Vocabulary
- come back: To reply to someone, often forcefully
- talking about: To discuss a particular topic.
- going on: To continue doing something
- once a month: Happening or appearing one time in each month.
- get through: To arrive at the end of or finish something
- go back to: To return to a starting point
- go together: To match well; to be harmonious or aesthetically pleasing.
- like riding a bike: Skill that is easily remembered after learning it once.
- on a stick: Food that is served on a stick
- have to: Must do
- gone viral: To become very popular by circulating quickly through the Internet.
- for nothing: Without payment or reward; to no purpose or effect; in vain
- based on: To use something as the foundation or starting point for something else.
- mess with: To interfere with or tamper with something.
- set up
- out there: In or to a place that is far away
- look at: To use your eyes to focus on something
- hand on: To pass or transfer something physically to someone else.
- humanly possible: Within the limits of what a person can achieve.
- stick around: To remain in place; not leave or go
- weird: Odd or unusual; surprising; strange
- stick: To push a sharp or pointed object into something
- recommend: To advise or suggest that someone do something
- practical: Relating to what is sensible, real or useful
- scene: Incident where someone behaves angrily, badly
- method: (Organized and planned) way of doing something
- cruise: To easily achieve
- pursuit: Act of following someone to catch them
- parallel: To be equal to, or like, something else
- hustle: To make someone move quickly by pushing them
- legit: As recognized by the law
- crime: Act that is believed to be a mistake or foolish
- promote: To try to encourage popularity/sales of a product
- bother: To cause problems, concerns or worry for someone
- lot: What happens to a person in life from chance; fate
- scar: Long lasting emotional pain from a bad experience
- pure: Not mixed with anything else
- decide: To make a choice or choose after thinking about it
- liver: Organ from animals served as food
- antarctica: An extremely cold continent at the south pole almost entirely below the Antarctic Circle; covered by an ice cap up to , feet deep
- pal: Friend
- great: Very good; better than before
- medical: Of or relating to physical health or medicine
- forensic: Establishing facts or evidence in investigations
- dummy: Being a cover for or serving as a front for
- cinema: A place for showing movies
- trust: To expect confidently
- hockey: Sport played on a field with sticks and a ball
- official: Real, exact, truely felt
- hold: To agree to keep something for someone
- officially: According to what is stated by an authority figure
- remove: To get rid of something completely
- feel: To be aware of or experience an emotion, sensation
- work: The product of some artistic or literary endeavor
- specialist: Person who works in one specific area or field
- examiner: Someone who gives a test
- autopsy: Examination of dead body to find cause of death
- geography: Study of the earth and its natural features
- people: Persons sharing culture, country, background, etc.
- warm: To become more friendly or to like something
- show: To be easily seen or displayed
- good: Proper, appropriate or right
- call: A order or request for action
- mole: Small animal with dark fur that lives under ground
- ask: To say to someone that you want something
- jack: To increase the amount or intensity of something
- talk: Style of speaking
- karaoke: Singing popular songs to a prerecorded soundtrack
- ray: Person's name
- midnight: 12 o'clock at night; the middle of the night
- heartbreak: Great sorrow caused by e.g. death of loved one
- margarita: Cocktail made of tequila, triple sec and lime
- bobby: Police officer (UK slang)
- bourgeois: Of or typical of the middle class; stuffy; pompous
- bullock: Bull that has been castrated
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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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80
Nicole Kidman Confirms Practical Magic 2 Will Have Midnight Margaritas, Quotes Her Viral AMC Ad
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Richard VT posted on 2026/03/04Get ready for some fun with Nicole Kidman as she spills the tea on "Practical Magic 2" and her viral AMC ad! You'll pick up on everyday conversational phrases and simple sentence structures while hearing about Midnight Margaritas and maybe even a cruise anecdote!
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