Footer

    Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play

    About

    • About Us
    • Our Learning Services
    • Join Us
    • FAQ
    • Hot Tags

    Services

    • Pronunciation Challenge
    • Saved
    • Search Vocabulary
    • Blog

    Channels

    Levels

    • A1
    • A2
    • B1
    • B2
    • C1
    • C2

    Privacy˙Terms˙
    ©2026 VoiceTube Corporation. All rights reserved

    alexis

    US

    ・

    UK

    A1
    prop. n.Proper NounA female given name of Greek origin, meaning 'helper' or 'defender'.
    Alexis is a beautiful name for a girl.
    prop. n.Proper NounA male given name of Greek origin, meaning 'helper' or 'defender'.
    Alexis can also be a male name, though less common.
    prop. n.Proper NounA surname of Greek origin.
    Mr. Alexis is a well-respected member of the community.

    Video subtitles

    Classic French Onion Soup | French Guy Cooking

    04:27Classic French Onion Soup | French Guy Cooking
    • Hi Food Tuber's. I'm Alexis, French Guy Cooking

      Hi Food Tuber's. I'm Alexis, French Guy Cooking

    • Hi Food Tuber's. I'm Alexis, French Guy Cooking

      Hi Food Tuber's. I'm Alexis, French Guy Cooking

    B1

    Will we let AI decide for us?

    09:47Will we let AI decide for us?
    • Lewis or Alexis de Tocqueville or Martin Heidegger.

      Lewis or Alexis de Tocqueville or Martin Heidegger.

    • Lewis or Alexis de Tocqueville or Martin Heidegger.

      Lewis or Alexis de Tocqueville or Martin Heidegger.

    B1

    How to Build a Product I, Michael Seibel, Steve Huffman, Emmett Shear - CS-183F

    47:31How to Build a Product I, Michael Seibel, Steve Huffman, Emmett Shear - CS-183F
    • I remember in, in July at some point, um, I made Alexis, my co-founder, stay up all night one night categorizing every link that had ever been submitted to Reddit.

      I remember in, in July at some point, um, I made Alexis, my co-founder, stay up all night one night categorizing every link that had ever been submitted to Reddit.

    • I made Alexis my co-founder stay up all night one night categorizing every link

      I made Alexis my co-founder stay up all night one night categorizing every link

    A2

    FREAKY FRIDAY PRANK!

    03:52FREAKY FRIDAY PRANK!
    • Hi, I'm Jack Vale, and with my mom, Alexis G.

      Hi, I'm Jack Vale, and with my mom, Alexis G.

    • I'm with my mom, Alexis G. Zall.

      I'm with my mom, Alexis G. Zall.

    A2

    Hidden Friends Details Almost No One Notices

    06:44Hidden Friends Details Almost No One Notices
    • Then, in season seven, actress Alexis Arquette, who was also Courtney Cox's former sister-in-law, briefly appeared in a scene starring herself and Perry.

      Then, in season seven, actress Alexis Arquette, who was also Courtney Cox's former sister-in-law, briefly appeared in a scene starring herself and Perry.

    • Then, in Season 7, actress Alexis Arquette, who was also Courteney Cox's former sister-in-law,

      Then, in Season 7, actress Alexis Arquette, who was also Courteney Cox's former sister-in-law,

    B1

    眼科医だけど質問ある?| Tech Support | WIRED Japan

    13:30眼科医だけど質問ある?| Tech Support | WIRED Japan
    • At Alexis K97 asks, question for optometrists out there.

      At Alexis K97 asks, question for optometrists out there.

    B2

    Google's Computer Science Summer Institute

    03:30Google's Computer Science Summer Institute
    • ALEXIS: Before CSSI, I knew close to nothing about

      ALEXIS: Before CSSI, I knew close to nothing about

    • ALEXIS: If you're thinking about applying to CSSI, do it.

      ALEXIS: If you're thinking about applying to CSSI, do it.

    A2

    HISTORY OF IDEAS - Manners

    14:46HISTORY OF IDEAS - Manners
    • Rousseau now contrasts favourably with modern mannered people. Rousseau tells us that people living in what he calls the state of nature were, in his eyes, far superior to educated and mannered Parisians. Their manners may have been simple, but they were honest and forthright, without the sins of what he now terms the over-civilised. Rousseau retells the story of civilisation as one of loss and decline, from a primordial state of fresh-faced curiosity, honesty and enthusiasm, to barbarous over-politeness, fakery and deceit. He describes the elaborate French court at Versailles as less civilised than an early human cave. Readers across Europe are astonished, and not a little impressed, by this impudence. For hundreds of years, moralists have been arguing that our natural selves are wild, harmful, over-sexual and dangerous, and that we must learn to tame them for the sake of others. Now Rousseau suggests the diametrical opposite. Civilisation has gone too far, it's our mannered selves that have become the problem, and the task of a properly evolved civilisation is to throw off the chains of manners, to relax us, strip off the etiquette and return to primitive frankness. Rousseau's point continues to echo down to our own times. It is his voice we can hear whenever someone sticks up for the simpler life, and suggests we dress less formally, eat dinner more casually and more readily say whatever is passing through our minds. New York, United States, 1827. A French aristocrat, Alexis de Tocqueville, is on a tour of the young United States in an effort to understand the spirit of a new kind of society, a democracy. He is immediately struck by American manners, or lack thereof. In Europe, reflects de Tocqueville, manners have been codified to emphasise hierarchical differences between people. Ordinary people defer to aristocrats, aristocrats to royalty, and so on. But in the United States, everything is done so as to suggest that there are no differences between people. No one takes off their hat to anyone, a postman can casually greet a judge, a mule driver can strike up cheerful banter with a wealthy merchant, and one cannot tell by someone's clothes whether they might be living in a mansion or a hut. Expressions like how you doing and hi are heard everywhere across the new republic. It could be charming, but the aristocratic de Tocqueville wryly notes a problem. These casual manners do not do away with class and wealth differences. They merely sentimentally disguise them. The manners of old Europe have been accused of being cruel in their stress on hierarchy.

      Rousseau now contrasts favourably with modern mannered people. Rousseau tells us that people living in what he calls the state of nature were, in his eyes, far superior to educated and mannered Parisians. Their manners may have been simple, but they were honest and forthright, without the sins of what he now terms the over-civilised. Rousseau retells the story of civilisation as one of loss and decline, from a primordial state of fresh-faced curiosity, honesty and enthusiasm, to barbarous over-politeness, fakery and deceit. He describes the elaborate French court at Versailles as less civilised than an early human cave. Readers across Europe are astonished, and not a little impressed, by this impudence. For hundreds of years, moralists have been arguing that our natural selves are wild, harmful, over-sexual and dangerous, and that we must learn to tame them for the sake of others. Now Rousseau suggests the diametrical opposite. Civilisation has gone too far, it's our mannered selves that have become the problem, and the task of a properly evolved civilisation is to throw off the chains of manners, to relax us, strip off the etiquette and return to primitive frankness. Rousseau's point continues to echo down to our own times. It is his voice we can hear whenever someone sticks up for the simpler life, and suggests we dress less formally, eat dinner more casually and more readily say whatever is passing through our minds. New York, United States, 1827. A French aristocrat, Alexis de Tocqueville, is on a tour of the young United States in an effort to understand the spirit of a new kind of society, a democracy. He is immediately struck by American manners, or lack thereof. In Europe, reflects de Tocqueville, manners have been codified to emphasise hierarchical differences between people. Ordinary people defer to aristocrats, aristocrats to royalty, and so on. But in the United States, everything is done so as to suggest that there are no differences between people. No one takes off their hat to anyone, a postman can casually greet a judge, a mule driver can strike up cheerful banter with a wealthy merchant, and one cannot tell by someone's clothes whether they might be living in a mansion or a hut. Expressions like how you doing and hi are heard everywhere across the new republic. It could be charming, but the aristocratic de Tocqueville wryly notes a problem. These casual manners do not do away with class and wealth differences. They merely sentimentally disguise them. The manners of old Europe have been accused of being cruel in their stress on hierarchy.

    • A French aristocrat, Alexis de Tocqueville, is on a tour of the young United States in an effort to understand the spirit of a new kind of society, a democracy.

      A French aristocrat, Alexis de Tocqueville, is on a tour of the young United States in an effort to understand the spirit of a new kind of society, a democracy.

    B2

    How your ‘second brain’ changes the way you think | BBC Global

    02:21How your ‘second brain’ changes the way you think  | BBC Global
    • A surgeon named William Beaumont worked with a patient, Alexis St Martin, who lived with a hole in his stomach from a gunshot wound.

      A surgeon named William Beaumont worked with a patient, Alexis St Martin, who lived with a hole in his stomach from a gunshot wound.

    • A surgeon named William Beaumont worked with a patient, Alexis St.

      A surgeon named William Beaumont worked with a patient, Alexis St.

    B2

    Modeling's New It Boy, Lucky Blue Smith

    04:49Modeling's New It Boy, Lucky Blue Smith
    • - Um, yeah, so the director of Next LA, Alexis,

      - Um, yeah, so the director of Next LA, Alexis,

    • Yeah, so the director of Next L.A., Alexis, he found me when I was 10.

      Yeah, so the director of Next L.A., Alexis, he found me when I was 10.

    A2