Vocabulary
- look at: To use your eyes to focus on something
- think of: To look on as (being something specific); consider
- well rested: Having had enough rest or sleep; feeling refreshed.
- on purpose: Intentionally; deliberately.
- going on: To continue doing something
- at night: During the night; in the nighttime.
- come back: To reply to someone, often forcefully
- with it: Intelligent, alert, and up-to-date.
- on the street: Located on or along a public road in a town or city.
- new level: A higher or improved stage of achievement or quality.
- have to: Must do
- with a bang: In a sudden, noticeable, and exciting way.
- go out: To leave a building (e.g. a house)
- count on: To depend on someone
- at least: As a minimum
- take on: To acquire a new characteristic
- weird: Odd or unusual; surprising; strange
- episode: One separate event in a series of events
- sort: To organize things by putting them into groups
- struggle: To try very hard to do something difficult
- audience: Group of people attending a play, movie etc.
- precious: Having a youthful, cute, and pleasant appearance
- awful: Very bad; horrible; terrible
- stare: To look at someone or something for a long time
- freak: (Of weather, etc.) unusual; unpredictable; amazing
- blame: To say someone is responsible for something bad
- cozy: Comfortable, warm, pleasant, and often, small
- bit: Device put in a horse's mouth to control it
- reference: A letter of recommendation, e.g. for a job
- venture: (Business) activity involving calculated risks
- ditch: To abandon or give up a plan, etc.
- fart: To break wind; to emit gas from the anus
- administration: Act of giving e.g. medicine to a patient
- deficit: Amount less than what is needed or required
- segment: Part divided from the other parts of something
- empty: Containing nothing; with no contents
- rest: Time when one relaxes, sleeps, or is inactive
- tuck: To put something into a small or safe place
- investigate: To try to find out facts; to carry out research
- scramble: To cause war planes to take off quickly
- count: To add things together to find the total number
- slumber: Act of sleeping; sleep
- lot: What happens to a person in life from chance; fate
- hit: To have a negative impact on a person/place/thing
- kind: In a caring and helpful manner
- creative: Having the ability to make something new
- adult: Person or animal that is fully grown
- sketch: Brief account of something without many details
- operation: Business or company, or its activities
- breath: Air you take in and out of your body
- podcast: A digital recording (e.g. radio show) for download
- pull: Act of breathing in smoke, as from a pipe
- faucet: Tap; device for controlling the flow of water
- murder: Something that is difficult or painful to do
- inherit: To have a quality or feature passed down at birth
- wear: To have clothes, glasses, shoes etc. on your body
- make: To arrange or prepare something e.g. dinner
- bang: To strike something loudly or forcefully
- drip: Tiny amount of liquid that falls from something
- start: First time or place that a thing exists; beginning
- real: Actually existing or happening, not imagined
- peanut: Edible small nut which grows under the ground
- life: All the living things e.g. animals, plants, humans
- bug: To bother someone
- light: To cause something to burn; put a burning match to
- distort: To change the shape, appearance, or sound
- huddle: Tightly packed group
- trance: Daydreaming state; unaware state
- interrogation: Forceful inquiry by asking a lot of questions
- jelly: Semisolid food substance, eaten as dessert
- boo: To shout out 'boo', to express your disapproval
- beep: Short high sound such as that made by a car horn
- babe: Romantic term often used to your lover; darling
- sideshow: Subordinate incident of little importance
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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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Conan, Sona & Gourley Argue About Who Ruined This Intro | Conan O'Brien Needs A Friend
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林宜悉 posted on 2026/01/18Ever wondered what happens when a podcast intro goes hilariously wrong? You'll love this clip where Conan O'Brien and his friends have a total mic meltdown, leading to some super awkward and funny moments! It's a fantastic chance to pick up on natural, situational dialogue and simple sentence structures used in everyday conversation.
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