Vocabulary

  • have to: Must do
  • sneak past: To move quietly and secretly past someone or something.
  • going on: To continue doing something
  • goes well: To happen in the way desired
  • on the way: During the journey to a particular place.
  • look at: To use your eyes to focus on something
  • look for: To try to find a thing or person that is lost
  • for the rest: Concerning the remaining people or things.
  • wait out: To wait until the end of something, especially something unpleasant.
  • beat the clock: To hurry in order to do something before a deadline.
  • knock out: To hit and make unconscious
  • of old: From a long time ago; in the past.
  • talking about: To discuss a particular topic.
  • used to: Did regularly before, but don't do now
  • take in: To allow to enter; receive as a guest
  • at least: As a minimum
  • pitch black: Extremely dark; completely without light.
  • speed up: To move more quickly
  • left out: To forget; omit
  • pick out: To choose or select one item from many
  • pass on: A polite way of saying 'to die'
  • due to: Because of; owing to
  • look around: To explore a place; search for something.
  • stuff: Generic description for things, materials, objects
  • panic: Overwhelming feeling of fear and anxiety
  • matter: To be of great importance; to count
  • audience: Group of people attending a play, movie etc.
  • dumb: Senseless; stupid
  • aisle: Long narrow space between rows of seats
  • imagine: To think creatively about; form mental picture of
  • sneak: To move around in a way so no one will see you
  • burst: To move (arrive, exit, etc.) suddenly or hurriedly
  • film: Thin layer that covers something
  • couple: To join something to something else
  • rest: Time when one relaxes, sleeps, or is inactive
  • beat: To move in regular motions in order to push blood
  • construction: Act of building something; thing that is built
  • ground: To break (coffee, etc.) into tiny bits with machine
  • leave: To go away from; depart
  • ramp: Path that increases in height as you walk up it
  • cement: Building material made from gray powder, water
  • bully: a person who habitually seeks to harm or intimidate those whom they perceive as vulnerable
  • single: One run in cricket or a hit baseball
  • hit: To have a negative impact on a person/place/thing
  • boom: Very fast increase in growth or popularity
  • drive: A person's ambition and motivation to do something
  • chin: Part of your face below your mouth above your neck
  • suspend: To hang something or someone from something
  • remember: To give someone a gift, e.g. birthday, wedding
  • grow: To get bigger and more mature; make plants do this
  • laugh: To make a happy sound when something is funny
  • lane: Marked strip of the road or swimming pool
  • fast: In a way that is difficult to move or change
  • traffic: The cars or vehicles on the road
  • knock: Bad experience that reduces a person's confidence
  • brake: Mechanism on car, train, bike to make it slow down
  • guy: Man; boy; any person
  • grade: To give a road the required angle of slope
  • life: All the living things e.g. animals, plants, humans
  • know: To be familiar with a person or place, thing
  • habitual: Done by someone on a regular basis
  • exit: A door that you go through to leave a place
  • jet: Stream of liquid/gas shooting out of small opening
  • speed: How fast or slow something is or is done
  • anti: A prefix meaning 'against' or 'opposed'
  • continental: Of or typical of the culture of mainland Europe
  • hole: An empty space, as in the ground, in a sock etc.
  • merge: To cause two or more things to combine into one
  • bleed: To allow a liquid or gas to escape
  • tired: Without energy so you want to rest or fall asleep
  • oncoming: (E.g. of traffic) moving towards
  • grandma: Mother of your father or mother
  • secondhand: Something that has already used by another person
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    01:03

    She took a brave step forward, leaving behind her comfort zone to chase her dreams.

    Vocabulary
    • brave

      adj. Having courage

    • comfort zone

      phr. A familiar situation where one feels safe

    Explanation
    a brave step is a noun phrase, where brave is an adjective modifying the noun step, meaning "a courageous step". forward is an adverb modifying step, meaning "ahead". The whole phrase serves as the object, answering the "what" of took (verb) — she took a brave step forward.

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    brave

    US/brev/
    UK/breɪv/
    adj.Brave
    v.t.To bravely face
    A2 Elementary

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    #audience laughing#laughing#clock#kid#class#teacher

    Millennials Are Still The Stupidest Generation. Brad Upton

    0
    林宜悉 posted on 2023/10/30
    Get ready to laugh and learn with Brad Upton's hilarious take on millennials! You'll pick up everyday conversational phrases and cultural insights while enjoying jokes about childhood mishaps, travel, and traffic.

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