Vocabulary

  • look at: To use your eyes to focus on something
  • for example: As an illustration or instance.
  • move on: To decide to change or go to a different place
  • on to: Toward something; forward
  • go back to: To return to a starting point
  • from the first: From the very beginning.
  • walk through: To show someone carefully how to do something
  • fit into: To be small enough to go inside something.
  • with it: Intelligent, alert, and up-to-date.
  • based on: To use something as the foundation or starting point for something else.
  • start out: To begin your life or career in a particular way.
  • move into: To start living in a new house or building
  • get back to: To get in contact with someone again
  • fill out: To become fatter
  • in other words: Stating something in a different way, often to make it clearer or more understandable.
  • move over: To make room for someone or something by shifting position.
  • over to: Used to hand over to someone else to speak
  • smooth out: To remove wrinkles or creases from something.
  • fill in: To put earth in e.g. a hole
  • first off: To begin with; firstly.
  • stand out
  • work on: To devote effort to improve or develop something
  • regardless of
  • rather than: More exactly; more correctly
  • forget about: To stop thinking about something; to ignore something.
  • for now: Temporarily; for the present time.
  • potential: Capable of happening or becoming reality
  • process: To organize and use data in a computer
  • bunch: A group of things of the same kind
  • prioritize: To rank things in importance
  • recommend: To advise or suggest that someone do something
  • improve: To make, or become, something better
  • severe: Very bad; harsh
  • effective: Working efficiently to produce a desired result
  • identify: To indicate who or what someone or something is
  • current: Electricity flowing through wires
  • contribute: To be a factor in causing something to happen
  • failure: When things go wrong; lack of function
  • prevent: To stop something from happening or existing
  • component: One of the parts that something is made up of
  • function: Social event, or party such as a wedding
  • avoid: To prevent from happening
  • occur: To come to pass or to happen
  • issue: To make something available to be used or sold
  • comfort: To try to make distressed person feel better
  • form: Sports team or person's current winning record
  • remote: Being far away from people, towns, etc.
  • release: To free someone from a responsibility or burden
  • effect: An advantage, benefit
  • pretty: Being attractive to the eye in a simple way
  • drop: Distance between a higher and a lower level
  • risk: To do something potentially dangerous or foolish
  • rate: To assess something or consider its qualities
  • break: To create a new record e.g. running the 100m dash
  • provide: To make available; to supply for use
  • likelihood: Chance that something might happen
  • record: Highest or most extreme level achieved
  • project: To predict what will happen in the future
  • shape: The outer form of something, what it looks like
  • leave: To go away from; depart
  • loop: A circle or curved shape, as when you tie a lace
  • column: Regular series of articles in a newspaper/magazine
  • prototype: A first or preliminary version of a device or vehicle from which other forms are developed
  • occurrence: Specific instance of something happening
  • evaluation: Judgment about the value or condition of something
  • chart: Drawing showing information in a clear way
  • preliminary: Happening or necessary before a thing happens
  • uncomfortable: Not being relaxed; worried about something
  • clinic: Local medical center; department of a hospital
  • unstable: (Of a chair, etc.) likely to move, fall etc.
  • preventative: Intended to stop something bad from happening
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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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    #failure#seat#rpm#customer#design#mode

    Design FMEA (Failure Modes & Effects Analysis)

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    chatarow posted on 2025/03/22
    Ever wondered how to prevent product failures before they happen? This video dives into Design FMEA, teaching you essential vocabulary for identifying failure modes, analyzing risks, and planning preventive actions in a workplace setting. You'll pick up advanced terms and learn practical steps to improve your designs!

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