Vocabulary (Review)
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Learn 10 high-frequency expressions, including words for parts of the body and features
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Hi everybody, my name is Alisha. |
Welcome to the 2000 Core English Words and Phrases video series. |
Each lesson will help you learn new words, practice and review what you've learned. |
Okay, let's get started. |
First is |
break out |
Breakout has a couple different uses, but for today, let's talk about the one that |
means to have lots and lots of pimples appear on your skin because of a skin condition. |
So sometimes, especially when we're young, stress and changing bodies can create lots |
and lots of break outs. |
Here's an example. |
I wash my face every day so I don't break out. |
chin |
Chin is a body part. |
The chin is this part of your body, the part just below your lips. |
It's this edge of your face right here. |
Here's an example. |
He has food on his chin. |
forehead |
Your forehead is this part of your face, this part of your body. |
Your forehead is the section of your face from about your eyebrows up until your hairline, |
this part right here. |
Here's an example. |
The newest thermometer can take a temperature in the ear or on the forehead. |
blonde hair |
Blonde hair is a type of hair color. |
Blonde hair usually looks yellow or maybe yellowish white. |
It can also be a kind of dirty blonde, which means that it's a little bit of a brownish |
or yellow color. |
Here's an example. |
The woman has blonde hair. |
black hair |
Black hair refers to hair that is black in color. |
It's a very, very common hair color. |
Here's an example. |
The woman has black hair. |
brown hair |
Brown hair is another super common hair color. |
I have brown hair. |
Brown hair can be very light or very dark brown. |
Here's an example. |
She has brown hair and dimples. |
red hair |
Red hair is not such a common hair color compared to, say, black hair or brown hair. |
And red hair isn't usually bright red, like a flower or an apple, but rather it's a little |
bit orange red. |
Here's an example. |
The woman has long red hair. |
tooth |
A tooth is one of the things, the white things in your mouth that you use to eat with. |
So singular, it's tooth, one tooth. |
In the plural form, all of them, it is teeth. |
Here's an example. |
When your tooth hurts, it's important to go to the dentist. |
wrinkle |
A wrinkle is something that happens in our skin as we get older. |
So the skin, when we are very, very young, is very, very smooth. |
But as we get older and we smile and laugh and cry and have experiences, we will start |
to see lines in our face. |
These are called wrinkles and they're totally normal. |
Here's an example. |
The old woman has a lot of wrinkles. |
eyebrow |
Your eyebrow is the part of your face that is above your eye and below your forehead. |
It's this line of hair that is above your eye. |
Be careful with pronunciation here. |
This is eyebrow. |
Sometimes I hear learners say eyebrow. |
This is incorrect. |
It's eyebrow. |
Here's an example. |
Women often pluck their eyebrow hairs. |
Let's review. |
I'm going to describe a word or phrase in English, see if you can remember it. |
Then repeat after me, focusing on pronunciation. |
Ready? |
Do you remember how to say the verb that means to suddenly have lots and lots of pimples |
on your face? |
breakout |
And how to say this part of your body right here, below your mouth and at the edge of |
your face. |
chin |
What about the part of your body right here, above your eyebrows and below your hairline? |
forehead |
Do you remember the expression for someone's hair that is a white or maybe yellowish color? |
blonde hair |
Let's try the expression for someone with very, very dark hair. |
You could think of this as having no color. |
black hair |
What about the expression that I could use to describe my hair color? |
brown hair |
Now let's see if you remember how to say the expression that we use for the not-so-common |
hair color that looks a little bit orange colored. |
red hair |
Another one. |
What about the word for the white thing in your mouth that you use to eat food with? |
tooth |
Do you remember how to say the lines that appear on our face slowly as we get older? |
wrinkle |
And finally, do you remember how to say the hairs that are above your eyes? |
eyebrow |
Well done! See you next time! Bye! |
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