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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 67 - Mask Toggle
|
Emoji
|
Word | Images | Past | Past Participle | Third Person Singular | Gerund | Meaning | Example Sentence | Example Expression | Example Expression Meaning | Synonyms | Antonyms | Collocations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
#3185
💍
|
/ˈmærɪdʒ/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
The legally or formally recognized union of two people as partners in a personal relationship.
••••••
|
Their marriage lasted for over thirty years. |
marriage of convenience |
A marriage for practical reasons rather than love.
••••••
|
wedding, union, matrimony, partnership, alliance
••••••
|
divorce, separation
••••••
|
happy marriage, arranged marriage, successful marriage, marriage ceremony, marriage contract
••••••
|
|
#3186
👩❤️👨
|
/ˈmærid/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
Having a spouse; joined in marriage.
••••••
|
She is happily married with two children. |
newly married |
Recently entered into marriage.
••••••
|
wedded, espoused, united, partnered
••••••
|
single, divorced
••••••
|
married couple, happily married, married life, married man, married woman
••••••
|
|
#3187
💒
|
/ˈmæri/
verb
••••••
|
•••••• |
married
••••••
|
married
••••••
|
marries
••••••
|
marrying
••••••
|
To join in marriage; to take someone as a spouse.
••••••
|
They plan to marry next spring. |
marry into |
To become part of a family or social group through marriage.
••••••
|
wed, unite, espouse, join
••••••
|
divorce, separate
••••••
|
marry someone, plan to marry, marry into a family, decide to marry
••••••
|
|
#3188
⚔️
|
/ˈmɑːrʃəl/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
Related to war, soldiers, or military life.
••••••
|
The country imposed martial law during the crisis. |
martial law |
Military control of an area, usually during emergencies.
••••••
|
military, warlike, soldierly, combative
••••••
|
civil, peaceful
••••••
|
martial law, martial arts, martial spirit, martial training
••••••
|
|
#3189
✝️
|
/ˈmɑːrtər/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
A person who suffers or dies for their beliefs or cause.
••••••
|
He was hailed as a martyr for defending his faith. |
play the martyr |
To exaggerate suffering or sacrifice to gain sympathy.
••••••
|
sufferer, victim, saint, hero
••••••
|
survivor, betrayer
••••••
|
martyr for faith, martyr to cause, play the martyr
••••••
|
|
#3190
🎭
|
/mæsk/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
A covering for the face to protect, disguise, or entertain.
••••••
|
He wore a mask at the costume party. |
wear many masks |
To play different roles or hide one's true self.
••••••
|
covering, disguise, veil, shield, facade
••••••
|
exposure, reveal
••••••
|
face mask, protective mask, surgical mask, wear a mask
••••••
|
|
#3191
🌐
|
/mæs/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
a large body of matter with no specific shape; a large number of people or things
••••••
|
A huge mass of people gathered in the square. |
critical mass |
the minimum size or amount needed for something to start or be effective
••••••
|
bulk, crowd, heap, volume, multitude
••••••
|
fragment, part, individual
••••••
|
mass production, mass movement, mass media, mass destruction
••••••
|
|
#3192
⚔️
|
/ˈmæsəkər/
verb
••••••
|
•••••• |
massacred
••••••
|
massacred
••••••
|
massacres
••••••
|
massacring
••••••
|
to kill a large number of people brutally; to defeat decisively
••••••
|
The army massacred the innocent civilians. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
slaughter, butcher, kill, annihilate
••••••
|
protect, save, preserve, spare
••••••
|
massacre civilians, massacre troops, massacre innocents, brutal massacre, mass massacre
••••••
|
|
#3193
💆
|
/məˈsɑːʒ/
verb
••••••
|
- •••••• |
massaged
••••••
|
massaged
••••••
|
massages
••••••
|
massaging
••••••
|
to rub and press muscles to relieve pain or tension; to manipulate information
••••••
|
The therapist will massage your back to reduce muscle tension. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
rub, knead, manipulate, work
••••••
|
ignore, neglect, avoid, abandon
••••••
|
massage gently, massage thoroughly, massage muscles, give a massage
••••••
|
|
#3194
🗿
|
/ˈmæsɪv/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
extremely large, heavy, or solid in size or degree
••••••
|
The company made a massive investment in renewable energy. |
a massive hit |
something extremely successful or popular
••••••
|
huge, enormous, gigantic, colossal, immense
••••••
|
tiny, small, minor
••••••
|
massive scale, massive effort, massive increase, massive attack
••••••
|
|
#3195
🎓
|
/ˈmɑːstər/
noun, verb
••••••
|
- •••••• |
mastered
••••••
|
mastered
••••••
|
masters
••••••
|
mastering
••••••
|
A person with great skill or control in a subject or activity; to gain full command over something.
••••••
|
She mastered the art of cooking Italian dishes. |
jack of all trades, master of none |
Someone who can do many things but is not an expert in any of them.
••••••
|
expert, specialist, teacher, guru, controller
••••••
|
novice, beginner, student
••••••
|
master plan, master key, master skill, master class
••••••
|
|
#3196
🧘
|
/mæt/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
a piece of fabric material placed on a floor or surface for wiping feet or protection
••••••
|
She placed a new mat at the entrance of the house. |
doormat |
a person who is easily taken advantage of
••••••
|
rug, carpet, covering, pad
••••••
|
bare floor, uncovered
••••••
|
welcome mat, yoga mat, floor mat, door mat
••••••
|
|
#3197
⚽
|
/mætʃ/
noun, verb
••••••
|
•••••• |
matched
••••••
|
matched
••••••
|
matches
••••••
|
matching
••••••
|
A contest between people or teams; to pair or correspond with something.
••••••
|
The two teams will play a football match tomorrow. |
perfect match |
Two people or things that go very well together.
••••••
|
contest, game, pair, partner, counterpart
••••••
|
mismatch, imbalance
••••••
|
football match, match the color, match made in heaven
••••••
|
|
#3198
👫
|
/meɪt/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
a friend or companion; a partner in marriage or reproduction
••••••
|
He went fishing with his old school mate. |
best mate |
a very close friend
••••••
|
friend, companion, partner, buddy, ally
••••••
|
enemy, foe, rival
••••••
|
close mate, class mate, team mate, life mate
••••••
|
|
#3199
🧱
|
/məˈtɪəriəl/
noun, adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
The substance or matter from which something is made; relating to physical things rather than ideas or emotions.
••••••
|
The builder brought all the necessary material for the construction. |
material evidence |
Physical proof that can be used in a legal case or argument.
••••••
|
substance, fabric, stuff, matter, resource
••••••
|
immaterial, abstract, spiritual
••••••
|
raw material, building material, study material, material wealth
••••••
|
|
#3200
✨
|
/məˈtɪərɪəlaɪz/
verb
••••••
|
- •••••• |
materialized
••••••
|
materialized
••••••
|
materializes
••••••
|
materializing
••••••
|
To become real or actual; to appear suddenly or in a physical form.
••••••
|
The opportunity he had been waiting for finally materialized. |
fail to materialize |
When something expected does not happen or become real.
••••••
|
appear, emerge, occur, happen, realize
••••••
|
vanish, disappear
••••••
|
plans materialize, dreams materialize, suddenly materialize
••••••
|
|
#3201
➗
|
/mæθ/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
The study of numbers, quantities, and shapes, also called mathematics.
••••••
|
She is very good at math. |
do the math |
Figure something out logically or by calculation.
••••••
|
mathematics, arithmetic, calculus, algebra
••••••
|
nonsense, guesswork
••••••
|
math problem, math test, math skills, math homework
••••••
|
|
#3202
🧮
|
/ˌmæθəˈmætɪkəl/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
relating to mathematics or the use of mathematics
••••••
|
The mathematical equation was difficult to solve. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
numerical, quantitative, algebraic, geometric
••••••
|
non-mathematical, illogical
••••••
|
mathematical problem, mathematical analysis, mathematical model
••••••
|
|
#3203
📐
|
/ˌmæθəˈmætɪkli/
adverb
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
in a way that relates to mathematics; using numbers, formulas, or logical calculation
••••••
|
The problem can be solved mathematically rather than by guesswork. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
numerically, analytically, logically, quantitatively
••••••
|
intuitively, approximately
••••••
|
mathematically correct, mathematically proven, mathematically speaking, mathematically precise
••••••
|
|
#3204
🔢
|
/ˌmæθəˈmætɪks/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the abstract science of number, quantity, and space; the study of numbers and their operations
••••••
|
Mathematics helps us understand patterns in nature and the universe. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
math, arithmetic, geometry, algebra, calculus
••••••
|
n/a, none
••••••
|
study mathematics, mathematics teacher, pure mathematics, applied mathematics
••••••
|
|
#3205
📌
|
/ˈmætər/
noun, verb
••••••
|
- •••••• |
mattered
••••••
|
mattered
••••••
|
matters
••••••
|
mattering
••••••
|
A subject or situation under consideration; to be important.
••••••
|
It doesn’t matter what others think. |
a matter of time |
Something that will definitely happen sooner or later.
••••••
|
issue, subject, affair, significance, importance
••••••
|
triviality, insignificance
••••••
|
serious matter, personal matter, matter of time
••••••
|
|
#3206
🌳
|
/məˈtjʊr/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
fully developed or grown, especially emotionally or intellectually
••••••
|
She has become a mature and confident leader. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
grown, developed, experienced, wise
••••••
|
immature, inexperienced
••••••
|
mature decision, mature outlook, mature personality
••••••
|
|
#3207
📈
|
/ˈmæk.sɪ.maɪz/
verb
••••••
|
- •••••• |
maximized
••••••
|
maximized
••••••
|
maximizes
••••••
|
maximizing
••••••
|
to increase something as much as possible
••••••
|
The company aims to maximize its profits this year. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
increase, boost, enhance, amplify
••••••
|
minimize, reduce
••••••
|
maximize profits, maximize efforts, maximize potential
••••••
|
|
#3208
⬆️
|
/ˈmæksɪməm/
noun/adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the greatest or highest amount, value, or degree possible
••••••
|
She scored the maximum marks in the exam. |
to the maximum |
to the greatest possible extent
••••••
|
utmost, highest, peak, greatest, limit
••••••
|
minimum, least, lowest
••••••
|
maximum effort, maximum speed, maximum limit, maximum capacity
••••••
|
|
#3209
🌸
|
/meɪ/
modal verb, noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
Used to express possibility, permission, or uncertainty; also the name of the fifth month of the year.
••••••
|
You may leave early if you finish your work. |
come what may |
No matter what happens.
••••••
|
might, perhaps, can, possibility
••••••
|
cannot, must not
••••••
|
may occur, may happen, may I, month of May
••••••
|
|
#3210
🤔
|
/ˈmeɪbi/
adverb
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
used to express possibility or uncertainty
••••••
|
Maybe we will go to the park tomorrow. |
just maybe |
indicating a slight possibility
••••••
|
perhaps, possibly, might, could be
••••••
|
certainly, surely, definitely
••••••
|
maybe later, maybe someday, maybe not, maybe tomorrow
••••••
|
|
#3211
🏛️
|
/ˈmeɪər/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
The elected head of a city, town, or municipality.
••••••
|
The mayor announced a new policy to improve public transport. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
city leader, governor, official, magistrate, chief
••••••
|
citizen, resident, subordinate
••••••
|
mayor of the city, mayoral election, city mayor, mayor's office
••••••
|
|
#3212
🙋
|
/miː/
pronoun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
Used by a speaker to refer to themselves as the object of a verb or preposition.
••••••
|
She gave me a beautiful gift. |
me time |
time spent relaxing alone and focusing on oneself
••••••
|
myself, I, self
••••••
|
you, he, she
••••••
|
for me, to me, with me, about me
••••••
|
|
#3213
🍽️
|
/miːl/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
An occasion when food is eaten, or the food that is eaten on such an occasion.
••••••
|
We had a delicious meal at the restaurant. |
square meal |
a substantial, satisfying, and balanced meal
••••••
|
dish, feast, food, banquet, repast
••••••
|
fast, hunger, starvation
••••••
|
have a meal, cook a meal, family meal, main meal
••••••
|
|
#3214
👉
|
/miːn/
verb, adjective
••••••
|
•••••• |
meant
••••••
|
meant
••••••
|
means
••••••
|
meaning
••••••
|
to intend or signify; also unkind when used as adjective
••••••
|
I didn’t mean to hurt your feelings. |
mean business |
to be serious about something
••••••
|
intend, signify, denote, imply
••••••
|
misinterpret, misunderstand
••••••
|
mean well, mean something, mean business, really mean
••••••
|
|
#3215
❓
|
/ˈmiːnɪŋ/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
The definition, purpose, or significance of something.
••••••
|
The meaning of the word is explained in the dictionary. |
hidden meaning |
a deeper or secret interpretation of something
••••••
|
sense, significance, purpose, definition, interpretation
••••••
|
nonsense, insignificance, absurdity
••••••
|
true meaning, literal meaning, meaning of life, meaning behind
••••••
|
|
#3216
💡
|
/ˈmiːnɪŋfəl/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
having purpose, value, or significance
••••••
|
He gave a meaningful smile before leaving the room. |
make a meaningful contribution |
to add something valuable or significant to a situation
••••••
|
significant, purposeful, valuable, expressive, important
••••••
|
meaningless, trivial, empty
••••••
|
meaningful conversation, meaningful relationship, meaningful impact, meaningful work
••••••
|
|
#3217
🤷
|
/ˈmiː.nɪŋ.ləs/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
without purpose; having no significance; pointless
••••••
|
The data became meaningless without proper context. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
pointless, senseless, insignificant, worthless
••••••
|
meaningful, significant, important
••••••
|
meaningless words, meaningless gesture, meaningless data
••••••
|
|
#3218
⏳
|
/ˈmiːnˌtaɪm/
noun/adverb
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the period of time between two events; meanwhile
••••••
|
The train will be late, so in the meantime let's have some tea. |
in the meantime |
during the time between events
••••••
|
meanwhile, interim, interval, intermission
••••••
|
afterward, later
••••••
|
in the meantime, meantime period, meantime activities
••••••
|
|
#3219
⌚
|
/ˈmiːn.waɪl/
adverb
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
at the same time; during the same period
••••••
|
She was cooking dinner, meanwhile he was setting the table. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
meantime, at the same time, simultaneously
••••••
|
later, afterwards, subsequently
••••••
|
meanwhile back, meanwhile elsewhere
••••••
|
|
#3220
📏
|
/ˈmɛʒər/
noun/verb
••••••
|
•••••• |
measured
••••••
|
measured
••••••
|
measures
••••••
|
measuring
••••••
|
to determine the size, amount, or degree of something; a standard unit or plan
••••••
|
The tailor measured the length of the cloth. |
beyond measure |
to an extreme degree
••••••
|
assess, calculate, evaluate, gauge, standard
••••••
|
guess, estimate, ignore
••••••
|
measure success, measure distance, safety measures, take measures
••••••
|
|
#3221
📏
|
/ˈmeʒərmənt/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the size, length, or amount of something, as determined by measuring
••••••
|
The tailor took my waist measurement before stitching the suit. |
take measurements |
to measure the size, length, or amount of something
••••••
|
dimension, size, extent, magnitude, evaluation
••••••
|
guess, estimate
••••••
|
accurate measurement, take measurement, standard measurement, body measurement
••••••
|
|
#3222
🥩
|
/miːt/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the flesh of animals used as food
••••••
|
She bought fresh meat from the market. |
the meat of the matter |
the most important or basic part of something
••••••
|
flesh, beef, chicken, lamb, pork
••••••
|
vegetable, fruit
••••••
|
red meat, fresh meat, cooked meat, meat dish
••••••
|
|
#3223
🔧
|
/məˈkænɪk/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
a person who repairs and maintains machines or vehicles
••••••
|
The mechanic fixed the engine in less than an hour. |
grease monkey |
a slang term for a car mechanic
••••••
|
technician, repairman, engineer, fitter, machinist
••••••
|
driver, operator
••••••
|
car mechanic, skilled mechanic, aircraft mechanic, auto mechanic
••••••
|
|
#3224
⚙️
|
/məˈkænɪkəl/
adjective
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
relating to machines or the way they work
••••••
|
She has a good understanding of mechanical systems. |
mechanical mind |
a person who easily understands and works with machines
••••••
|
automated, machine-driven, technical, robotic, motorized
••••••
|
manual, emotional, natural
••••••
|
mechanical system, mechanical engineer, mechanical failure, mechanical process
••••••
|
|
#3225
⚙️
|
/ˈmɛkəˌnɪzəm/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
A system of parts working together in a machine; a process or technique for achieving something.
••••••
|
The mechanism of the clock stopped working after years of use. |
defense mechanism |
An unconscious process used to protect oneself from anxiety or stress.
••••••
|
system, apparatus, device, structure, process
••••••
|
disorder, chaos, randomness
••••••
|
defense mechanism, coping mechanism, mechanical mechanism, complex mechanism
••••••
|
|
#3226
🥇
|
/ˈmɛdəl/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
a piece of metal given as an award for achievement
••••••
|
She won a gold medal in the 100-meter race. |
medal of honor |
a high award for bravery or service
••••••
|
award, trophy, prize, badge, honor
••••••
|
penalty, disqualification
••••••
|
gold medal, silver medal, bronze medal, win a medal, award a medal
••••••
|
|
#3227
📰
|
/ˈmiːdiə/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
the main means of mass communication such as newspapers, television, radio, and the internet
••••••
|
The story quickly spread across the media. |
social media |
online platforms used for communication and content sharing
••••••
|
press, news, journalism, broadcasting, communication
••••••
|
silence, secrecy
••••••
|
mass media, social media, media coverage, media attention
••••••
|
|
#3228
🏥
|
/ˈmedɪkəl/
adjective
••••••
|
•••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
relating to the science or practice of medicine
••••••
|
He went for a medical check-up last week. |
medical condition |
a disease or health issue someone has
••••••
|
clinical, healthcare, therapeutic, medicinal
••••••
|
nonmedical, unhealthy
••••••
|
medical treatment, medical advice, medical center, medical research
••••••
|
|
#3229
💊
|
/ˈmedɪkeɪt/
verb
••••••
|
•••••• |
medicated
••••••
|
medicated
••••••
|
medicates
••••••
|
medicating
••••••
|
to treat with medicine; to give drugs to someone for medical purposes
••••••
|
The doctor will medicate the patient to reduce inflammation. |
- •••••• | - •••••• |
treat, dose, prescribe, administer
••••••
|
withhold, deny, refuse, neglect
••••••
|
medicate patient, properly medicate, heavily medicate, daily medicate
••••••
|
|
#3230
💊
|
/ˌmedɪˈkeɪʃən/
noun
••••••
|
- •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• | - •••••• |
a drug or other form of medicine used to treat or prevent disease
••••••
|
The doctor prescribed medication for his headache. |
take medication |
to consume prescribed medicine
••••••
|
medicine, drug, remedy, prescription
••••••
|
disease, illness
••••••
|
take medication, prescribe medication, over-the-counter medication, pain medication
••••••
|
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