HOW


Meaning of HOW in English

Frequency: The word is one of the 700 most common words in English.

1.

You use ~ to ask about the way in which something happens or is done.

How do I make payments into my account?...

How do you manage to keep the place so tidy?...

How are you going to plan for the future?

QUEST

How is also a conjunction.

I don’t want to know ~ he died...

I didn’t know ~ to tell you.

CONJ

2.

You use ~ after certain adjectives and verbs to introduce a statement or fact, often something that you remember or expect other people to know about.

It’s amazing ~ people collect so much stuff over the years...

It’s important to become acutely aware of ~ your eating ties in with your stress level.

CONJ

3.

You use ~ to ask questions about the quantity or degree of something.

How much money are we talking about?...

How many full-time staff have we got?...

How long will you be staying?...

How old is your son now?...

How fast were you driving?...

He was asked ~ serious the situation had become.

QUEST: QUEST much/many , QUEST adj/adv

4.

You use ~ when you are asking someone whether something was successful or enjoyable.

How was your trip down to Orlando?...

I wonder ~ Sam got on with him.

QUEST

5.

You use ~ to ask about someone’s health or to find out someone’s news.

Hi! How are you doing?...

How’s Rosie?...

How’s the job?...

QUEST

6.

‘How do you do’ is a polite way of greeting someone when you meet them for the first time.

CONVENTION formulae

7.

You use ~ to emphasize the degree to which something is true.

I didn’t realize ~ heavy that shopping was going to be...

Franklin told them all ~ happy he was to be in Britain again.

ADV: ADV adj/adv emphasis

8.

You use ~ in exclamations to emphasize an adjective, adverb, or statement.

How strange that something so simple as a walk on the beach could suddenly mean so much...

ADV: ADV adj/adv/cl emphasis

9.

You use ~ in expressions such as ‘How can you...’ and ‘How could you...’ to indicate that you disapprove of what someone has done or that you find it hard to believe.

How can you drink so much beer, Luke?...

How could he be so indiscreet?

QUEST: QUEST can/could disapproval

10.

You use ~ in expressions such as ‘~ about...’ or ‘~ would you like...’ when you are making an offer or a suggestion.

How about a cup of coffee?...

You want Jeannie to make the appointment for you? How about the end of next week?...

QUEST

11.

If you ask someone ‘How about you?’ you are asking them what they think or want.

Well, I enjoyed that. How about you two?...

CONVENTION

12.

You use ~ about to introduce a new subject which you think is relevant to the conversation you have been having.

Are your products and services competitive? How about marketing?

PHRASE: PHR n

13.

You ask ‘How come?’ or ‘How so?’ when you are surprised by something and are asking why it happened or was said. (INFORMAL)

‘They don’t say a single word to each other.’—‘How come?’...

PHRASE: oft PHR cl

Collins COBUILD.      Толковый словарь английского языка для изучающих язык Коллинз COBUILD (международная база данных языков Бирмингемского университета) .