Lesson 57Lesson 57 Details
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Lesson 57Lesson 57 - Basculement de Masque

Émoji
Expression Signification Phrase d'Exemple
#1680
-
••••••
live it up
phrasal-verb
••••••
to enjoy life and have fun, especially after success
••••••

After winning the award, they went out to live it up.

••••••
#1681
-
••••••
live off
phrasal-verb
••••••
to depend on a particular kind of food for living
••••••

During college, I mostly lived off instant noodles.

••••••
#1682
-
••••••
live on
phrasal-verb
••••••
to eat mainly a particular type of food
••••••

He lives on fast food, which is not healthy.

••••••
#1683
-
••••••
live through
phrasal-verb
••••••
to experience or survive an important period of history
••••••

Our grandparents lived through times of great cultural change.

••••••
#1684
-
••••••
live up to
phrasal-verb
••••••
to meet expectations or standards
••••••

He worked hard to live up to his parents’ expectations.

••••••
#1685
-
••••••
live up to promises
phrasal-verb
••••••
to act according to what one has promised or expected
••••••

Great leaders always live up to their promises.

••••••
#1686
-
••••••
live with
phrasal-verb
••••••
to accept and endure something unpleasant or regrettable
••••••

He’ll have to live with his decision for the rest of his life.

••••••
#1687
-
••••••
live within
phrasal-verb
••••••
to spend only as much money as you earn
••••••

It's important to live within your means.

••••••
#1688
-
••••••
live within your means
phrasal-verb
••••••
to spend less money than you earn
••••••

It's important to live within your means to avoid debt.

••••••
#1689
-
••••••
load up on
phrasal-verb
••••••
to eat a lot of something, usually before an activity or event
••••••

Athletes load up on carbs before a big game.

••••••
#1690
-
••••••
come to terms
phrasal-verb
••••••
to reach an agreement after discussion or struggle
••••••

Both companies finally came to terms on the partnership deal.

••••••
#1691
-
••••••
come to terms with
phrasal-verb
••••••
to accept and agree on conditions after negotiation
••••••

After long discussions, both sides came to terms with a fair agreement.

••••••
#1692
-
••••••
come together
phrasal-verb
••••••
to gather as a family for a purpose or celebration
••••••

Our family comes together every year for the new year feast.

••••••
#1693
-
••••••
come together for
phrasal-verb
••••••
to unite for a common purpose; to join efforts toward a shared goal
••••••

Communities from all over the world come together for humanitarian causes.

••••••
#1694
-
••••••
come together on
phrasal-verb
••••••
to unite in agreement on a common issue
••••••

World leaders came together on climate change goals.

••••••
#1695
-
••••••
come under
phrasal-verb
••••••
to experience pressure or attack, especially politically
••••••

The government came under pressure to increase public spending.

••••••
#1696
-
••••••
come up
phrasal-verb
••••••
to be mentioned or occur unexpectedly
••••••

Your name came up during the meeting.

••••••
#1697
-
••••••
come up against
phrasal-verb
••••••
to face a problem or difficulty
••••••

We came up against several obstacles during the project.

••••••
#1698
-
••••••
come up empty
phrasal-verb
••••••
to fail to achieve or find something
••••••

We searched everywhere but came up empty.

••••••
#1699
-
••••••
come up for
phrasal-verb
••••••
to be scheduled for discussion or decision; to be considered
••••••

The new proposal will come up for review next week.

••••••
#1700
-
••••••
bloom into
phrasal-verb
••••••
to develop into something beautiful or full of life
••••••

She bloomed into a confident young woman.

••••••
#1701
-
••••••
blow apart emotionally
phrasal-verb
••••••
to lose control because of overwhelming emotion
••••••

After the breakup, she blew apart emotionally for weeks.

••••••
#1702
-
••••••
blow away
phrasal-verb
••••••
when the wind moves something through the air
••••••

The strong wind blew away the leaves and dust from the street.

••••••
#1703
-
••••••
blow in
phrasal-verb
••••••
to arrive unexpectedly, usually with wind
••••••

A cold wind suddenly blew in from the north.

••••••
#1704
-
••••••
blow it
phrasal-verb
••••••
to fail at something important; to lose an opportunity
••••••

I really blew it in the interview by arriving late.

••••••
#1705
-
••••••
blow off
phrasal-verb
••••••
to release stress or anger by doing something
••••••

He went jogging to blow off some steam after the argument.

••••••
#1706
-
••••••
blow off steam
phrasal-verb
••••••
to release anger or stress by doing something active
••••••

He went jogging to blow off steam after the heated meeting.

••••••
#1707
-
••••••
blow off work
phrasal-verb
••••••
to skip work or avoid responsibilities, often to reduce stress
••••••

He decided to blow off work and spend the day at the beach.

••••••
#1708
-
••••••
blow out
phrasal-verb
••••••
to extinguish flames, especially candles
••••••

She blew out the candles and made a wish on her birthday.

••••••
#1709
-
••••••
blow over
phrasal-verb
••••••
to become less serious and eventually end without major harm
••••••

Most small arguments blow over with time.

••••••