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Past
Past Participle
Third Person Singular
Gerund
Meaning
Example Sentence
Example Sentence Translation
Synonyms
Antonyms
Collocations
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Word
Lesson 3 - Mask Toggle
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Emoji
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Word | Images | Past | Past Participle | Third Person Singular | Gerund | Meaning | Example Sentence | Example Expression | Example Expression Meaning | Synonyms | Antonyms | Collocations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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#101
✊
|
/ˈæktɪvɪst/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
A person who works to bring about social or political change.
••••••
|
The activist organized a protest against pollution. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
campaigner, advocate, reformer, protester
••••••
|
opponent, bystander
••••••
|
political activist, social activist, human rights activist, student activist
••••••
|
|
#102
🏃
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/ækˈtɪvɪti/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
something that people do for enjoyment, work, or a particular purpose
••••••
|
The children were engaged in outdoor activity. |
burst of activity |
a sudden period of intense action or effort
••••••
|
action, task, pursuit, exercise, operation
••••••
|
inactivity, rest, idleness
••••••
|
outdoor activity, group activity, economic activity, physical activity
••••••
|
|
#103
✅
|
/ˈæktʃuəl/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
real and existing, not just imagined or supposed
••••••
|
The actual cost was higher than expected. |
in actual fact |
used to emphasize that something is really true
••••••
|
real, genuine, factual, true, authentic
••••••
|
fake, false, imaginary
••••••
|
actual cost, actual reason, actual situation, actual fact
••••••
|
|
#104
🔎
|
/ˈæktʃuəli/
adverb
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
used to emphasize that something is true, especially when surprising
••••••
|
She actually completed the project ahead of schedule. |
actually speaking |
used to emphasize the truth when expressing an opinion
••••••
|
really, indeed, truly, genuinely
••••••
|
supposedly, allegedly
••••••
|
actually true, actually happen, actually mean, actually exist
••••••
|
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#105
📐
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/əˈkjuːt/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
present or experienced to a severe or intense degree; having sharp perception
••••••
|
The patient suffered from acute pain after the surgery. |
acute angle |
an angle less than 90 degrees
••••••
|
severe, sharp, intense, critical, keen
••••••
|
chronic, mild, dull
••••••
|
acute pain, acute illness, acute awareness
••••••
|
|
#106
⚡
|
/əˈkjuːtli/
adverb
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
in a sharp, intense, or severe way; with keen awareness
••••••
|
She was acutely aware of the risks involved. |
acutely aware |
having a very strong or sharp awareness of something
••••••
|
sharply, intensely, keenly, severely, profoundly
••••••
|
dully, mildly, weakly
••••••
|
acutely aware, acutely painful, acutely conscious, acutely sensitive
••••••
|
|
#107
🧠
|
/əˈkjuːtnəs/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
sharpness of mind or senses; severity or intensity of a condition
••••••
|
Her acuteness allowed her to notice details others missed. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
sharpness, keenness, perceptiveness, intensity, severity
••••••
|
dullness, bluntness, mildness
••••••
|
mental acuteness, visual acuteness, sensory acuteness, intellectual acuteness
••••••
|
|
#108
🔄
|
/əˈdæpt/
verb
••••••
|
- •••••• |
adapted
••••••
|
adapted
••••••
|
adapts
••••••
|
adapting
••••••
|
to adjust or change something to suit new conditions or situations
••••••
|
He quickly adapted to the new environment. |
adapt to change |
to adjust oneself according to new circumstances
••••••
|
adjust, modify, alter, accommodate
••••••
|
resist, reject
••••••
|
adapt to, adapt for, adapt quickly, adapt easily
••••••
|
|
#109
🔄
|
/ˌædæpˈteɪʃən/
noun
••••••
|
•••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the process of changing or adjusting to fit a new situation
••••••
|
The adaptation of the program to mobile devices was a success. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
adjustment, modification, alteration, change
••••••
|
stagnation, resistance, inflexibility
••••••
|
adaptation to change, adaptation process, cultural adaptation
••••••
|
|
#110
➕
|
/æd/
verb
••••••
|
•••••• |
added
••••••
|
added
••••••
|
adds
••••••
|
adding
••••••
|
To put together or combine with something else; to increase the number, amount, or value.
••••••
|
He decided to add more details to the report. |
add fuel to the fire |
To make a bad situation worse.
••••••
|
increase, attach, include, combine, augment
••••••
|
subtract, remove, deduct
••••••
|
add value, add details, add numbers, add weight
••••••
|
|
#111
⚠️
|
/ˈædɪkt/ (noun), /əˈdɪkt/ (verb)
noun, verb
••••••
|
- •••••• |
addicted
••••••
|
addicted
••••••
|
addicts
••••••
|
addicting
••••••
|
a person who is unable to stop using a harmful substance or doing something harmful; to cause someone to become dependent on something
••••••
|
He is a video game addict who spends hours playing every day. |
addicted to |
being unable to stop doing or using something
••••••
|
user, abuser, dependent, fanatic
••••••
|
nonuser, free, independent
••••••
|
drug addict, video game addict, addicted to, hopeless addict
••••••
|
|
#112
⚠️
|
/əˈdɪkʃən/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
A strong and harmful need to regularly have or do something, such as drugs, alcohol, or habits.
••••••
|
His addiction to video games affected his studies. |
fight an addiction |
to struggle against a harmful habit
••••••
|
dependence, craving, obsession, compulsion, habit
••••••
|
freedom, independence, control
••••••
|
drug addiction, gambling addiction, addiction recovery, overcome addiction
••••••
|
|
#113
➕
|
/əˈdɪʃən/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the process of adding something to something else
••••••
|
The addition of solar panels made the house more energy-efficient. |
in addition |
used to introduce an extra piece of information
••••••
|
inclusion, increase, supplement, augmentation
••••••
|
removal, subtraction, elimination
••••••
|
addition to, make an addition, new addition, addition of features
••••••
|
|
#114
➕
|
/əˈdɪʃənəl/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
added, extra, or supplementary to what already exists
••••••
|
The teacher gave the students additional homework. |
additional cost |
extra expense beyond the basic cost
••••••
|
extra, further, supplementary, added
••••••
|
basic, minimal, primary
••••••
|
additional information, additional charge, additional support, additional effort
••••••
|
|
#115
➕
|
/əˈdɪʃənəli/
adverb
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
in addition to what has been said or done
••••••
|
Additionally, we offer discounts for early bookings. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
furthermore, moreover, also, as well
••••••
|
however, nevertheless
••••••
|
additionally, additionally offer, additionally provide
••••••
|
|
#116
📢
|
/əˈdrɛs/
verb
••••••
|
•••••• |
addressed
••••••
|
addressed
••••••
|
addresses
••••••
|
addressing
••••••
|
To speak to someone directly or to deal with an issue.
••••••
|
The manager will address the employees about the new policy. |
address the issue |
to deal with or solve a problem
••••••
|
talk to, speak to, deal with, handle
••••••
|
ignore, neglect, avoid
••••••
|
address the problem, address a crowd, address concerns, address formally
••••••
|
|
#117
📑
|
/əˈdjuːs/
verb
••••••
|
- •••••• |
adduced
••••••
|
adduced
••••••
|
adduces
••••••
|
adducing
••••••
|
To provide evidence or reasons to support an argument or idea.
••••••
|
The lawyer adduced several examples to support his case. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
cite, present, offer, advance, produce
••••••
|
conceal, withhold, suppress
••••••
|
adduce evidence, adduce reasons, adduce examples
••••••
|
|
#118
✔️
|
/ˈædɪkwət/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
sufficient or acceptable in quality or quantity
••••••
|
The food was adequate for the small group. |
adequate to the task |
sufficiently capable of completing a responsibility
••••••
|
sufficient, enough, satisfactory, suitable, ample
••••••
|
inadequate, insufficient, lacking
••••••
|
adequate supply, adequate amount, adequate support, adequate protection
••••••
|
|
#119
✔️
|
/ˈædɪkwətli/
adverb
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
in a satisfactory manner
••••••
|
He completed the task adequately, but could improve next time. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
sufficiently, properly, acceptably
••••••
|
inadequately, insufficiently
••••••
|
adequately prepared, adequately equipped, adequately addressed
••••••
|
|
#120
🧷
|
/ədˈhɪər/
verb
••••••
|
•••••• |
adhered
••••••
|
adhered
••••••
|
adheres
••••••
|
adhering
••••••
|
to stick firmly to something or follow a belief or rule
••••••
|
The label will not adhere to the wet surface. |
adhere to rules |
to strictly follow rules or principles
••••••
|
stick, cling, attach, comply, follow
••••••
|
detach, separate, ignore
••••••
|
adhere to principles, adhere strictly, adhere closely, adhere firmly
••••••
|
|
#121
📜
|
/ədˈhɪərəns/
noun
••••••
|
•••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the act of sticking to or faithfully following something
••••••
|
Her strict adherence to the law impressed everyone. |
adherence to tradition |
faithfully following traditional practices
••••••
|
compliance, obedience, loyalty, attachment, devotion
••••••
|
noncompliance, disobedience, defiance
••••••
|
adherence to policy, strict adherence, close adherence, adherence standards
••••••
|
|
#122
🏠🏠
|
/əˈdʒeɪsənt/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
পার্শ্ববর্তী; সংলগ্ন; নিকটবর্তী;
••••••
|
The hotel is adjacent to the shopping mall. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
neighboring, adjoining, bordering, next to
••••••
|
distant, remote, separate, far
••••••
|
adjacent rooms, adjacent buildings, adjacent areas
••••••
|
|
#123
📝
|
/ˈædʒɪktɪv/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
a word that describes or modifies a noun by giving more information about its quality, quantity, or state
••••••
|
The adjective in the sentence adds more detail to the noun. |
descriptive adjective |
an adjective that vividly describes a noun
••••••
|
descriptor, modifier, qualifier, describing word
••••••
|
noun, verb
••••••
|
descriptive adjective, comparative adjective, adjective clause, adjective phrase
••••••
|
|
#124
🏡
|
/əˈdʒɔɪn/
verb
••••••
|
- •••••• |
adjoined
••••••
|
adjoined
••••••
|
adjoins
••••••
|
adjoining
••••••
|
To be next to and joined with something.
••••••
|
Their house adjoins the park. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
border, connect, neighbor, join, touch
••••••
|
separate, detach, divide
••••••
|
adjoin property, adjoin land, houses adjoin
••••••
|
|
#125
⏸️
|
/əˈdʒɜrn/
verb
••••••
|
- •••••• |
adjourned
••••••
|
adjourned
••••••
|
adjourns
••••••
|
adjourning
••••••
|
to suspend a meeting or session to another time or place
••••••
|
The judge decided to adjourn the hearing until next week. |
motion to adjourn |
a formal proposal to end a meeting or session
••••••
|
suspend, postpone, delay, recess, discontinue
••••••
|
resume, continue, proceed
••••••
|
adjourn a meeting, adjourn the session, adjourn temporarily, motion to adjourn
••••••
|
|
#126
👨⚖️
|
/əˈdʒuːdɪˌkeɪt/
verb
••••••
|
- •••••• |
adjudicated
••••••
|
adjudicated
••••••
|
adjudicates
••••••
|
adjudicating
••••••
|
to make a formal judgment or decision about a problem or dispute
••••••
|
The committee was formed to adjudicate disputes between the parties. |
adjudicate a dispute |
to settle a conflict officially
••••••
|
arbitrate, judge, decide, settle, resolve
••••••
|
ignore, delay, neglect
••••••
|
adjudicate disputes, adjudicate cases, adjudicate claims
••••••
|
|
#127
⚙️
|
/əˈdʒʌst/
verb
••••••
|
- •••••• |
adjusted
••••••
|
adjusted
••••••
|
adjusts
••••••
|
adjusting
••••••
|
to change something slightly to make it more suitable or effective
••••••
|
She adjusted the mirror to see the road clearly. |
adjust to |
to get used to a new situation
••••••
|
modify, alter, adapt, regulate
••••••
|
disturb, disarrange, upset
••••••
|
adjust settings, adjust position, adjust speed, adjust focus
••••••
|
|
#128
🔧
|
/əˈdʒʌstmənt/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
a small change made to improve something or make it work better
••••••
|
The doctor made an adjustment to the patient’s medication. |
make an adjustment |
to change something slightly to improve it
••••••
|
modification, alteration, correction, change
••••••
|
rigidity, stagnation
••••••
|
adjustment to, minor adjustment, adjustment period, policy adjustment
••••••
|
|
#129
💊
|
/ədˈmɪnɪstər/
verb
••••••
|
•••••• |
administered
••••••
|
administered
••••••
|
administers
••••••
|
administering
••••••
|
To manage or oversee the operation of something; to provide or apply.
••••••
|
The nurse will administer the medicine at noon. |
administer justice |
To ensure that laws and fairness are upheld.
••••••
|
manage, oversee, control, execute, apply
••••••
|
neglect, ignore
••••••
|
administer medicine, administer justice, administer a program, administer funds
••••••
|
|
#130
🗂️
|
/ədˈmɪnɪstreɪt/
verb
••••••
|
- •••••• |
administrated
••••••
|
administrated
••••••
|
administrates
••••••
|
administrating
••••••
|
to manage or supervise the execution of duties, laws, or resources; to formally give or apply something such as a test or medicine
••••••
|
The committee will administrate the new policy across all departments. |
administrate justice |
to carry out or enforce justice in a fair and lawful manner
••••••
|
manage, administer, supervise, govern, oversee
••••••
|
neglect, mismanage
••••••
|
administrate a program, administrate duties, administrate resources, administrate policy
••••••
|
|
#131
🏛️
|
/ədˌmɪnɪˈstreɪʃən/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
The management or organization of a business, institution, or government.
••••••
|
The new administration introduced several reforms. |
public administration |
The management of government affairs and policies.
••••••
|
management, governance, supervision, leadership, control
••••••
|
mismanagement, neglect, chaos
••••••
|
school administration, government administration, business administration, administration office
••••••
|
|
#132
🏢
|
/ədˈmɪnɪstrətɪv/
adjective
••••••
|
•••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
relating to the management or organization of an institution or business
••••••
|
She handles all the administrative tasks in the office. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
managerial, executive, organizational, supervisory
••••••
|
non-managerial, subordinate
••••••
|
administrative staff, administrative work, administrative office, administrative system
••••••
|
|
#133
🧑💼
|
/ədˈmɪnɪstreɪtər/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
a person responsible for running or managing an organization or system
••••••
|
The school administrator implemented new policies for students. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
manager, director, supervisor, executive, controller
••••••
|
employee, worker, subordinate
••••••
|
system administrator, school administrator, database administrator, network administrator
••••••
|
|
#134
👏
|
/ˈædmərəbəl/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
প্রশংসনীয়; চমৎকার;
••••••
|
Her dedication to helping others is truly admirable. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
praiseworthy, commendable, laudable, excellent
••••••
|
deplorable, despicable, contemptible, shameful
••••••
|
admirable qualities, admirable effort, admirable courage
••••••
|
|
#135
👏
|
/ˌædməˈreɪʃən/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
a feeling of respect, pleasure, or approval for someone or something
••••••
|
She felt great admiration for her teacher’s dedication. |
look at someone with admiration |
to view someone with respect and approval
••••••
|
respect, esteem, appreciation, regard, praise
••••••
|
disdain, contempt, disapproval
••••••
|
deep admiration, mutual admiration, admiration for, express admiration
••••••
|
|
#136
😍
|
/ədˈmaɪər/
verb
••••••
|
- •••••• |
admired
••••••
|
admired
••••••
|
admires
••••••
|
admiring
••••••
|
To respect, appreciate, or look up to someone or something.
••••••
|
I really admire her dedication to education. |
admire from afar |
To respect or like someone without approaching them directly.
••••••
|
respect, appreciate, praise, value, esteem
••••••
|
despise, dislike, scorn
••••••
|
admire greatly, admire deeply, admire the beauty, admire courage
••••••
|
|
#137
🎟️
|
/ədˈmɪʃən/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
The process or fact of being allowed to enter a place or join an organization.
••••••
|
The admission fee to the museum is five dollars. |
free admission |
Entry without cost.
••••••
|
entry, access, acceptance, enrollment
••••••
|
exclusion, denial, rejection
••••••
|
admission fee, admission test, admission process, admission ticket
••••••
|
|
#138
🙋
|
/ədˈmɪt/
verb
••••••
|
•••••• |
admitted
••••••
|
admitted
••••••
|
admits
••••••
|
admitting
••••••
|
To confess or acknowledge something as true; to allow entry.
••••••
|
He admitted that he had made a mistake. |
admit defeat |
To accept that you have failed.
••••••
|
confess, acknowledge, accept, allow, grant
••••••
|
deny, refuse, reject
••••••
|
admit mistake, admit defeat, admit truth, admit into
••••••
|
|
#139
🧑🎓
|
/ˌædəˈlɛsənt/
noun/adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
A young person in the process of developing from a child into an adult.
••••••
|
Adolescents often experience rapid physical and emotional changes. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
teenager, youth, minor, juvenile
••••••
|
adult, mature
••••••
|
adolescent behavior, adolescent years, adolescent development, adolescent health
••••••
|
|
#140
👨👩👧
|
/əˈdɒpt/
verb
••••••
|
- •••••• |
adopted
••••••
|
adopted
••••••
|
adopts
••••••
|
adopting
••••••
|
To take something as your own, such as a child, idea, or method.
••••••
|
They decided to adopt a child from the orphanage. |
adopt a policy |
To formally accept and begin to use a policy.
••••••
|
accept, embrace, foster, implement, take on
••••••
|
abandon, reject, refuse
••••••
|
adopt a child, adopt a policy, adopt a method, adopt a strategy
••••••
|
|
#141
👶
|
/əˈdɒpʃən/
noun
••••••
|
•••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the act of legally taking another's child and bringing it up as one's own, or accepting and starting to use something new
••••••
|
The couple celebrated the adoption of their new baby daughter. |
put up for adoption |
to make a child available to be adopted by someone else
••••••
|
acceptance, approval, embrace, fostering, implementation
••••••
|
rejection, abandonment, refusal
••••••
|
child adoption, adoption process, adoption agency, international adoption
••••••
|
|
#142
👨👩👧
|
/əˈdɒptɪv/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
relating to the adoption of a child or the act of taking something as one’s own
••••••
|
She grew up in a loving adoptive family. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
foster, adoptable, surrogate, substitute, non-biological
••••••
|
biological, natural, birth
••••••
|
adoptive parents, adoptive family, adoptive child, adoptive mother, adoptive father
••••••
|
|
#143
❤️
|
/əˈdɔːr/
verb
••••••
|
- •••••• |
adored
••••••
|
adored
••••••
|
adores
••••••
|
adoring
••••••
|
to love deeply and respect highly
••••••
|
She adores her little sister. |
adore the ground someone walks on |
to idolize or love someone deeply
••••••
|
love, cherish, admire, idolize, treasure
••••••
|
hate, despise, detest
••••••
|
adore someone, adore the way, absolutely adore, adore the idea
••••••
|
|
#144
📢
|
/ædz/
noun (plural)
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
short for advertisements; promotional messages intended to sell products or services
••••••
|
I often skip ads when watching videos online. |
targeted ads |
advertisements shown to people based on their interests or behavior
••••••
|
advertisements, commercials, promos, publicity
••••••
|
editorial content, information
••••••
|
online ads, TV ads, display ads, targeted ads, paid ads
••••••
|
|
#145
🙌
|
/ˈædjʊˌleɪt/
verb
••••••
|
- •••••• |
adulated
••••••
|
adulated
••••••
|
adulates
••••••
|
adulating
••••••
|
to praise or flatter excessively
••••••
|
The fans adulated the actor after his performance. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
flatter, praise, idolize, glorify
••••••
|
criticize, insult, scorn
••••••
|
adulate endlessly, adulate someone, constantly adulate
••••••
|
|
#146
🧑
|
/ˈædʌlt/ or /əˈdʌlt/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
A fully grown or developed person; mature.
••••••
|
Children must be accompanied by an adult. |
young adult |
A person in their late teens or early twenties.
••••••
|
grown-up, mature person, elder, senior
••••••
|
child, minor, infant
••••••
|
adult education, adult content, adult life, adult supervision
••••••
|
|
#147
🥛
|
/əˈdʌltəreɪt/
verb
••••••
|
•••••• |
adulterated
••••••
|
adulterated
••••••
|
adulterates
••••••
|
adulterating
••••••
|
to make something poorer in quality by adding another substance, usually of lower quality
••••••
|
The company was fined for adulterating its products with cheap chemicals. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
contaminate, debase, dilute, taint, spoil
••••••
|
purify, refine, cleanse
••••••
|
adulterate food, adulterate drink, adulterate medicine
••••••
|
|
#148
⏩
|
/ədˈvæns/
verb
••••••
|
- •••••• |
advanced
••••••
|
advanced
••••••
|
advances
••••••
|
advancing
••••••
|
to move forward or make progress
••••••
|
The army advanced towards the city. |
advance notice |
prior information given before an event happens
••••••
|
progress, proceed, promote, improve, forward
••••••
|
retreat, withdraw, regress
••••••
|
advance payment, advance notice, advance booking, technological advance
••••••
|
|
#149
🚀
|
/ədˈvænst/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
highly developed or complex
••••••
|
He is studying an advanced level of mathematics. |
advanced technology |
highly developed and modern technology
••••••
|
sophisticated, developed, progressive, modern
••••••
|
basic, simple, primitive
••••••
|
advanced level, advanced stage, advanced degree, advanced course
••••••
|
|
#150
💡
|
/ədˈvæntɪdʒ/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
a condition or circumstance that puts one in a favorable position
••••••
|
Having strong communication skills is a great advantage in business. |
take advantage of |
to make good use of something
••••••
|
benefit, edge, asset, gain, upper hand
••••••
|
disadvantage, drawback, handicap
••••••
|
competitive advantage, great advantage, take advantage, clear advantage
••••••
|
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