Vocabulary
- see through: To realize the truth about
- look for: To try to find a thing or person that is lost
- wait for: To wait until someone comes, or something happens
- bounce back: To return quickly to a normal condition after a difficult situation or illness.
- figure out: To understand the behavior of someone
- based on: To use something as the foundation or starting point for something else.
- work on: To devote effort to improve or develop something
- clue in: Inform someone about something they do not know.
- rather than: More exactly; more correctly
- at last: Finally; after a long delay.
- spell out: To explain something in a very clear and detailed way.
- in action: Actively doing something; performing a task or duty.
- work in: To make an opening for something in your schedule
- check out
- tip: To pour or move something from a place, container
- lead: Wire for electricity, computer, etc.; cable
- structure: The way in which the parts of a system or object are arranged or organized, or a system arranged in this way
- work: The product of some artistic or literary endeavor
- develop: To explain something in steps and in detail
- ancient: Very old; having lived a very long time ago
- reveal: To show something that was hidden before
- controversial: Causing a great deal of argument, or conflict
- tiny: Very, very small
- interact: To talk or do things with each other
- surface: To give (road) a top layer
- layer: One of several sheets of a material or object
- light: To cause something to burn; put a burning match to
- snap: To close your mouth quickly like biting something
- insight: Power to understand people and things very well
- study: To focus on learning something usually at school
- glimpse: To see or notice something very briefly
- discover: To find something new that was not known before
- bounce: A person's energy or confidence
- crystal: A solid formed by the solidification of a chemical
- philosopher: Person studying the meaning of truth and life
- atom: Smallest bit that matter can be broken down into
- flash: To appear suddenly and briefly
- chemistry: The study of the structure of substances
- tunnel: Passage under the ground, often for cars or trains
- visible: Can see, easily seen or understood
- early: Coming/happening before others in a time sequence
- retina: Part of the eye that senses light
- stationary: Being still or unmoving
- camera: Object that takes pictures digitally, or on film
- ray: Person's name
- photograph: To take a picture with a camera
- apple: Hard round red or green fruit with a white center
- dentist: Person whose job is to take care of people's teeth
- periodic: Happening regularly, but not frequently
- detector: Device that receives a signal and responds to it
- wavelength: To have similar feelings
- laser: Strong narrow beam of high-powered light
- ozone: Gas protecting the earth from the sun
- crafty: Being cunning to get others to do what you want
- depletion: Reducing the amount, strength or number of
- dna: Chemical in living cells with genetic information
- franklin: A landowner (th and th centuries) who was free but not of noble birth
- awesomeness: Degree to which a thing makes you feel admiration
- replay: To play a game again, as on a video
- wrongly: In error; unfairly; unjustly
- helix: Three-dimensional shape of a cone-like object
- diffraction: Bending light, etc. around something/through a hole
- crick: Painful muscle spasm especially in the neck or back ('rick' and 'wrick' are British)
- xenon: A colorless odorless inert gaseous element occurring in the earth's atmosphere in trace amounts
- microsecond: One millionth (10^-6) of a second
- h2
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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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Nina posted on 2016/09/09Ever wondered if you can actually *see* an atom? This video dives into the incredible science behind atomic structure and how techniques like X-ray crystallography let us visualize the smallest building blocks of matter! You'll pick up some advanced vocabulary and fascinating science history along the way.
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