Vocabulary
- out of order: Not in proper working condition; broken.
- scale up: To increase in size, number, or extent.
- depending on: To rely on for support (financial or emotional)
- look at: To use your eyes to focus on something
- based on: To use something as the foundation or starting point for something else.
- to some extent: Partially; not completely.
- on top of that: In addition to something already mentioned; furthermore.
- catch up: To become equal with another person
- know about: To have information or understanding of a subject or situation.
- see in: To accompany someone to the entrance of a building or room.
- for example: As an illustration or instance.
- arrive at: To reach a place, especially at the end of a journey.
- at the same time: Simultaneously; at the identical moment.
- same time: Occurring simultaneously or at the same point in time.
- at least: As a minimum
- by itself: Alone; without help or assistance.
- talking about: To discuss a particular topic.
- wait for: To wait until someone comes, or something happens
- come back: To reply to someone, often forcefully
- down the road: At a future time; in the future.
- walk through: To show someone carefully how to do something
- as well as: Also; in addition to
- in addition to: Besides; as well as
- in terms of
- over to: Used to hand over to someone else to speak
- assume: To act in a false manner to mislead others
- critical: Making a negative judgment of something
- multiple: Having or involving more than one of something
- basically: Used before you explain something simply, clearly
- scale: Size, level, or amount when compared
- destination: The place you are traveling to
- extent: Point, level or limit to which something reaches
- separate: Being different from or unrelated to another
- bit: Device put in a horse's mouth to control it
- inherently: As an essential part of
- component: One of the parts that something is made up of
- efficient: Able to produce results without waste
- address: Exact street location of a place
- response: Something said/written as an answer to something
- require: To demand that someone does something
- comparison: Act of comparing things
- compare: To consider how similar and different things are
- complete: To finish or reach the end of doing something
- performance: Act of doing something
- reason: To think and make conclusions in a logical manner
- switch: A change or shift from one method to another
- congestion: Excessive accumulation of blood/fluid in the body
- ecosystem: Types of plants and animals in an specific area
- layer: One of several sheets of a material or object
- request: To ask for, usually politely and formally
- queue: Line of people or cars waiting for something
- framework: Skeleton structure of a building or construction
- receive: To get something someone has given or sent to you
- depend: Be controlled or determined by (someone/something)
- kind: In a caring and helpful manner
- order: Religious or social group, as of nuns
- delivery: Way someone acts when speaking publicly
- simple: Not hard to understand or do; not complex
- transaction: An exchange in business usually involving money
- optimize: To make as effective as possible
- point: An item to be discussed
- pull: Act of breathing in smoke, as from a pipe
- pack: Bag carried on the back of donkey, etc.
- bandwidth: Data transmission rate over the internet
- implementation: A practical means for accomplishing something
- overhead: Located above your head or in the sky
- incur: To bring something (bad) on yourself
- side: To decide to agree with one point, not the other
- startup: A company just starting its operations
- sue: Person's name
- tile: Squares of hard material to cover floor/roof/wall
- happen: To take place or occur
- hear: To be aware of sound; to perceive with the ear
- datum: Item of factual information
- interface: Place where things come together to communicate
- semantic: Concerning the different meanings of words
- workload: Work you are expected to do in a specified time
- latency: State of being not yet evident or active
- payload: Part of guided missile containing the explosive
- header: Soccer shot made with head
- byte: Small measurement of computer information
- ethernet: Network technology for local area networks
- nanosecond: One billionth of a second
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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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Performance Evaluation of Interconnect Technologies for AI Scale Up Computing UAL vs UALoE SU
0
佛斯特 posted on 2025/10/25Ever wondered how AI scale-up computing really works under the hood? This video dives deep into the performance of interconnect technologies like UAL and Rocky, perfect for infrastructure engineers looking to boost their technical vocabulary. You'll pick up advanced terms related to memory semantics and RDMA writes that are crucial for understanding high-performance networking!
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