A1 noun Neutral #46 am häufigsten

time

/taɪm/

Time is the measurement of minutes, hours, days, and years. We use it to know when things happen or how long something lasts.

Beispiele

3 von 5
1

I don't have enough time to finish my lunch today.

I do not have a sufficient amount of minutes to eat my meal now.

2

The meeting will start at the scheduled time.

The formal gathering begins at the previously agreed hour.

3

Got any time to hang out later?

Are you free to spend some casual moments together soon?

Wortfamilie

Nomen
time
Verb
time
Adverb
timelessly
Adjektiv
timely
Verwandt
timer
💡

Merkhilfe

Think of the 'T' in Time looking like the hands of a clock at 3:00.

Schnelles Quiz

I don't have much ______ to talk because my bus is coming now.

Richtig!

Die richtige Antwort ist: time

Beispiele

1

I don't have enough time to finish my lunch today.

everyday

I do not have a sufficient amount of minutes to eat my meal now.

2

The meeting will start at the scheduled time.

formal

The formal gathering begins at the previously agreed hour.

3

Got any time to hang out later?

informal

Are you free to spend some casual moments together soon?

4

Geological time refers to the vast periods of Earth's history.

academic

Scientific chronology describes the very long stages of the planet's past.

5

We need to improve our delivery time for clients.

business

We must make the speed of our product distribution faster for customers.

Wortfamilie

Nomen
time
Verb
time
Adverb
timelessly
Adjektiv
timely
Verwandt
timer

Häufige Kollokationen

spend time to use time doing a specific activity
waste time to use time badly on things that are not important
free time the hours when you are not working or studying
save time to do something faster so you have more time later
on time not late; at the exact moment expected

Häufige Phrasen

in time

early enough to do something

kill time

to do something to stay busy while waiting

time flies

a phrase meaning that time passes very quickly

Wird oft verwechselt mit

time vs weather

Learners of languages like French or Spanish often confuse these because their language uses one word for both; in English, 'time' is for clocks and 'weather' is for rain/sun.

time vs times

'Time' usually means duration, while 'times' often refers to multiplication or specific instances.

📝

Nutzungshinweise

Use 'time' as an uncountable noun when talking about duration in general. Use it as a countable noun when referring to specific occasions or repetitions (e.g., 'I saw that movie three times').

⚠️

Häufige Fehler

Avoid saying 'I have no time' as much as 'I don't have time' in modern conversation. Do not confuse 'on time' (punctual) with 'in time' (before it's too late).

💡

Merkhilfe

Think of the 'T' in Time looking like the hands of a clock at 3:00.

📖

Wortherkunft

From the Old English 'tīma', which is related to words for 'tide' and 'division of time'.

Grammatikmuster

Uncountable for duration (e.g., 'much time') Countable for instances (e.g., 'many times') Followed by 'to' + verb (e.g., 'time to go')
🌍

Kultureller Kontext

In many English-speaking cultures, punctuality (being 'on time') is seen as a sign of respect and professionalism.

Schnelles Quiz

I don't have much ______ to talk because my bus is coming now.

Richtig!

Die richtige Antwort ist: time

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