Vocabulary
- come on over: An invitation to visit someone's home or location.
- knock off: To make a copy of something often illegally
- in with: Fashionable or popular at the moment.
- have to: Must do
- perspective: Artistic method of creating a sense of distance
- matter: To be of great importance; to count
- exact: Completely correct; accurate; specific
- bet: To gamble money to win more money, e.g. on horses
- guess: To give an answer without knowing if it is correct
- agony: Great pain or suffering
- waste: To kill or severely harm someone
- moment: Very short or brief period of time
- lot: What happens to a person in life from chance; fate
- learn: To get knowledge or skills by study or experience
- fact: Something that is known or proved to be true
- scream: To make a sudden loud, high sound
- temperature: When you your body heat is above normal
- stand: To be a candidate in an election
- fist: Tightly closed hand, as when you punch someone
- nail: Pointed piece of metal used to join pieces of wood
- excellent: Extremely good
- memory: Ability of the mind to call back past things
- great: Very good; better than before
- turn: To become (a particular age)
- celebrate: To observe an event or occasion, e.g. a birthday
- shot: To kick or throw a ball at a goal
- remember: To give someone a gift, e.g. birthday, wedding
- pump: To make liquid or gas flow in a particular direction
- frank: Member of the ancient Germanic peoples
- start: First time or place that a thing exists; beginning
- interesting: Taking your attention; making you want to know
- burn: To destroy with fire
- understand: To know the meaning of language, what someone says
- oven: Kitchen appliance you put food in to bake, roast
- knock: Bad experience that reduces a person's confidence
- hurt: To cause pain, damage or injury
- forgive: To stop blaming someone for guilt, mistake
- skin: To defeat someone easily and completely
- fan: To blow air upon a fire to make it stronger
- char: To become burnt and the outside appears black
- basketball: Team game played to throw the ball through a hoop
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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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林宜悉 posted on 2025/12/13Get ready for a super intense scene from 'The Boys' where Homelander delivers a chilling threat! You'll love practicing your listening skills with this dialogue, picking up on simple sentence structures and situational phrases that feel incredibly real.
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