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Advanced English Vocabulary made EASY

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Advanced English Vocabulary made EASY

Speak English With Vanessa
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Vanessa: Are you ready to level up your English vocabulary?  

Legendas (188)

0:00Vanessa: Are you ready to level up your English vocabulary?  
0:03I mean, really level up your vocabulary? Well,  you're in the right place. Today, you are going  
0:09to learn 25 advanced English expressions that are  used in daily life conversation. Hi, I'm Vanessa  
0:19from SpeakEnglishWithVanessa.com and like always  I have created a free PDF worksheet with all 25 of  
0:27these important phrases, definitions, and sample  sentences. Plus, at the bottom of the worksheet is  
0:35a quiz. Test yourself and see if you have really  learned these 25 advanced phrases. You can click  
0:42on the link in the description to download this  free PDF worksheet today. It is my gift to you.  
0:48If you've been learning English with me here  on this channel for a while, you know that I  
0:53teach you real-life vocabulary, words and  phrases that we really use in daily life.  
1:00But sometimes it's fun to level up your daily  life vocabulary and make those phrases advanced.
1:07So I specifically chose expressions today  that are advanced. This means at the C1 level,  
1:16but also are absolutely used in daily  life. So don't be afraid to use these  
1:21in your natural conversations. You don't  need to save these only for the workplace  
1:27or an academic situation. You can use these in  daily life. All right, let's get started. To  
1:33accumulate. Look at this sentence and I want you  to kind of guess what you think it means. Wow,  
1:40a lot of snow accumulated overnight. What do you  think that means? It means to grow or increase.  
1:48As I teach you all 25 of these phrases, I'm  going to be giving you the sample sentence  
1:53first because I want you to use all of the ideas  and knowledge already in your mind about English  
2:00to guess the definition. If I just give you  the definition, it's okay, but I would like  
2:06you to try to guess the definition first. Take the  sample sentence and use it to your best knowledge.
2:12Let's go on to the second one. Phrase number  two is adjustment. Could you help me with my  
2:18bike? I think it needs an adjustment. It's  making a strange noise. This is the exact  
2:24question that I asked my neighbor who is a  bike expert, and he helped me and the noise  
2:28stopped. So what is an adjustment? It's simply  a change. Something needs to change so that it  
2:36stops making that noise. Phrase number three  is availability. Notice that the T at the end  
2:43of this word is pronounced like a D in American  English. Availability. This is commonly used in  
2:51my daily life. Let me check my availability  before I commit. Check my availability.
2:59This simply means, am I free? Do I have any  time that I can commit to this activity? Let  
3:05me check my availability. Advanced phrase  number four is benchmark. I love this one.  
3:12Take a look at this sample sentence. I don't  always eat five different vegetables every day,  
3:17but it's a good benchmark number. Here, the  word benchmark is a standard. It's recommended  
3:25to eat at least five different vegetables each  day. Do I do this every day successfully? No,  
3:32but it's a good benchmark. I think about  this occasionally. Oh, maybe I could try a  
3:37different vegetable today in order to reach that  benchmark. Advanced phrase number five is bind,  
3:44but I would like to expand that to use  a full phrase to put someone in a bind.
3:50Take a look at this strict project deadline  has really put me in a bind. I don't know if  
3:58I'm going to be able to meet it. Do you think  that the project deadline is a good deadline?  
4:06No. It has put me in a bind. This means it has  wrapped me tightly, but in a figurative way.  
4:13So it has put me in a difficult situation.  I don't know if I'm going to be able to do  
4:18a good job and also make the deadline. This  deadline has put me in a bind. I have to do  
4:25less quality work in order to meet the deadline.  Advanced phrase number six is a breakthrough.
4:34Take a look at this sentence. This job might  be the breakthrough that I was hoping for. Do  
4:41you get the idea here that I'm in a bind and then  I'm hoping that this job will be the breakthrough?  
4:49This job will be exactly what I was hoping for  to help me advance in my career. Oftentimes,  
4:56we use this when there is a discovery. So we might  say the vaccine for polio was a great breakthrough  
5:04in medicine. It helped to solve a big problem  with just this medication. Advanced phrase number  
5:12seven is capability. To wear a cape? No. Take a  look at this. Even though my daughter is young,  
5:20she has the capability of feeding herself  with a spoon. Sometimes it is quite messy,  
5:26but she does have this capability. And what does  capability mean? Well, it means ability. It is  
5:33another advanced and fun way to say ability.  My daughter has the ability to feed herself  
5:39or the capability to feed herself. Just grow  your vocabulary step by step with this word.
5:46Advanced phrase number eight is circulate.  This is a good one for eight. Circulate.  
5:53What if I said to you, the news circulated  through our neighborhood like lightning?  
6:00We get the idea that all the neighbors are  talking so quickly that the news is making its  
6:09way through the neighborhood, and that's the  idea with this word. Circulate means just to  
6:14freely pass around. So if your neighbors like  to talk, well I imagine news, or at least the  
6:21idea of news circulates quite quickly through  your neighborhood. Advanced phrase number nine  
6:27is to collaborate. I collaborated with over 17  amazing YouTube English teachers to make this  
6:35lesson for you. It's true. To collaborate means  to work together. Sometimes collaboration is a  
6:43beautiful thing, such as this wonderful lesson  and sometimes collaborating can be really tough.
6:48Maybe your interests or your values are not  aligned, but usually collaboration provides  
6:55a better solution in the end. Make sure you  check out that lesson to learn what all these  
7:0117 teachers had to say about how to speak  better English. It's an awesome video with  
7:07awesome teachers. Advanced phrase number 10 is  to coordinate. Notice the pronunciation of this  
7:13word. To coordinate. Coordinate. There are two  Os and they are slightly pronounced differently.  
7:22To coordinate. Coor. Coor. Coordinate. So  I often say this phrase, "Man, it is hard  
7:29to coordinate schedules with some of my friends  who have kids. Your kid's doing this at this time,  
7:36my kid's doing this at this time. Oh, then one kid  is sick. Oh, then another kid is sick. It is hard  
7:40to coordinate our schedules." And coordinate  means to align something, usually a schedule.  
7:47We are coordinating a time to be able to see  each other, and sometimes that's not so easy.
7:52Advanced phrase number 11 is to dedicate. Recently  my city Asheville was hit by a terrible hurricane,  
8:00Hurricane Helene, and we can use this expression  to talk about what happened. Thousands of  
8:07volunteers dedicated their time to help people in  need. It's true. There were thousands of people  
8:15in the city around the country, even from Canada.  In fact, there were Canadian workers who helped  
8:22to fix my electricity. There were people from  everywhere who dedicated their time to help those  
8:29in need. This is an important thing to see when  you're going through a hard time. Look for all  
8:34the good that's being done. And dedicate here just  means to give all your time and all your energy.  
8:40So thank you to everyone who dedicates their  time and energy helping other people in need.
8:46Advanced phrase number 12 is to delegate. This is  one of my favorite things to do. I try to delegate  
8:54certain chores to my kids. This means that I don't  do all the chores. I don't do every single dish,  
9:01all the laundry, all the cleaning up,  all the organizing. No. I do a lot,  
9:05but I try to delegate those chores to my  children. What's this mean? It means to  
9:12give tasks to other people. So my kids help to  clean up at the end of the day. They put their  
9:18dishes in the sink. Sometimes they help to fold  laundry or they help to clean the dishes. I am  
9:24trying to teach them those skills, but it's also  helpful for me to delegate those tasks. Advanced  
9:31phrase number 13 sounds similar to delegate,  but it's not. It is designate. Designate.
9:40Look at this sentence. I designated a certain  amount of money for charity. I think it's a  
9:47beautiful thing when you can use money for  what you need, you can use money to save,  
9:52and you can use money to give. So I designated  this amount of money to give to a charity. Can  
10:00you guess what that means? It just means that  I chose to set aside this amount of money for  
10:07a specific purpose. I designated, I chose  for that amount of money to go to a charity.  
10:14Advanced phrase number 14 is efficient. I try  to be extremely efficient when I work, but do  
10:20you know what is not efficient? Public transport  in the US is not efficient. If you visit the US,  
10:29you usually need to rent a car. It's just the way  things are. So what's this word mean? Efficient  
10:36means it works quickly, effectively. Well, I try  to work quickly and effectively and efficiently,  
10:43but public transportation in the US,  not quick, not efficient, not the best.
10:50Advanced phrase number 15 is eligible. Eligible.  If you get a new job, the boss or the person  
11:00giving you the details of the job might  tell you, "After you've worked for this  
11:05company for one year, you become eligible for some  benefits." Or, "after you've signed this paper,  
11:14you become eligible for certain benefits." What  does eligible mean? It means you have the right to  
11:21get those benefits. You cannot have those benefits  taken away from you if you sign that paper. Well,  
11:28you have the right to get those benefits.  You are eligible to get them. Advanced phrase  
11:33number 16 is endeavor. Endeavor. Take a look  at this sentence. Wow, what a huge endeavor.  
11:42You are trying to climb that mountain in one  day. Usually it takes three days. What a huge  
11:49endeavor. Usually we use the word endeavor  with the word huge. It's just a phrase that  
11:55goes together. You could say it's a big endeavor,  but huge is extremely commonly used with endeavor.
12:01And it just means a challenging task or project.  What a huge endeavor to try to climb that mountain  
12:07in just one day. Good luck. Advanced phrase  number 17 is frustration. Frustration. We  
12:16often use this with a full phrase, I could sense  his frustration. I can sense your frustration.  
12:26If I said to my child, "Wow, I can really  sense your frustration with those stickers."  
12:33My four-year-old son tries to take stickers  off of a sticker book and sometimes it's hard  
12:39for little fingers to get stickers off. So he  goes, "Oh, I can't get it. What am I doing?  
12:45Mommy." He gets frustrated about it. So I could  use this phrase, "Wow, I can really sense your  
12:51frustration with those stickers. It's something  that makes you annoyed or angry or frustrated."  
13:00Advanced phrase number 18 is functional.  Functional. These shoes are really pretty,  
13:07but they aren't functional  for walking long distances.
13:12Really nowadays, as a mom, all my shoes are  functional. I don't have any fancy shoes  
13:18because I just need functional shoes nowadays.  What's functional mean? Well, it means that  
13:25something works easily or smoothly. You get  the sense that functional shoes are sneakers,  
13:33tennis shoes, flat shoes, not high heels, nothing  uncomfortable. Functional shoes. Advanced phrase  
13:41number 19 is glimpse. We often use the full  phrase to catch a glimpse. If you're walking  
13:51past a mirror and you don't realize that there's  a mirror there, you might be walking and, "Oh,  
13:56I caught a glimpse of myself in the mirror and  it surprised me." This can be a surprising thing,  
14:03right? So you get the idea that a glimpse  means to look, but it's a quick look. So to  
14:09catch a glimpse, "Oh, it's just a quick look.  I caught a glimpse of myself in the mirror."
14:15Advanced phrase number 20 is generic. Generic.  This is usually not a positive phrase. Take a  
14:24look at this. The hotel room had a lot of generic  decorations. This means nothing personalized,  
14:33nothing unique. Generic just means simple, plain,  the same as everything else. Now the one time  
14:42when generic is a good thing is with medicine.  So if you go to a pharmacy in the US, you can  
14:49watch my video here where I show you an American  pharmacy, including some important vocabulary,  
14:54you will often see two different versions of  medicine. You'll see the brand name version and  
15:01what we call a generic version. Usually they have  the exact same ingredients, but one is just from  
15:08that store. It's not this fancy brand name, and  it's usually a lot cheaper than the brand name.  
15:15So for me, I often buy a generic medication  because it's cheaper and it's the same thing.
15:21Advanced phrase number 21 is one that I  unfortunately use often, it is harmony,  
15:27but I often use this by saying, "Can we just have  some peace and harmony in here for five minutes?"  
15:35When you have three kids, if it's a rainy day  and everyone is stuck inside, you can imagine  
15:42it gets loud, sometimes kids start to fight  with each other more often than if they were  
15:47outside. Harmony means peace, working together  so smoothly and easily. So I wish as a mom, can  
15:56we just have some peace and harmony in here for  five minutes. That would be the dream. Advanced  
16:03phrase number 22. We're almost at the end here. We  only have 25 today. Advanced phrase number 22 is  
16:10hierarchy. Notice the pronunciation here. Higher,  like higher and lower. Hierarchy. With a K sound.  
16:20Hierarchy. You might say "It takes a long time for  stuff to get done in the government because of the  
16:27complicated hierarchy. No one is allowed to make  a decision for themselves. Instead, they have to  
16:33ask their boss, who has to ask their boss, who has  to ask their boss, and their boss and their boss."
16:37And ugh, it takes forever to get things done  when there is a complicated hierarchy. And  
16:43what's a hierarchy? Well, it's just a system  of importance, usually with people. It could  
16:48be a hierarchy of animals, possibly a  hierarchy of events. But usually this  
16:53is with people where you have to ask a lot  of people in order to get anything done.  
16:59Advanced phrase number 23 is immense.  When we had Hurricane Helene hit my city,  
17:07the damage from the storm was immense. In fact,  a lot of rescue workers said that this was the  
17:15worst damage that they had ever seen in their  entire career. It's really difficult when you  
17:22have a natural disaster in the mountains. It's  hard to reach people. It's hard to help people.  
17:27The damage is immense. Can you guess what that  word means? It means huge, unimaginable. Immense.
17:36Now I used it in a negative way. The damage  was immense. But you can also use this in  
17:41a positive way. We might say that I love my  husband immensely. This means I have a huge  
17:49amount of love, and that's a positive thing,  right? So we could use this in a negative or  
17:54a positive way. Advanced phrase number 24.  This is our second to last advanced phrase.  
18:00It is interact. Interact. I want to let  you know that when we're speaking quickly,  
18:06we often cut out that first T and it sounds  like interact, interact, interact. That T is  
18:13just gone. It's on vacation somewhere, having a  good old time. It's not in this word. Interact.  
18:18So let me give you a sample sentence. My  kids loved interacting with the exhibits  
18:23in the museum. Interacting with the exhibits in  the museum. Did you hear how I cut out that T?
18:29My kids loved interacting with the exhibits  in the museum. And what's this mean? It means  
18:35that you're communicating or reacting  to something around you. A lot of times,  
18:40children's museums will have things  that you can touch or play with or move,  
18:44and you can learn different concepts or experience  different things by interacting with the different  
18:50exhibits in the museum. And drum roll, the  25th and final advanced English expression for  
18:58today is landmark. Landmark. When there was the  hurricane in my city, one of the biggest landmarks  
19:09in a little town, this beautiful red water wheel  got damaged. In fact, it got immensely damaged,  
19:18we could say. The water coming from the  stream became immense and it got damaged.  
19:26This landmark is something that people often  think of when they think of this little town.
19:33So we can use the word landmark to talk about  an object that kind of serves as a guide. When  
19:38we think of Paris, what's the landmark?  The Eiffel Tower. When you think of Egypt,  
19:45what do you think of? The pyramids. Those  are landmarks in those countries. Hopefully  
19:51they'll be able to repair this cute water wheel  that is the landmark of the little town. Well,  
19:57congratulations. You just learned 25 advanced  C1 level English expressions. Don't forget to  
20:06download the free PDF worksheet. There's a link  in the description. When you download that free  
20:11PDF worksheet, you will get each of these  advanced expressions, definitions, multiple  
20:17sample sentences, and you can answer the quiz  to see if you can really remember these phrases.
20:25Because it's great to watch this video,  but you need to remember them, right?  
20:29So if you want to remember them, I  highly recommend downloading the PDF,  
20:33reviewing the phrases, and taking the  quiz. Test yourself. You can click on  
20:38the link in the description to download  that free PDF worksheet today. Well,  
20:41thank you so much for learning English with me,  and I'll see you again next Friday for a new  
20:46lesson here on my YouTube channel. Bye.  But wait, do you want more? I recommend  
20:52watching this video next where you will learn  250 wonderful vocabulary phrases with pictures,  
21:00including why do I call my friends birds? Watch  that video to find out, and I'll see you there.