Vocabulary
- look at: To use your eyes to focus on something
- walk through: To show someone carefully how to do something
- in your face: Bold, aggressive, and confrontational.
- deal it out: To distribute or give something to people.
- double up: To bend your body quickly, for example because you are in pain or because you are laughing a lot
- bet: To gamble money to win more money, e.g. on horses
- rare: (Of meat) cooked, but still red and juicy
- reach: To come to or arrive at a goal or destination
- state: Region within a country, with its own government
- compare: To consider how similar and different things are
- performance: Act of doing something
- respect: To follow the established rules
- break: To create a new record e.g. running the 100m dash
- mood: Emotion or a state of mind; how you feel
- mind: To be bothered or upset by something
- fault: A failure or negative aspect of
- flame: To glow
- hit: To have a negative impact on a person/place/thing
- breathe: To move air into and out of your lungs
- deck: Floor built into a ship, bus, plane or home
- boom: Very fast increase in growth or popularity
- step: Movement done as part of a particular dance
- turn: To become (a particular age)
- quick: Using very little time; moving far in little time
- match: To equal or be as good as something else
- jealousy: Unhappy feeling of wanting what someone else has
- world: All the humans, events, activities on the earth
- real: Actually existing or happening, not imagined
- feel: To be aware of or experience an emotion, sensation
- life: All the living things e.g. animals, plants, humans
- base: Place military personnel live, train, and operate
- stay: To keep trying without giving up
- video: Recording capturing action with sound
- unfair: not treating people in an equal way, or not morally right
- billionaire: Person with more than 1,000,000,000 dollars etc.
- monster: Large frightening imaginary creature
- magic: Attractive, appealing, and exciting quality
- baby: A very young child, who cannot yet speak
- cash: Physical money (not credit card or digital)
- delete: To remove or erase something
- beta: Test version of a product or software
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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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