Vocabulary
- have to: Must do
- for example: As an illustration or instance.
- at least: As a minimum
- sit down: To take a seat
- turn on
- forget about: To stop thinking about something; to ignore something.
- easy enough: Sufficiently easy; not too difficult.
- english speaker: A person who speaks English.
- by itself: Alone; without help or assistance.
- on the internet: Located or available on the internet.
- down with: Suffering from an illness.
- at home: In one's own residence or country.
- for free: Without charge; at no cost.
- over time: Gradually; as time passes.
- as long as: For the period that; provided that.
- think of: To look on as (being something specific); consider
- look at: To use your eyes to focus on something
- in with: Fashionable or popular at the moment.
- move on: To decide to change or go to a different place
- for long: For a considerable period of time.
- in the future: At a later time; in times to come.
- on the street: Located on or along a public road in a town or city.
- left and right: In both the left and right directions.
- go to ground: Hide or disappear to avoid capture or trouble.
- fit in: To mix with others so you get on well with them
- stuff: Generic description for things, materials, objects
- context: Set of facts surrounding a person or event
- recognize: To accept the truth or reality of something
- pretend: To act as if something is true when it is not
- practice: The office and place for legal or medical work
- bias: Preference to believe things even if incorrect
- coincidence: Occurrence by chance, not design or planned
- conversation: Talking with other people; discussion or chat
- motivation: Reason behind why someone did something
- fluent: Doing something well and with ease
- sentence: (Of a judge) to decide the punishment of
- slip: Act of beginning to fall from losing balance
- method: (Organized and planned) way of doing something
- stare: To look at someone or something for a long time
- interaction: Process of people or things affecting each other
- motivate: To give someone a reason, the will to do something
- protest: To argue against something in a forceful way
- actual: Real or existing in fact, not imagined; real
- equal: Same in shape, size, or number
- ground: To break (coffee, etc.) into tiny bits with machine
- click: To work well with someone or something
- article: Word such as 'a', 'an', or 'the' used before nouns
- unleash: To release or let an animal go
- leave: To go away from; depart
- impress: To make an emotional impact upon
- chore: Task done to keep a house in order e.g. cleaning
- equally: In an equal, even, or identical manner
- revolutionary: Marking a significant change in something
- lot: What happens to a person in life from chance; fate
- whisper: To talk with breath but no voice
- learn: To get knowledge or skills by study or experience
- invade: To enter something causing a harmful result
- extension: Addition to something, e.g. a house
- language: Words or signs used to communicate messages
- success: Achievement of a desired purpose or goal
- pick: Sharp tool used for breaking the ground
- step: Movement done as part of a particular dance
- turn: To become (a particular age)
- find: To become aware of something that is happening
- person: Man, woman or child
- browse: To look around for things, e.g. in a bookstore
- maximize: To make as large or great as possible
- summary: Brief, complete and accurate
- fast: In a way that is difficult to move or change
- anime: A form of Japanese animation
- paste: To move computer data from one page to another
- tutor: A teacher who deals with students personally
- skip: Very large waste disposal bin
- reversal: Change to the opposite, often from good to bad
- manure: Animal waste put on soil to help plants grow
- browser: Software that lets you search for information
- blockade: To block or impede the movement of people, objects
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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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