Be is the most common verb in English. It is used in many different ways.
The present tense forms of be are am, are, and is, and the past tense forms are was and were. Be is both an auxiliary and a main verb.
Am, is, and are are not usually pronounced in full. When you write down what someone says, you usually represent am and is using 'm and 's.
You can also represent are using 're, but only after a pronoun.
You can also use the forms 'm, 's and 're when you are writing in a conversational style.
Be is an auxiliary when forming continuous tenses and passives.
In conversation, get is often used to form passives.
You use be as a main verb when you are describing things or people or giving information about them. After be, you use a complement. A complement is either an adjective or a noun group.
When be is followed by a noun group indicating a unique job or position within an organization, you do not have to put 'the' in front of the noun.
Be Careful!
Make is sometimes used instead of 'be' to say how successful someone is in a particular job or role. For example, instead of saying 'He will be a good president', you can say 'He will make a good president'.
You can talk about a person's age by using be followed by a number.
You can also use be to say how much something costs.
You can use many kinds of prepositional phrase after be.
You sometimes use to-infinitive clauses after be.
When you use be as a main verb in questions and negative clauses, you do not use the auxiliary 'do'.
Be is not usually a main verb in continuous tenses. However, you can use it in continuous tenses to describe someone's behaviour at a particular time.
Do not confuse be with become. Be is used to indicate that someone or something has a particular quality or nature, or is in a particular situation. Become is used to indicate that someone or something changes in some way.
Be is often used after there to indicate the existence or occurrence of something.
Be Careful!
You cannot use be without there to indicate that something exists or happens. You cannot say, for example, 'Another explanation is' or 'Another explanation must be'. You must say 'There is another explanation' or 'There must be another explanation'.
Be is often used after it to describe something such as an experience, or to comment on a situation.
If you have visited a place and have now come back from it, British speakers say that you have been there.
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Noun | 1. | ![]() metal, metallic element - any of several chemical elements that are usually shiny solids that conduct heat or electricity and can be formed into sheets etc. beryl - the chief source of beryllium; colored transparent varieties are valued as gems chrysoberyl - a rare hard yellow green mineral consisting of beryllium aluminate in crystal form; used as a gemstone gadolinite, ytterbite - a mineral that is a source of rare earths; consists of silicates of iron and beryllium and cerium and yttrium and erbium |
Verb | 1. | be - have the quality of being; (copula, used with an adjective or a predicate noun); "John is rich"; "This is not a good answer" look - have a certain outward or facial expression; "How does she look?"; "The child looks unhappy"; "She looked pale after the surgery" be well - be healthy; feel good; "She has not been well lately" suffer - feel unwell or uncomfortable; "She is suffering from the hot weather" feel - be conscious of a physical, mental, or emotional state; "My cold is gone--I feel fine today"; "She felt tired after the long hike"; "She felt sad after her loss" remain, stay, rest - stay the same; remain in a certain state; "The dress remained wet after repeated attempts to dry it"; "rest assured"; "stay alone"; "He remained unmoved by her tears"; "The bad weather continued for another week" continue - exist over a prolonged period of time; "The bad weather continued for two more weeks" coruscate, sparkle, scintillate - be lively or brilliant or exhibit virtuosity; "The musical performance sparkled"; "A scintillating conversation"; "his playing coruscated throughout the concert hall" befuddle, confound, confuse, discombobulate, fox, bedevil, fuddle, throw - be confusing or perplexing to; cause to be unable to think clearly; "These questions confuse even the experts"; "This question completely threw me"; "This question befuddled even the teacher" rank - take or have a position relative to others; "This painting ranks among the best in the Western World" point - be positionable in a specified manner; "The gun points with ease" compact, pack - have the property of being packable or of compacting easily; "This powder compacts easily"; "Such odd-shaped items do not pack well" rest - not move; be in a resting position cut - allow incision or separation; "This bread cuts easily" seethe - be in an agitated emotional state; "The customer was seething with anger" appear, seem, look - give a certain impression or have a certain outward aspect; "She seems to be sleeping"; "This appears to be a very difficult problem"; "This project looks fishy"; "They appeared like people who had not eaten or slept for a long time" seem, appear - seem to be true, probable, or apparent; "It seems that he is very gifted"; "It appears that the weather in California is very bad" owe - be in debt; "She owes me $200"; "I still owe for the car"; "The thesis owes much to his adviser" belong - be owned by; be in the possession of; "This book belongs to me" cover - be sufficient to meet, defray, or offset the charge or cost of; "Is this enough to cover the check?" represent - be representative or typical for; "This period is represented by Beethoven" account - be the sole or primary factor in the existence, acquisition, supply, or disposal of something; "Passing grades account for half of the grades given in this exam" cut across - be contrary to ordinary procedure or limitations; "Opinions on bombing the Serbs cut across party lines" begin, start - have a beginning characterized in some specified way; "The novel begins with a murder"; "My property begins with the three maple trees"; "Her day begins with a workout"; "The semester begins with a convocation ceremony" begin - have a beginning, of a temporal event; "WW II began in 1939 when Hitler marched into Poland"; "The company's Asia tour begins next month" stand - be in some specified state or condition; "I stand corrected" go - be or continue to be in a certain condition; "The children went hungry that day" make sense, add up - be reasonable or logical or comprehensible comprise, consist - be composed of; "The land he conquered comprised several provinces"; "What does this dish consist of?" prove, turn out, turn up - be shown or be found to be; "She proved to be right"; "The medicine turned out to save her life"; "She turned up HIV positive" account for - be the reason or explanation for; "The recession accounts for the slow retail business" remain - be left; of persons, questions, problems, results, evidence, etc.; "There remains the question of who pulled the trigger"; "Carter remains the only President in recent history under whose Presidency the U.S. did not fight a war" stick by, stand by, adhere, stick - be loyal to; "She stood by her husband in times of trouble"; "The friends stuck together through the war" footle, hang around, lallygag, loiter, lollygag, mess about, mill about, mill around, tarry, lounge, lurk, linger, loaf - be about; "The high school students like to loiter in the Central Square"; "Who is this man that is hanging around the department?" |
2. | be - be identical to; be someone or something; "The president of the company is John Smith"; "This is my house" | |
3. | be - occupy a certain position or area; be somewhere; "Where is my umbrella?" "The toolshed is in the back"; "What is behind this behavior?" stretch, stretch along - occupy a large, elongated area; "The park stretched beneath the train line" attend, go to - be present at (meetings, church services, university), etc.; "She attends class regularly"; "I rarely attend services at my church"; "did you go to the meeting?" inhabit, live, populate, dwell - inhabit or live in; be an inhabitant of; "People lived in Africa millions of years ago"; "The people inhabited the islands that are now deserted"; "this kind of fish dwells near the bottom of the ocean"; "deer are populating the woods" inhabit - be present in; "sweet memories inhabit this house" keep one's distance, keep one's eyes off, keep one's hands off, stand back, stay away - stay clear of, avoid; "Keep your hands off my wife!"; "Keep your distance from this man--he is dangerous" extend to, reach, touch - to extend as far as; "The sunlight reached the wall"; "Can he reach?" "The chair must not touch the wall" extend, run, lead, pass, go - stretch out over a distance, space, time, or scope; run or extend between two points or beyond a certain point; "Service runs all the way to Cranbury"; "His knowledge doesn't go very far"; "My memory extends back to my fourth year of life"; "The facts extend beyond a consideration of her personal assets" cover, extend, continue - span an interval of distance, space or time; "The war extended over five years"; "The period covered the turn of the century"; "My land extends over the hills on the horizon"; "This farm covers some 200 acres"; "The Archipelago continues for another 500 miles" poke out, reach out, extend - reach outward in space; "The awning extends several feet over the sidewalk" lie - be located or situated somewhere; occupy a certain position sit - be located or situated somewhere; "The White House sits on Pennsylvania Avenue" sit around, sit - be around, often idly or without specific purpose; "The object sat in the corner"; "We sat around chatting for another hour" face - be opposite; "the facing page"; "the two sofas face each other" straddle - sit or stand astride of follow - be next; "Mary plays best, with John and Sue following" center on - have as a center; "The region centers on Charleston" rest, lie - have a place in relation to something else; "The fate of Bosnia lies in the hands of the West"; "The responsibility rests with the Allies" belong, go - be in the right place or situation; "Where do these books belong?"; "Let's put health care where it belongs--under the control of the government"; "Where do these books go?" come - exist or occur in a certain point in a series; "Next came the student from France" | |
4. | be - have an existence, be extant; "Is there a God?" come - be found or available; "These shoes come in three colors; The furniture comes unassembled" preexist - exist beforehand or prior to a certain point in time; "Did this condition pre-exist?" kick about, kick around, knock about - be around; be alive or active; "Does the old man still kick around?" coexist - exist together indwell - to exist as an inner activating spirit, force, or principle consist, lie in, dwell, lie - originate (in); "The problems dwell in the social injustices in this country" endanger, imperil, jeopardise, jeopardize, menace, peril, threaten - pose a threat to; present a danger to; "The pollution is endangering the crops" flow - be abundantly present; "The champagne flowed at the wedding" distribute - be distributed or spread, as in statistical analyses; "Values distribute" | |
5. | be - happen, occur, take place; "I lost my wallet; this was during the visit to my parents' house"; "There were two hundred people at his funeral"; "There was a lot of noise in the kitchen" | |
6. | ![]() correspond, equate - be equivalent or parallel, in mathematics correspond, gibe, jibe, match, tally, agree, fit, check - be compatible, similar or consistent; coincide in their characteristics; "The two stories don't agree in many details"; "The handwriting checks with the signature on the check"; "The suspect's fingerprints don't match those on the gun" represent, stand for, correspond - take the place of or be parallel or equivalent to; "Because of the sound changes in the course of history, an 'h' in Greek stands for an 's' in Latin" translate - be equivalent in effect; "the growth in income translates into greater purchasing power" | |
7. | be - form or compose; "This money is my only income"; "The stone wall was the backdrop for the performance"; "These constitute my entire belonging"; "The children made up the chorus"; "This sum represents my entire income for a year"; "These few men comprise his entire army" make - constitute the essence of; "Clothes make the man" compose - form the substance of; "Greed and ambition composed his personality" form, constitute, make - to compose or represent:"This wall forms the background of the stage setting"; "The branches made a roof"; "This makes a fine introduction" straddle, range - range or extend over; occupy a certain area; "The plants straddle the entire state" fall into, fall under - be included in or classified as; "This falls under the rubric 'various'" supplement - serve as a supplement to; "Vitamins supplemented his meager diet" | |
8. | be - work in a specific place, with a specific subject, or in a specific function; "He is a herpetologist"; "She is our resident philosopher" vet - work as a veterinarian; "She vetted for the farms in the area for many years" cox - act as the coxswain, in a boat race | |
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11. | be - have life, be alive; "Our great leader is no more"; "My grandfather lived until the end of war" live on, survive, last, live, endure, hold out, hold up, go - continue to live through hardship or adversity; "We went without water and food for 3 days"; "These superstitions survive in the backwaters of America"; "The race car driver lived through several very serious accidents"; "how long can a person last without food and water?" | |
12. | be - to remain unmolested, undisturbed, or uninterrupted -- used only in infinitive form; "let her be" | |
13. | ![]() be - have the quality of being; (copula, used with an adjective or a predicate noun); "John is rich"; "This is not a good answer" |