Vocabulary
- bad habits: Negative or harmful routines or behaviors that are difficult to stop.
- at the ready: Fully prepared and available for immediate use.
- of course: Sure ; Certainly
- have to: Must do
- come after: To follow someone in order to threaten them
- turn on
- at least: As a minimum
- out there: In or to a place that is far away
- speak to: To address or communicate with someone.
- in mind: Being aware of or considering something.
- subscribe: To regularly pay to receive a service
- pronunciation: How a word is said; how a word sounds
- process: To organize and use data in a computer
- obsession: Irrational motive for performing certain actions
- recommend: To advise or suggest that someone do something
- practice: The office and place for legal or medical work
- description: Explanation of what something is like, looks like
- improve: To make, or become, something better
- native: Someone from or born in a specific country
- vocabulary: Words that have to do with a particular subject
- concept: Abstract idea of something or how it works
- experience: Thing a person has done or that happened to them
- associate: Partner in professional work, e.g. in law
- conversation: Talking with other people; discussion or chat
- priority: Thing that is more important/urgent than others
- fear: Unpleasant feeling caused by being aware of danger
- combination: Series of letters or numbers needed to open a lock
- fluent: Doing something well and with ease
- temptation: Something making you want to do/have bad thing
- reality: What is true, as opposed to what is imagined
- prevent: To stop something from happening or existing
- reflect: To indicate or be a sign of something
- guilty: Responsible for doing something wrong
- overcome: To succeed in a struggle against; defeat
- passive: Allowing things to happen with quiet acceptance
- strive: To work hard/make effort to achieve something
- resist: To not be affected by e.g. a force or an effect
- neglect: Act of failing to do something important, required
- grammar: Book describing the syntactic rules of a language
- extra: More than necessary; additional
- apply: To spread a substance or liquid over a surface
- accept: To agree to receive or take something offered
- click: To work well with someone or something
- fall: Season after summer and before winter; Autumn
- layer: One of several sheets of a material or object
- regularly: At the usual time each day, week, or month
- moment: Very short or brief period of time
- lot: What happens to a person in life from chance; fate
- channel: Long hole dug in the ground, e.g. to move water
- important: Having power or authority
- learn: To get knowledge or skills by study or experience
- complexity: State of having many parts and not being simple
- audio: Concerning sound
- language: Words or signs used to communicate messages
- active: Moving around a lot or doing many things
- founder: Person establishing an organization, school etc.
- head: To hit a ball with your head in a game
- turn: To become (a particular age)
- dub: To add a new soundtrack to an audio recording
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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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6 Habits Destroying Your English (Fix These NOW)
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Susan posted on 2026/05/11Are you stuck in a language rut? This video reveals six common habits that are secretly destroying your English fluency, from mental translation to the fear of making mistakes! You'll get practical tips to break free and start thinking in English like a native speaker.
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