Vocabulary
- zoom in on: To adjust a camera or lens to make a subject appear closer.
- in on: To be involved in a secret or plan.
- right out of the gate: Immediately at the beginning of an event or process.
- out of the gate: At the very beginning of an event or process.
- talking about: To discuss a particular topic.
- work together: To collaborate or cooperate with others to achieve a common goal.
- think about: To consider something carefully.
- figure out: To understand the behavior of someone
- instead of: When one thing is replaced by another
- answer to: To be responsible to someone and have to explain your actions to them.
- as one: Acting or moving together at the same time.
- to let: Indicates that a property is available for rent.
- of course: Sure ; Certainly
- put together: To build or assemble something small, e.g. a toy
- on earth: Used to emphasize a question expressing surprise or anger.
- night and day: Continuously; all the time.
- look at: To use your eyes to focus on something
- jump in: To enter a vehicle quickly.
- back out: To say you will now not do something you promised
- at scale: In large quantities; with significant reach or impact.
- right back: Said when someone says they will return soon, indicating you expect their prompt return.
- in the world: Used to emphasize a question expressing surprise, confusion, or disbelief.
- have to: Must do
- entire: Complete or full; with no part left out; whole
- incredibly: To a great degree; very; amazingly
- approach: To get close to reaching something or somewhere
- individual: Single person, looked at separately from others
- massive: Very big; large; too big
- process: To organize and use data in a computer
- inevitable: That must happen; certain to happen
- strategy: Careful plan or method for achieving a goal
- physical: Health check at the doctors' or hospital
- basically: Used before you explain something simply, clearly
- scale: Size, level, or amount when compared
- completely: In every way or as much as possible
- extreme: Very great in degree
- mess: Something that is untidy, dirty or unclean
- integrate: To combine together; make into one thing
- shift: To change in position or direction
- innovation: Process of creating new ideas or inventions
- dictate: To speak while someone writes down your words
- deal: To cope with something - usually troubles
- conclusion: End of something; finish
- leap: To enter or start something eagerly
- performance: Act of doing something
- drop: Distance between a higher and a lower level
- guess: To give an answer without knowing if it is correct
- leave: To go away from; depart
- platform: Flat, raised structure that people stand on
- totally: In a complete way; completely; absolutely
- secret: Kept hidden from others; Known only to a few people
- single: One run in cricket or a hit baseball
- integration: Act of bringing things together into a whole
- control: A device designed to operate a machine
- system: Set of organized, planned ideas that work together
- complexity: State of having many parts and not being simple
- explode: To express an emotion in a sudden and loud way
- build: Your physical shape; physique
- piece: A counter in a board game
- chip: To break a small piece off something such as a cup
- rack: A frame, stand, hook on which things are hung
- density: Degree to which an area is filled or covered
- pull: Act of breathing in smoke, as from a pipe
- question: To ask for or try to get information
- pack: Bag carried on the back of donkey, etc.
- bandwidth: Data transmission rate over the internet
- gritty: Showing strong determination
- upgrade: To improve something in terms of quality
- zoom: Camera lens used to magnify images
- silicon: Mineral used in making steel and computer parts
- lego: Child's plastic construction set
- supercomputer: Very powerful computer
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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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佛斯特 posted on 2026/06/05NVIDIA's new Rubin platform isn't just about faster chips; it's a complete reinvention of the supercomputer! You'll discover how they're tackling physical limits with "extreme co-design" and pick up fascinating terms like "rack-scale" and "blind mate connectors" as they explain this game-changing approach to AI infrastructure.
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