Vocabulary
- stand by: To keep to an agreement
- look at: To use your eyes to focus on something
- across the board: Broad in scope or content
- send off: To force someone to leave a game
- now or never: An opportunity that must be taken immediately, or it will be lost.
- spin off: A company that is formed from part of an existing company.
- up there: In or to a higher place or position; far away.
- search for: To try to find someone or something.
- hold out hope: To continue to hope that something will happen, even if it seems unlikely.
- along with: In addition to; together with.
- approach: To get close to reaching something or somewhere
- melancholy: Having a sad mood or feeling
- approximately: Around; nearly; almost; about (a number)
- track: To use marks to follow a wild animal
- impulse: Sudden desire to do something that is not planned
- crack: Attempt to achieve a goal or objective
- initial: First letter of your given name
- dramatic: Gripping the attention; causing an effect
- reach: To come to or arrive at a goal or destination
- tense: The use of grammar to state the time things happen
- sequence: Part of a movie showing one part of the story
- initiate: To cause something to begin
- orbit: Path an object takes as it circles another object
- nerd: Intelligent but single-minded expert in a field
- launch: Starting a new project; introducing new product
- board: Surface for posting or showing information
- spin: To make a ball rotate when throwing it
- crew: Organized group of workers (e.g. on a ship)
- visual: Of or relating to vision
- breach: To break laws or barriers (e.g. walls)
- satellite: Device sent into space that aids communication
- proceed: To continue to do something; carry on
- receive: To get something someone has given or sent to you
- energy: Physical or mental strength
- communication: Talking to people; giving information to people
- colony: Group (bees, etc.) that live in the same place
- buzz: Low pitched sound similar to the sound bees make
- alarm: Sound or light used for a warning or alert
- control: A device designed to operate a machine
- information: Collection of facts and details about something
- mellow: Being completely relaxed and calm
- voyage: Long journey to a distant or unknown place
- drive: A person's ambition and motivation to do something
- applaud: To clap the hands together to express support
- transmission: Part of car including gears affecting speed of car
- whine: To complain in an annoying crying voice
- fast: In a way that is difficult to move or change
- disappear: To no longer see because it's not there any more
- grade: To give a road the required angle of slope
- return: To hit something back to the other player or team
- ride: Machine at an amusement park for riding on for fun
- clear: Empty; without anything in it or on it
- travel: To go to a place that is far away
- diagnostic: Concerning finding out the cause of a problem
- light: To cause something to burn; put a burning match to
- groan: To make a deep sound from despair, pain etc.
- propulsion: Forward movement often under power
- commander: Person with authority who commands or controls
- lose: To be unable to keep in check or control something
- come: To arrive at a place
- rumble: Low, heavy continuous sound or series of sounds
- earth: Wire connecting an electrical device to the ground
- disappoint: To not meet the expectations of others or yourself
- spacecraft: Vehicle capable of traveling to outer space
- chatter: To talk a lot in a casual manner
- hum: To make a constant low sound
- beep: Short high sound such as that made by a car horn
- vector: Math a quantity that has both size and direction
- spaceship: Spacecraft designed to travel into space
- entangle: To involve in troubles that are hard to escape
- crackle: To make sharp repeated noises, like a fire burning
- standby: Ready for use in an emergency, etc.
- whoosh: Sound made when something moves quickly past you
- hoo: Dialect West Yorkshire and Lancashire she
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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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nelson posted on 2019/08/03Get ready for a suspenseful ride with the sci-fi short film "FTL"! You'll dive into a mysterious disappearance during a Mars mission and pick up some advanced vocabulary related to space travel and mission control. This is a fantastic way to boost your English while enjoying a thrilling movie scene!
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