offbeat bride we can't get over the dress
You are in: | Home > Grammar, Vocabulary & Pronunciation > Ask about English |
Learning English | |
Tugba from Turkey writes: Hello. I would like to know the difference between wear, put on, dress, and dressed in. |
Wear When you wear your clothes, shoes or jewellery you have them on your body:
You can also wear your hair in a particular way:
There is another meaning to wear. If something wears, it becomes thinner or weaker because it is used frequently over a long period of time. We also have the expression to wear thin and the phrasal verb to wear out. People can also feel worn out. If something wears you out, it makes you feel extremely tired. Compare the following usages:
| ||||
Put on When you put clothes on you place them on your body in order to wear them. And when you have finished wearing them, you take them off. We also put on weight, the opposite of which is to lose weight. Compare the following (additional) usages of put on:
|
Dress When you dress, you put clothes on. You can also dress children, dress a wound by cleaning it and covering it and dress a salad by putting oil and vinegar on it. If you dress up, you put on different clothes to make yourself look smarter, if you dress down, you put on clothes that are less smart than usual. We often speak of getting dressed as a colloquial alternative to dress. Compare the following usages:
| ||||
Be dressed in If you dress or are dressed in a particular way, you wear clothes, usually for a particular purpose:
| ||||
If you would like more practice more please visit our Message Board in the You, Me and Us part of our website. | ||||
offbeat bride we can't get over the dress
Source: https://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/grammar/learnit/learnitv229.shtml