Mastering the Most Frequent Nouns
Translation
Past
Past Participle
Third Person Singular
Gerund
Meaning
Example Sentence
Example Sentence Translation
Synonyms
Antonyms
Collocations
Mnemonic
Example Sentence Translation
Word
Lesson 13 - Mask Toggle
Emoji
|
Word | Meaning | Example Sentence | Synonyms | Antonyms | Collocations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
#241
💕
|
Dalliance
/ˈdæl.i.əns/
noun
••••••
|
a casual romantic or sexual relationship; a brief involvement or experiment
••••••
|
His dalliance with photography lasted only a few months before he lost interest. |
flirtation, affair, fling, liaison
••••••
|
commitment, dedication, serious relationship
••••••
|
brief dalliance, romantic dalliance, casual dalliance
••••••
|
#242
☀️
|
Day
/deɪ/
noun
••••••
|
a period of twenty-four hours; the time during which there is light
••••••
|
What a beautiful day it is today with clear blue skies! |
daytime, twenty-four hours, date, era
••••••
|
night, darkness, evening
••••••
|
beautiful day, long day, working day
••••••
|
#243
🏞️
|
Dam
/dæm/
noun
••••••
|
a barrier constructed to hold back water and raise its level; a female parent of an animal
••••••
|
The massive dam provides electricity and controls flooding in the region. |
barrier, weir, embankment, dyke
••••••
|
opening, breach, gap
••••••
|
hydroelectric dam, concrete dam, dam construction
••••••
|
#244
⏰
|
Deadline
/ˈded.laɪn/
noun
••••••
|
the latest time or date by which something should be completed
••••••
|
The deadline for submitting the project is next Friday. |
time limit, due date, cutoff, expiry
••••••
|
extension, flexibility, open-ended
••••••
|
strict deadline, meet deadline, deadline pressure
••••••
|
#245
🔒
|
Dead-lock
/ˈded.lɑk/
noun
••••••
|
a situation in which no progress is possible; complete standstill
••••••
|
The negotiations reached a deadlock when neither side would compromise. |
stalemate, impasse, standstill, gridlock
••••••
|
progress, breakthrough, resolution, movement
••••••
|
political deadlock, break deadlock, reach deadlock
••••••
|
#246
💥
|
Damage
/ˈdæm.ɪdʒ/
noun
••••••
|
physical harm caused to something; injury or harm that reduces value or usefulness
••••••
|
The storm caused significant damage to the coastal buildings. |
harm, destruction, injury, loss
••••••
|
repair, restoration, improvement, benefit
••••••
|
property damage, brain damage, environmental damage
••••••
|
#247
🔥
|
Damnation
/dæmˈneɪ.ʃən/
noun
••••••
|
condemnation to eternal punishment in hell; something that causes ruin or failure
••••••
|
The preacher spoke about salvation and damnation in his sermon. |
condemnation, perdition, ruin, curse
••••••
|
salvation, blessing, redemption
••••••
|
eternal damnation, threat of damnation, escape damnation
••••••
|
#248
🤝
|
Dealing
/ˈdiː.lɪŋ/
noun
••••••
|
business transactions; the way of treating people or handling situations
••••••
|
His fair dealing with customers earned him an excellent reputation. |
transaction, trade, conduct, behavior
••••••
|
avoidance, neglect, dishonesty
••••••
|
fair dealing, business dealing, honest dealing
••••••
|
#249
❄️
|
Dandruff
/ˈdæn.drʌf/
noun
••••••
|
small white or grey flakes of dead skin that form on the scalp and fall from the hair
••••••
|
He used a special shampoo to treat his persistent dandruff problem. |
scalp flakes, seborrhea, scurf
••••••
|
healthy scalp, clean hair
••••••
|
dandruff shampoo, severe dandruff, treat dandruff
••••••
|
#250
⚰️
|
Death
/deθ/
noun
••••••
|
the end of life; the permanent cessation of vital functions
••••••
|
The death of the great leader was mourned by the entire nation. |
demise, passing, mortality, end
••••••
|
birth, life, existence, vitality
••••••
|
sudden death, natural death, death certificate
••••••
|
#251
🎯
|
Daring
/ˈder.ɪŋ/
noun
••••••
|
adventurous courage; willingness to take risks
••••••
|
The mountain climber's daring impressed everyone at the base camp. |
boldness, courage, bravery, audacity
••••••
|
cowardice, timidity, caution, hesitation
••••••
|
great daring, act of daring, show daring
••••••
|
#252
🗣️
|
Debate
/dɪˈbeɪt/
noun
••••••
|
a formal discussion of opposing viewpoints; argument with reasoned points
••••••
|
The political debate lasted for three hours with passionate arguments. |
discussion, argument, dispute, deliberation
••••••
|
agreement, consensus, silence, acceptance
••••••
|
heated debate, public debate, debate competition
••••••
|
#253
🌑
|
Darkness
/ˈdɑrk.nəs/
noun
••••••
|
the partial or total absence of light; wickedness or evil; ignorance or lack of knowledge
••••••
|
The power outage plunged the entire city into darkness. |
blackness, gloom, shadow, ignorance
••••••
|
light, brightness, illumination, knowledge
••••••
|
total darkness, fear of darkness, darkness falls
••••••
|
#254
💳
|
Debit
/ˈdeb.ɪt/
noun
••••••
|
an entry recording an amount owed; money taken from a bank account
••••••
|
The bank showed a debit of fifty dollars from my checking account. |
charge, withdrawal, debt, liability
••••••
|
credit, deposit, asset, income
••••••
|
debit card, debit account, automatic debit
••••••
|
#255
📊
|
Data
/ˈdeɪ.tə/
noun
••••••
|
facts and statistics collected together for reference or analysis; information in digital form
••••••
|
Scientists analyzed the data from thousands of experiments to reach their conclusion. |
information, facts, statistics, figures
••••••
|
ignorance, misinformation, assumptions
••••••
|
collect data, analyze data, raw data
••••••
|
#256
🧱
|
Debris
/dəˈbriː/
noun
••••••
|
scattered fragments of something destroyed; rubble or wreckage
••••••
|
The cleanup crew removed debris from the construction site. |
rubble, wreckage, fragments, ruins
••••••
|
construction, building, whole structure
••••••
|
space debris, construction debris, clear debris
••••••
|
#257
👧
|
Daughter
/ˈdɔː.tər/
noun
••••••
|
a female offspring; a young woman in relation to her parents
••••••
|
Their daughter graduated from medical school with top honors. |
child, offspring, girl, descendant
••••••
|
son, parent, ancestor
••••••
|
eldest daughter, beloved daughter, daughter-in-law
••••••
|
#258
💰
|
Debt
/det/
noun
••••••
|
something owed, especially money; obligation to pay or repay
••••••
|
He worked extra hours to pay off his student loan debt. |
loan, obligation, liability, arrears
••••••
|
asset, credit, wealth, savings
••••••
|
pay debt, national debt, debt relief
••••••
|
#259
🌅
|
Dawn
/dɔːn/
noun
••••••
|
the first appearance of light in the sky before sunrise; the beginning or start of something
••••••
|
The fishermen set out to sea before dawn to catch the morning tide. |
daybreak, sunrise, morning, beginning
••••••
|
dusk, sunset, evening, end
••••••
|
crack of dawn, dawn breaks, dawn of a new era
••••••
|
#260
🍂
|
Decay
/dɪˈkeɪ/
noun
••••••
|
the process of rotting or decomposing; gradual decline or deterioration
••••••
|
The old building showed signs of decay after years of neglect. |
deterioration, rot, decomposition, decline
••••••
|
growth, improvement, preservation, renewal
••••••
|
tooth decay, urban decay, prevent decay
••••••
|
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