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  • If, um, if anybody was looking for some stuff, then all they'd have to do would be to follow the spiders.

  • Yep, that'd lead him right.

  • That's all I have to say. Oh, and someone will need to feed Fang while I'm away.

  • Good boy.

  • Hagrid's right.

  • With Dumbledore gone, it'll only take a day. Look, come on.

  • Come on, Fang.

  • Come on.

  • You heard what Hagrid said.

  • Follow the spiders.

  • They're heading to the Dark Forest. Why spiders?

  • Why couldn't it be follow the butterflies?

  • Come on.

  • There's something over there.

  • It sounds like something big. Big?

  • Harry!

  • Harry, it's our car!

  • It must have been here all the time.

  • And look, the forest has turned it wild. Come on.

  • We don't want to lose the trail.

  • Come on.

  • Harry, I don't like this.

  • Harry, I don't like this at all. Shush.

  • Can we go back now?

  • Come on.

  • Come on.

If, um, if anybody was looking for some stuff, then all they'd have to do would be to follow the spiders.

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B1 harry hagrid forest shush dumbledore big big

Follow The Spiders | Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets

  • 10 0
    林宜悉 posted on 2025/05/23
Video vocabulary

Keywords

stuff

US /stʌf/

UK /stʌf/

  • noun
  • Generic description for things, materials, objects
  • verb
  • To push material inside something, with force
trail

US /trel/

UK /treɪl/

  • noun
  • Series of marks or signs left by something moving
  • Rough path, as through a forest or field
  • Following behind someone to see what they're doing
  • A mark or series of signs or objects left behind by the passage of someone or something.
  • verb
  • To follow behind someone
  • To be losing to a competitor
  • To pull something behind you along the ground
  • To follow behind someone to see what they're doing
  • other
  • To follow or pursue (someone or something) closely.
  • To drag or allow (something) to drag behind.
  • other
  • To be losing or behind in a competition or race.
  • (of a plant) to spread or hang downwards loosely.
  • To be losing or behind in a competition.
lead

US /lid/

UK /li:d/

  • noun
  • Wire for electricity, computer, etc.; cable
  • Information that could help to solve a crime
  • Main part in a play or movie
  • Heavy, gray metal element
  • Rope used to tie something to stop it escaping
  • Act of being at the front in a race or game
  • adjective
  • Being the main part in movies or plays
  • verb
  • To show the way or guide others
  • To be at the front of a race or game
  • To travel in front of; go in advance of others
wild

US /waɪld/

UK /waɪld/

  • adverb
  • In a manner which lacks control
  • adjective
  • Living in nature; not tame
  • (Of land) not developed by people
  • noun
  • A natural environment e.g. jungle, forest
head

US /hɛd/

UK /hed/

  • verb
  • To hit a ball with your head in a game
  • To be first or at the front or top (e.g. a list)
  • To travel or move toward a particular place; To go in a particular direction
  • To become the leader of something
  • To lead or be responsible for something
  • noun
  • Counter for the number of cattle
  • Natural mental ability or intelligence
  • Leader or person with the greatest authority
  • Mind; mental ability; mental state
  • Side of a coin with a head on it
  • Top part of your body with eyes and a mouth
  • Starting point of something, e.g. a river
turn

US /tɚn/

UK /tɜ:n/

  • verb
  • To become (a particular age)
  • To become a different quality, color, etc.
  • To change the direction of something, e.g. a car
  • To move in an opposite direction or position
  • To shape metal with a spinning tool
  • noun
  • Place where changing of direction happens
  • Your time or chance to perform a duty
  • Your chance to play or do in say a game
  • Unexpected change, as in the weather
feed

US /fid/

UK /fi:d/

  • verb
  • To give food, e.g. to animals or a baby
  • To push something through an opening
  • To provide necessary supplies to
  • noun
  • Food given to animals
forest

US /ˈfɔrɪst, ˈfɑr-/

UK /'fɒrɪst/

  • noun
  • Large area with many trees
  • A large area covered chiefly with trees and undergrowth.
  • A thicket of trees and underbrush covering a large tract of land.
  • A large area covered chiefly with trees and undergrowth.
  • A resource or area that provides timber, wildlife habitat, and recreational opportunities.
  • A wild, uncultivated area, often associated with mystery or danger.
  • An area of land designated for conservation and recreation.
  • adjective
  • Relating to or characteristic of forests or forestry.
lose

US /luz/

UK /lu:z/

  • verb
  • To be unable to keep in check or control something
  • To decrease in value or quantity (e.g. weight)
  • To stop having certain qualities or abilities
  • To stop having or being entitled to
  • To fail to win something that is being contested
  • To be unable to find something you once had
  • To be dependent on someone (used with 'not')
  • other
  • To be unable to find something
  • To become smaller in weight or size
  • To fail to take advantage of something
  • To be defeated in a battle or war
  • other
  • To fail to win a game or competition
time

US /taɪm/

UK /taɪm/

  • noun
  • Speed at which music is played; tempo
  • Point as shown on a clock, e.g. 3 p.m
  • Number of hours, minutes needed to do something
  • Occasion when something happens
  • Period or occasion that something occurred
  • Period in history or the past
  • Something measured in minutes, hours, days, etc.
  • How long an event takes; duration
  • verb
  • To check speed at which music is performed
  • To choose a specific moment to do something
  • To measure how long an event takes, e.g. a race
  • To schedule something to occur at a specific moment