Lesson 71Lesson 71 Details
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Lesson 71Lesson 71 - 遮罩切换

表情符号
表达 含义 例句
#2100
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bring in money
phrasal-verb
••••••
to generate income or revenue
••••••

The new policy helped the government bring in money from foreign investors.

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#2101
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••••••
bring in new ideas
phrasal-verb
••••••
to introduce creative thoughts or plans
••••••

Leaders should bring in new ideas to improve team performance.

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#2102
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••••••
bring in on
phrasal-verb
••••••
to include someone in a discussion or project
••••••

Let’s bring John in on this design review meeting.

••••••
#2103
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••••••
bring in reforms
phrasal-verb
••••••
to introduce changes to improve a system or policy
••••••

The new government promised to bring in reforms to strengthen the economy.

••••••
#2104
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••••••
bring in revenue
phrasal-verb
••••••
to generate income or money for a company or government
••••••

The new industrial zone is expected to bring in revenue for the region.

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#2105
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••••••
bring in sustainability goals
phrasal-verb
••••••
to introduce new environmental or social targets
••••••

The firm plans to bring in sustainability goals for all departments.

••••••
#2106
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••••••
bring in tariffs
phrasal-verb
••••••
to introduce taxes on imported goods
••••••

The government plans to bring in tariffs to protect domestic manufacturers.

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#2107
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••••••
bring in together
phrasal-verb
••••••
to unite people from different backgrounds
••••••

The HR department worked hard to bring in together employees from various cultures.

••••••
#2108
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••••••
bring into
phrasal-verb
••••••
to include someone or something in an activity or situation
••••••

We should bring into the discussion more experts on the subject.

••••••
#2109
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••••••
bring into play
phrasal-verb
••••••
to use or introduce something to influence a situation
••••••

The president brought into play his connections to win the election.

••••••
#2110
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••••••
read up on
phrasal-verb
••••••
to study or get information about something by reading
••••••

You should read up on this topic before writing your paper.

••••••
#2111
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••••••
reason out
phrasal-verb
••••••
to find an answer or solution by logical thinking
••••••

She tried to reason out the cause of the confusion.

••••••
#2112
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••••••
rebuild confidence
phrasal-verb
••••••
to regain self-assurance after emotional setbacks
••••••

He slowly rebuilt confidence after losing everything.

••••••
#2113
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••••••
receive from
phrasal-verb
••••••
to get something that someone gives you
••••••

I received a letter from my best friend yesterday.

••••••
#2114
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••••••
recharge after
phrasal-verb
••••••
to recover energy and relax following stress or effort
••••••

Take a break to recharge after intense meetings.

••••••
#2115
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••••••
recover confidence
phrasal-verb
••••••
to regain belief in oneself after failure
••••••

It took months for him to recover confidence after the rejection.

••••••
#2116
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••••••
recover from
phrasal-verb
••••••
to return to a normal state after a setback or loss
••••••

The global economy is gradually recovering from the financial crisis.

••••••
#2117
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••••••
recover from recession
phrasal-verb
••••••
to return to growth after an economic decline
••••••

The country is slowly recovering from recession.

••••••
#2118
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••••••
recover lost ground
phrasal-verb
••••••
to regain previous progress or position after a decline
••••••

The stock market quickly recovered lost ground after the policy announcement.

••••••
#2119
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••••••
reel in
phrasal-verb
••••••
to attract or bring in something, especially investment or profit
••••••

The new tax incentives helped reel in foreign capital.

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#2120
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••••••
step up with
phrasal-verb
••••••
to provide leadership or resources when needed
••••••

She steps up with clear goals whenever the team feels stuck.

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#2121
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••••••
ship out to
phrasal-verb
••••••
to send goods to a destination
••••••

The factory ships out to regional stores every Thursday.

••••••
#2122
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••••••
carry forward into
phrasal-verb
••••••
to move progress or funds into a future period
••••••

We carry forward into next quarter any unused training budget.

••••••
#2123
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••••••
rally around for
phrasal-verb
••••••
to gather support for a person or cause
••••••

Volunteers rallied around for the community cleanup in record time.

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#2124
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••••••
shore up with
phrasal-verb
••••••
to strengthen something by adding support
••••••

We shore up with extra data before presenting the forecast.

••••••
#2125
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••••••
budget out for
phrasal-verb
••••••
to allocate money for a future need
••••••

Finance budgets out for new laptops in the annual plan.

••••••
#2126
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••••••
buy in on
phrasal-verb
••••••
to agree to support a plan or idea
••••••

Managers buy in on the strategy once they see the cost savings.

••••••
#2127
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••••••
chart out for
phrasal-verb
••••••
to map a path or schedule for something
••••••

We chart out for peak-season shipping routes in advance.

••••••
#2128
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••••••
drive up with
phrasal-verb
••••••
to increase results by using a particular lever
••••••

They drive up with targeted ads during festival weeks.

••••••
#2129
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••••••
lean on for
phrasal-verb
••••••
to depend on someone for help or advice
••••••

My mentor is who I lean on for guidance before big negotiations.

••••••