
a person who has skill at playing, singing, or writing music. |
nation |
a country made up of people living under their own government. |
rattle |
to make a series of hard, short, knocking sounds. |
scold |
to tell someone that they have done something wrong, usually in an angry way. |
staircase |
a set of steps with a railing that goes from one floor to another in a building. |
suppose |
to assume to be true in order to make clear or to explain. |
teach |
to show (someone) how to do something or to help (someone) learn something. |
weather |
the conditions outside. Weather concerns such things as temperature, rain, snow, sun, and other things. |