Vocabulary
- go ahead: To start an activity; start doing, working etc.
- think of: To look on as (being something specific); consider
- talking about: To discuss a particular topic.
- used to: Did regularly before, but don't do now
- look around: To explore a place; search for something.
- in with: Fashionable or popular at the moment.
- with it: Intelligent, alert, and up-to-date.
- run in: To arrest person and take them to police station
- see in: To accompany someone to the entrance of a building or room.
- all the things: Everything; all items or aspects
- in real life: In the physical world; not online or in a fictional setting.
- even once: At least one time; even a single time.
- stuff: Generic description for things, materials, objects
- sort: To organize things by putting them into groups
- fragile: Easily affected, broken, or harmed
- character: Person in a story, movie or play
- barely: Only just; just possible
- describe: To tell the appearance, sound, smell of something
- decade: Period of 10 years
- theory: Ideas or principles that explain facts or events
- series: Set of stories or articles on a particular subject
- direction: When someone tells people what to do
- huge: Very very large
- introduce: To open an essay to set the scene
- film: Thin layer that covers something
- mediocre: Average; not outstanding; not very good
- interest: Best or most advantageous thing for someone
- anecdote: Brief story based on personal experience
- honest: Good, truthful, sincere, or faithful; trustworthy
- role: Character played by an actor
- expose: To make visible, without covering or protection
- fad: Something popular for a short time
- comedy: Amusing play, film, usually with a happy ending
- totally: In a complete way; completely; absolutely
- favorite: A thing that someone likes best or enjoys most
- hell: Any place of pain and suffering
- lot: What happens to a person in life from chance; fate
- narrator: Person or character who tells a story
- premiere: First performance of a show, film, play in public
- memorize: To study something so that you remember it
- pilot: To conduct a small practice experiment
- adult: Person or animal that is fully grown
- nail: Pointed piece of metal used to join pieces of wood
- alive: Living; not dead
- miraculous: Wonderful; extraordinary
- real: Actually existing or happening, not imagined
- think: To have an idea about something without certainty
- give: Degree of flexibility in something, a material
- tattoo: Permanent ink drawing on a person's skin
- violation: Abuse, damage or total disregard
- date: To have become old-fashioned
- long: Person's name
- show: To be easily seen or displayed
- good: Proper, appropriate or right
- workshop: A brief intensive course for a small group
- shack: Small often wooden building that is not well made
- clothe: To put a certain type of clothing on someone; dress
- prequel: A story, or movie that comes before another one
- subatomic: Concerning constituents of the atom
- outdate: To be older than
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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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Jim Parsons and Iain Armitage talk CBS' "Young Sheldon"
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21221黃聖甯 posted on 2025/02/19Ever wondered how Sheldon Cooper became the Sheldon Cooper we know and love? Dive into the origins of the eccentric genius with Jim Parsons and Iain Armitage as they discuss the prequel series "Young Sheldon"! You'll get a behind-the-scenes look at the show and pick up some fun vocabulary, like what it means for a blouse to be "diaphanous"!
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