Matters can be categorized as a noun and a verb.
Verb |
||
matter - To be important. | ||
matter - To care about, to mind; to find important. | ||
Noun |
||
matter - that which has mass and occupies space; "physicists study both the nature of matter and the forces which govern it" | ||
matter - written works (especially in books or magazines); "he always took some reading matter with him on the plane" | ||
matter - (used with negation) having consequence; "they were friends and it was no matter who won the games" | ||
matter - a vaguely specified concern; "several matters to attend to"; "it is none of your affair"; "things are going well" | ||
matter - a problem; "is anything the matter?" | ||
matter - some situation or event that is thought about; "he kept drifting off the topic"; "he had been thinking about the subject for several years"; "it is a matter for the police" |
# | Sentence | ||
---|---|---|---|
1. | noun | We should include ISDA energy definitions, CFTC matters re energy and an overview of power deregulation developments in North America. | |
2. | noun | To make matters even more confusing, there are two Mark Taylors. | |
3. | noun | Your love life is full, and any dissatisfaction with career and money matters fades into the background. | |
4. | noun | Take the messages for what they are: she has no objection in you being pals at uni, but she does not want to take matters further. | |
5. | noun | I mean, I don't care if he doesn't know, but if he pretends to know and tells me BS to my face, there's no way I'm going to trust him when matters turn to the price of the car and financing. | |
6. | noun | Your refusal to help complicated matters. | |
7. | noun | Mr Yoshimoto taught us many trivial matters. | |
8. | noun | The crowd may be on the side of Luciano, but the champ has got the skill to win and that's what matters. | |
9. | noun | As a rule, I prefer people who deal with matters of this kind directly with those involved. | |
10. | noun | Scientists deal mainly with physical matters. | |
11. | noun | It was getting dark, and, what made matters worse, it began to rain. | |
12. | noun | I had a bad cold, and to make matters worse, it began snowing. | |
13. | noun | We must consider these matters as a whole. | |
14. | noun | We should judge matters on a broader basis. | |
15. | noun | Not to mince matters, I don't want you to come to our party. | |
16. | verb | What matters is that the terrorists believe that they caused the result and that they won by driving Spain out of Iraq. | |
17. | verb | It only matters if you received an offer of employment or if you are currently working in New Zealand and used that job in your application to get your skilled migrant visa. | |
18. | verb | What matters is how well trained he is, and how good your bond it. | |
19. | verb | It matters little what you do. | |
20. | verb | Safety is what matters most. | |
21. | verb | It matters very little what college you graduated from. | |
22. | verb | It matters little where he is from. | |
23. | verb | Even if it is true, it matters little. | |
24. | verb | It matters little what kind of books one reads, so long as one has sound judgement. | |
25. | verb | Do you think that money really matters to me? | |
26. | verb | It is not the means which matters, it is the end. | |
27. | verb | It matters not how long we live, but how. | |
28. | verb | It matters little to me who is elected. | |
29. | verb | It matters little if we are late. | |
30. | verb | What others think of a person really matters in Japan. |
Sentence | |
---|---|
noun | |
We should include ISDA energy definitions, CFTC matters re energy and an overview of power deregulation developments in North America. |
|
To make matters even more confusing, there are two Mark Taylors. |
|
Your love life is full, and any dissatisfaction with career and money matters fades into the background. |
|
Take the messages for what they are: she has no objection in you being pals at uni, but she does not want to take matters further. |
|
I mean, I don't care if he doesn't know, but if he pretends to know and tells me BS to my face, there's no way I'm going to trust him when matters turn to the price of the car and financing. |
|
Your refusal to help complicated matters. | |
Mr Yoshimoto taught us many trivial matters. | |
The crowd may be on the side of Luciano, but the champ has got the skill to win and that's what matters. | |
As a rule, I prefer people who deal with matters of this kind directly with those involved. | |
Scientists deal mainly with physical matters. | |
It was getting dark, and, what made matters worse, it began to rain. | |
I had a bad cold, and to make matters worse, it began snowing. | |
We must consider these matters as a whole. | |
We should judge matters on a broader basis. | |
Not to mince matters, I don't want you to come to our party. | |
verb | |
What matters is that the terrorists believe that they caused the result and that they won by driving Spain out of Iraq. |
|
It only matters if you received an offer of employment or if you are currently working in New Zealand and used that job in your application to get your skilled migrant visa. |
|
What matters is how well trained he is, and how good your bond it. |
|
It matters little what you do. | |
Safety is what matters most. | |
It matters very little what college you graduated from. | |
It matters little where he is from. | |
Even if it is true, it matters little. | |
It matters little what kind of books one reads, so long as one has sound judgement. | |
Do you think that money really matters to me? | |
It is not the means which matters, it is the end. | |
It matters not how long we live, but how. | |
It matters little to me who is elected. | |
It matters little if we are late. | |
What others think of a person really matters in Japan. |