Vocabulary

  • in other words: Stating something in a different way, often to make it clearer or more understandable.
  • out of place: Not comfortable or belonging in a particular situation.
  • rather than: More exactly; more correctly
  • come at: To approach someone to attack them
  • read through: To read something from beginning to end, often to find mistakes or check details.
  • in effect: In reality; in practice; virtually
  • contrasted with: To be strikingly different from something else.
  • as we know it: In the form or way commonly understood or accepted.
  • at times: Sometimes; occasionally.
  • off the rails: Out of control; behaving unpredictably.
  • in the first place: To begin with; as the first point or consideration.
  • back into: To drive a vehicle backwards into a space or area.
  • home in: Move or direct toward a specific target or goal.
  • all at once: Suddenly; at the same time
  • at once: Immediately; without delay
  • like lightning: Very quickly or suddenly.
  • all along: From the beginning; all the time.
  • for free: Without charge; at no cost.
  • phrase: Common expression or saying
  • flip: To turn your body in the air, as in gymnastics
  • philosophy: Study of ideas about the basic nature of life
  • describe: To tell the appearance, sound, smell of something
  • sentence: (Of a judge) to decide the punishment of
  • metaphor: Imaginative use of words to reveal a similarity
  • grief: Feeling of great sadness because someone has died
  • bit: Device put in a horse's mouth to control it
  • inherently: As an essential part of
  • odd: Being unmatched with someone or something
  • mysterious: Unusual; hard to understand or work out
  • mean: Average of a set of numbers
  • gradually: Occurring in a slow manner over a period of time
  • direct: To tell someone in a very clear way to do something
  • comfort: To try to make distressed person feel better
  • ease: To make something less difficult, tight, stressed
  • humanity: Quality of being understanding or sympathetic
  • fiction: Made-up stories; imagined events
  • ominous: Indicating something bad or unpleasant will happen
  • thumb: To use your thumb to request a ride in a car
  • frightening: To make someone afraid or nervous
  • appear: To be seen, become visible; come into sight
  • naked: Not wearing any clothes; without covering
  • ambiguity: State of being confusing, uncertain or unclear
  • ambivalent: Not sure what you feel about something
  • emotion: A feeling such as sadness, anger or love
  • delight: Strong feeling of great pleasure
  • explanation: Details or reasons given to make something clear
  • place: To put someone in a particular type of situation
  • kind: In a caring and helpful manner
  • uncertainty: Feeling of not really knowing what will happen
  • manage: To survive hardships and difficulties; to cope
  • learn: To get knowledge or skills by study or experience
  • blind: Unable to see; with eyes that cannot see
  • finance: Control of money a person, business has access to
  • gradual: Moving slowly by small amounts, over time
  • bring: To take or go with someone to a place
  • rhyme: One of a group of words ending in similar sounds
  • poetry: Poetic writing; imaginative verses
  • sleeve: Part of a garment covering the arm
  • success: Achievement of a desired purpose or goal
  • head: To hit a ball with your head in a game
  • fail: To be unsuccessful in passing a class or exam
  • circuit: An area where cars race in a circle
  • contradiction: Saying or showing something is not so
  • step: Movement done as part of a particular dance
  • business: A company formed for making profit
  • equate: To consider things to be equal or the same
  • condense: To remove water from to make it thicker
  • weak: Not having a strong character
  • reside: To live in; dwell; to be present
  • lightning: Flashes of light in the sky caused by a storm
  • superb: Extremely good
  • disconnect: To separate something from something else
  • dazzle: To make one feel great excitement or admiration
  • feeble: Weak; not well in health; lacking power
  • preposterous: Very foolish or silly; ridiculous
  • apprehension: Dread or fear of a bad outcome
  • circumference: Length around an outer boundary, e.g. a circle
  • overt: Obvious; easily seen or noticed; explicit
  • oscillate: To keep moving back and forth many times
  • oblique: Neither perpendicular nor parallel
  • assertion: Statement made as if it were fact
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  • not found vocabularyNo vocabulary matches your filters
    • all along

      US /ɔl əˈlɔŋ/

      UK /ɔ:l əˈlɔŋ/

      • Adverb
      • From the beginning; all the time.
      • Phrase
      • In a line parallel to something long.
      A2
      More
    • all at once

      US

      UK

      • Adverb
      • Suddenly; at the same time
      • At the same time; simultaneously
      • Phrase
      • Suddenly; at the same time
      A1
      More
    • ambiguity

      US /ˌæmbɪˈɡjuɪti/

      UK /ˌæmbɪ'ɡju:ətɪ/

      • Uncountable Noun
      • State of being confusing, uncertain or unclear
      B2TOEIC
      More
    • ambivalent

      US /æmˈbɪvələnt/

      UK /æmˈbɪvələnt/

      • Adjective
      • Not sure what you feel about something
      B2TOEIC
      More
    • apprehension

      US /ˌæprɪˈhɛnʃən/

      UK /ˌæprɪ'henʃn/

      • Uncountable Noun
      • Dread or fear of a bad outcome
      B2
      More
    • as we know it

      US /əz wi no ɪt/

      UK /əz wi nəu ɪt/

      • other
      • In the form or way commonly understood or accepted.
      B2
      More
    • assertion

      US /əˈsɜːrʃn/

      UK /əˈsɜːʃn/

      • Noun
      • Statement made as if it were fact
      B2
      More
    • at once

      US /æt wʌns/

      UK /æt wʌns/

      • Adverb
      • Immediately; without delay
      • At the same time; simultaneously
      A2
      More
    • at times

      US /æt taɪmz/

      UK /æt taɪmz/

      • Phrase
      • Sometimes; occasionally.
      A1
      More
    • back into

      US /bæk ˈɪntu/

      UK /bæk ˈɪntuː/

      • Phrasal Verb
      • To drive a vehicle backwards into a space or area.
      • To accidentally collide with something while moving backwards.
      A1
      More
    • blind

      US /blaɪnd/

      UK /blaɪnd/

      • Adjective
      • Unable to see; with eyes that cannot see
      • Lacking in judgment or awareness
      • Transitive Verb
      • To cause someone to lose the ability to see
      • To be unable to see the truth about a situation
      A2
      More
    • circuit

      US /ˈsɜ:rkɪt/

      UK /ˈsɜ:kɪt/

      • Noun
      • An area where cars race in a circle
      • Route for journey all the way around a place
      • Intransitive Verb
      • To complete a journey all the way round an area
      B1
      More
    • circumference

      US /sərˈkʌmfərəns/

      UK /səˈkʌmfərəns/

      • Noun
      • Length around an outer boundary, e.g. a circle
      C1
      More
    • come at

      US /kʌm æt/

      UK /kʌm æt/

      • Phrasal Verb
      • To approach someone to attack them
      A1
      More
    • comfort

      US /ˈkʌmfət/

      UK /'kʌmfət/

      • Transitive Verb
      • To try to make distressed person feel better
      • Uncountable Noun
      • Acts or words that reduce pain or sadness
      • State of being relaxed, warm or happy
      A2
      More
    • condense

      US /kənˈdɛns/

      UK /kənˈdens/

      • Verb (Transitive/Intransitive)
      • To remove water from to make it thicker
      • To shorten (a book, etc.) by removing part of it
      B2TOEIC
      More
    • contradiction

      US /ˌkɑ:ntrəˈdɪkʃn/

      UK /ˌkɒntrəˈdɪkʃn/

      • Noun (Countable/Uncountable)
      • Saying or showing something is not so
      • A statement that is the opposite of another statement.
      B1
      More
    • contrasted with

      US

      UK

      • Phrasal Verb
      • To be strikingly different from something else.
      A1
      More
    • dazzle

      US /ˈdæzəl/

      UK /'dæzl/

      • Transitive Verb
      • To make one feel great excitement or admiration
      • (Of a bright light) to cause to not be able to see
      • Uncountable Noun
      • Strong bright light that makes you unable to see
      B2
      More
    • delight

      US /dɪˈlaɪt/

      UK /dɪ'laɪt/

      • Uncountable Noun
      • Strong feeling of great pleasure
      • Transitive Verb
      • To give someone pleasure or joy
      B1
      More
    • direct

      US /dɪˈrɛkt, daɪ-/

      UK /də'rekt/

      • Transitive Verb
      • To tell someone in a very clear way to do something
      • To show the way by conducting or leading
      • Adverb
      • Coming straight from something
      A2TOEIC
      More
    • disconnect

      US /ˌdɪskəˈnɛkt/

      UK /ˌdɪskəˈnekt/

      • Transitive Verb
      • To separate something from something else
      • Noun
      • State of being separated from something else
      B2
      More
    • ease

      US /iz/

      UK /i:z/

      • Verb (Transitive/Intransitive)
      • To make something less difficult, tight, stressed
      • To move slowly and purposely to get in small space
      • Uncountable Noun
      • State of being comfortable or relaxed
      A2
      More
    • emotion

      US /ɪˈmoʃən/

      UK /iˈməuʃən/

      • Noun (Countable/Uncountable)
      • A feeling such as sadness, anger or love
      • A mental state that arises spontaneously rather than through conscious effort
      A2
      More
    • equate

      US /ɪˈkwet/

      UK /ɪ'kweɪt/

      • Transitive Verb
      • To consider things to be equal or the same
      B1
      More
    • explanation

      US /ˌɛkspləˈneʃən/

      UK /ˌekspləˈneɪʃn/

      • Noun (Countable/Uncountable)
      • Details or reasons given to make something clear
      • A reason or justification given for an action or event.
      A2TOEIC
      More
    • feeble

      US /ˈfibəl/

      UK /ˈfi:bl/

      • Adjective
      • Weak; not well in health; lacking power
      B2
      More
    • fiction

      US /ˈfɪkʃən/

      UK /ˈfɪkʃn/

      • Uncountable Noun
      • Made-up stories; imagined events
      • False statement or account about something
      B1
      More
    • finance

      US /fəˈnæns, faɪ-, ˈfaɪˌnæns/

      UK /ˈfaɪnæns/

      • Uncountable Noun
      • Control of money a person, business has access to
      • Adjective
      • Concerned with money
      A2TOEIC
      More
    • flip

      US /flɪp/

      UK /flɪp/

      • Verb (Transitive/Intransitive)
      • To turn your body in the air, as in gymnastics
      • To move into a different position quickly
      • Noun
      • Act of turning your body in the air; somersault
      • Movement of something from one position to another
      B2
      More
    • for free

      US /fɔr fri/

      UK /fɔ: fri:/

      • Phrase
      • Without charge; at no cost.
      • Adjective
      • Available without payment.
      A2
      More
    • frightening

      US

      UK

      • Transitive Verb
      • To make someone afraid or nervous
      • Adjective
      • Being scary
      A2
      More
    • gradual

      US /ˈɡrædʒuəl/

      UK /ˈgrædʒuəl/

      • Adjective
      • Moving slowly by small amounts, over time
      • Noun
      • A gently sloping path or surface.
      B1
      More
    • gradually

      US /ˈɡrædʒʊəlɪ/

      UK /ˈgrædʒuəli/

      • Adverb
      • Occurring in a slow manner over a period of time
      • Little by little; in a slow and progressive manner.
      B1TOEIC
      More
    • grief

      US /ɡrif/

      UK /ɡri:f/

      • Uncountable Noun
      • Feeling of great sadness because someone has died
      • Things that are troublesome or annoying
      B1
      More
    • home in

      US /ˈhoʊm ɪn/

      UK /ˈhəum ɪn/

      • other
      • Move or direct toward a specific target or goal.
      B2
      More
    • humanity

      US /hjuˈmænɪti/

      UK /hju:ˈmænəti/

      • Uncountable Noun
      • Quality of being understanding or sympathetic
      • Compassionate behavior, especially towards those suffering.
      • Noun (Countable/Uncountable)
      • All human beings collectively; the human race.
      A2
      More
    • in effect

      US /ɪn ɪˈfɛkt/

      UK /in iˈfekt/

      • Phrase
      • In reality; in practice; virtually
      A1
      More
    • in other words

      US

      UK

      • Phrase
      • Stating something in a different way, often to make it clearer or more understandable.
      More
    • in the first place

      US

      UK

      • Phrase
      • To begin with; as the first point or consideration.
      • From the beginning; initially.
      A1
      More
    • inherently

      US /ɪn'herəntlɪ/

      UK /ɪn'herəntlɪ/

      • Adverb
      • As an essential part of
      B1
      More
    • lightning

      US /ˈlaɪtnɪŋ/

      UK /ˈlaɪtnɪŋ/

      • Noun (Countable/Uncountable)
      • Flashes of light in the sky caused by a storm
      • A sudden electrostatic discharge that occurs during an electrical storm.
      • Adjective
      • Moving very fast or occurring suddenly
      B1
      More
    • like lightning

      US /laɪk ˈlaɪtnɪŋ/

      UK /laɪk ˈlaɪtnɪŋ/

      • other
      • Very quickly or suddenly.
      B1
      More
    • metaphor

      US /ˈmɛtəˌfɔr, -fɚ/

      UK /ˈmetəfə(r)/

      • Noun
      • Imaginative use of words to reveal a similarity
      B1
      More
    • mysterious

      US /mɪˈstɪriəs/

      UK /mɪˈstɪəriəs/

      • Adjective
      • Unusual; hard to understand or work out
      A2
      More
    • naked

      US /ˈnekɪd/

      UK /ˈneɪkɪd/

      • Adjective
      • Not wearing any clothes; without covering
      B1
      More
    • oblique

      US /oˈblik, əˈblik/

      UK /əˈbli:k/

      • Adjective
      • Neither perpendicular nor parallel
      C1
      More
    • odd

      US /ɑd/

      UK /ɒd/

      • Adjective
      • Being unmatched with someone or something
      • Being a number not able to be divided by two
      A2
      More
    • off the rails

      US /ɔf ðə reɪlz/

      UK /ɒf ðə reɪlz/

      • other
      • Out of control; behaving unpredictably.
      B2
      More
    • ominous

      US /ˈɑmənəs/

      UK /ˈɒmɪnəs/

      • Adjective
      • Indicating something bad or unpleasant will happen
      B2TOEIC
      More
    • oscillate

      US

      UK

      • Intransitive Verb
      • To keep moving back and forth many times
      B2
      More
    • out of place

      US /aʊt ʌv ples/

      UK /aut ɔv pleis/

      • Adjective
      • Not comfortable or belonging in a particular situation.
      • Not in the correct or usual position; missing.
      A1
      More
    • overt

      US /oˈvɚt, ˈoˌvɚt/

      UK /ˈəuvə:t/

      • Adjective
      • Obvious; easily seen or noticed; explicit
      B2TOEIC
      More
    • philosophy

      US /fɪˈlɑsəfi/

      UK /fə'lɒsəfɪ/

      • Uncountable Noun
      • Study of ideas about the basic nature of life
      • Attitude to life that a person has
      C1
      More
    • phrase

      US /frez/

      UK /freɪz/

      • Noun
      • Common expression or saying
      • Section of musical notes in a piece of music
      • Verb (Transitive/Intransitive)
      • To choose words to say what you mean clearly
      A2
      More
    • poetry

      US /ˈpoʊətri/

      UK /ˈpəʊətri/

      • Uncountable Noun
      • Poetic writing; imaginative verses
      • A collection of poems.
      A2
      More
    • preposterous

      US /prɪˈpɑstərəs/

      UK /prɪˈpɒstərəs/

      • Adjective
      • Very foolish or silly; ridiculous
      C2
      More
    • rather than

      US

      UK

      • Adverb
      • More exactly; more correctly
      • Preferably; instead
      • Preposition
      • Instead of
      A1
      More
    • read through

      US /rid θru/

      UK /ri:d θru:/

      • Phrasal Verb
      • To read something from beginning to end, often to find mistakes or check details.
      • To read something quickly without paying attention to details.
      • Noun
      • A rehearsal where actors read through the script without acting it out fully.
      A1
      More
    • reside

      US /rɪˈzaɪd/

      UK /rɪˈzaɪd/

      • Intransitive Verb
      • To live in; dwell; to be present
      B1
      More
    • rhyme

      US /raɪm/

      UK /raɪm/

      • Noun (Countable/Uncountable)
      • One of a group of words ending in similar sounds
      • Poem or song using similar-sounding words
      B2
      More
    • sleeve

      US /sliv/

      UK /sli:v/

      • Noun
      • Part of a garment covering the arm
      A2
      More
    • success

      US /səkˈsɛs/

      UK /sək'ses/

      • Uncountable Noun
      • Achievement of a desired purpose or goal
      • A successful person; one who achieved their aims
      A2TOEIC
      More
    • superb

      US /su:ˈpɜ:rb/

      UK /su:ˈpɜ:b/

      • Adjective
      • Extremely good
      B1TOEIC
      More
    • thumb

      US /θʌm/

      UK /θʌm/

      • Intransitive Verb
      • To use your thumb to request a ride in a car
      • Countable Noun
      • Part of a glove that goes over the thumb
      • The short, thick finger on the side of your hand
      B1
      More
    • uncertainty

      US /ʌnˈsə:tn:ti/

      UK /ʌn'sɜ:tntɪ/

      • Uncountable Noun
      • Feeling of not really knowing what will happen
      • Lack of confidence; doubt.
      B2TOEIC
      More
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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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    B1
    #dickinson#truth#poem#lightning#circuit#circumference

    How Emily Dickinson Writes A Poem

    0
    林宜悉 posted on 2026/02/10
    Ever wondered how Emily Dickinson crafted her unique poetry? This video dives deep into her famous poem 'Tell It Slant,' showing you how to analyze metaphors and understand poetic ambiguity. You'll pick up advanced vocabulary and gain a richer cultural understanding of this iconic American poet!

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