Vocabulary
- interact with
- set up
- search for: To try to find someone or something.
- for example: As an illustration or instance.
- in fact: Used to emphasize the truth of a statement, especially one that contrasts with or contradicts something else.
- spend more time: To dedicate a greater amount of time to a particular activity or person.
- look at: To use your eyes to focus on something
- day: A period of 24 hours beginning at midnight
- learning: To get knowledge or skills by study or experience
- email: A message like a letter sent by computer or phone
- month: One of 12 28-31 day periods in the year
- website: Collection of webpages in one location
- people: Persons sharing culture, country, background, etc.
- write: To compose letters and words on paper or a screen
- cooking: To heat food until it is ready to eat
- address: Exact street location of a place
- learn: To get knowledge or skills by study or experience
- help: To act to enable a person to do something; assist
- excited: To make something or someone become more active
- teach: To help someone learn or do something
- person: Man, woman or child
- good: Proper, appropriate or right
- improve: To make, or become, something better
- sign: Indication that something exists or will happen
- visitor: Someone who goes to a place to see it (or someone)
- join: To bring something close to another, to become one
- project: To predict what will happen in the future
- plan: Drawing of how something should be done or made
- post: To send a letter or package using stamps
- video: Recording capturing action with sound
- lose: To be unable to keep in check or control something
- member: Part of the body of a human, animal
- click: To work well with someone or something
- online: Connected to the internet
- goal: Something you try to do or achieve; an aim
- spend: To use money to pay for something
- grow: To get bigger and more mature; make plants do this
- challenge: An activity you wish to try that may be hard to do
- success: Achievement of a desired purpose or goal
- blog: To read, write, or edit a shared on-line journal
- encourages: To increase the chance of something happening
- weight: How heavy something is
- develop: To explain something in steps and in detail
- encourage: To increase the chance of something happening
- valuable: Being useful or important
- helpful: Doing things that help someone
- require: To demand that someone does something
- search: To examine a person's clothing to find something
- successful: Having the desired effect or result
- event: Any social gathering; occasion; planned activity
- social: Involving activity with people, e.g. in free time
- continue: To do something without stopping, or after pausing
- participate: To take part with others in doing something
- community: Group of people who share a common idea or area
- eagerly: With eagerness; in an eager manner
- encouragement: Act of increasing the chance of a thing happening
- host: Mass; a great number
- commit: To do something bad, usually a crime
- interacting: To talk or do things with each other
- committed: To do something bad, usually a crime
- fluent: Doing something well and with ease
- commitment: Permanent love or concern for person, thing
- graduate: Concerning a Masters or Ph.D. university courses
- interact: To talk or do things with each other
- dissertation: An in-depth paper submitted for a higher degree
- teamwork: Cooperative work done by a team
- hash: A mixture of meat, potatoes, and vegetables cut into small pieces and baked or fried
- accountability: Responsibility to someone or for some activity
- tag: Child's game in which one person chases the others
- fluency: Ability to do something well and with ease
- subscribe: To regularly pay to receive a service
- motivated: To give someone a reason, the will to do something
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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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How a One-Month Challenge Can Improve Your English
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阿多賓 posted on 2013/11/21Ever wondered if you can really boost your English in just 30 days? This video reveals how a focused challenge, packed with community support and accountability, can transform your learning habits and skyrocket your fluency! You'll discover practical strategies to make every day count towards your English goals.
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