| Vocabulary Words | Meanings |
|---|---|
| fond | loving; liking very much |
| food | the things we eat to keep us alive |
| fool | a silly; person |
| foolish | silly; stupid; not wise |
| foot | the part of the body you stand on. The same word also means a measure of 12 inches |
| football | a team game in which you kick a ball and try to score goals |
| footpath | a path or part of the road where people can walk but vehicles are not allowed |
| footprint | the mark someone’s foot leaves in wet sand or soft earth |
| footstep | the sound a foot makes when walking |
| forbid | to command or order someone not to do something |
| force | power; strength |
| ford | a place in a river where the water is shallow enough for you to walk or drive through it safely |
| fore | in front, before |
| forearm | the part of our arm between you wrist and elbow |
| forecast | to say that something will happen before it does |
| forego | go without, give up |
| forehead | the part of your face above your eyes |
| foreigh | of another country; strange |
| forest | a large are of land where lots of trees are growing close together |
| forethought | a thought or plan for the future |
| forfeit | something you have to give up because of something you have done |
| forge | a blacksmith’s workshop, with a furnace for heating the metal. The same word also means to copy someone else’s handwriting for a dishonest purpose |
| forgery | something written or painted which is not genuine; someone else’s handwriting copied for a dishonest purpose |
| forget | not to remember |
| forget-me-not | a little blue flower |
| forgive | to pardon, to stop being cross with someone who has done something wrong |
| fork | a tool used to pick up food |
| form | shape. The same word also means a class in school, or a paper asking questions which are to be answered |
| fort | a strong building made to keep enemies out |
| forth | onward; out |
| fortnight | fourteen days; two weeks |
| fortress | another word for fort |
| fortunate | lucky |
| fortune | what comes of an animal or plant that has turned to stone after being buried for many millions of years |
| forward | towards the front |
| foundations | the solid part of a building below ground level |
| fowl | a bird, usually a hen |
| fox | a wild animal which has a long bushy tail |
| fraction | a part of a whole, such as one-half (1/2) or one-third (1/3) |
| fragile | delicate; easily broken or damaged |
| fragmen | a bit or piece broken off something |
| frame | the wood or metal around something, like a window or a picture |
| framework | the outline or main parts of something that the rest is built on to |
| fraud | dishonesty; a cheating trick |
| fraud | dishonesty; a cheating trick |
| fray | a fight or quarrel |
| fray | a fight or quarrel |
| freak | a person, plant or animal whose appearance is not ordinary or normal, such as a white black bird |
| free | not a prisoner; able to do or say what you like. The same word also means without payment |
| freeze | to become hard because of the cold, as when water turns into ice |
Defining relative clause
When a clause defines the noun it qualifies it is known as a defining relative clause.