by PushtoLearn
Unit 12
Tabla de contenidos
Unit 12, Optimise B1 Plus Ejercicios y tarjetas didácticas
Lista de palabras para Unit 12, Optimise B1 Plus
Palabra | Definición | Ejemplo |
capital | money or property used to produce wealth | Because Mr Blech is injecting new capital, Ecogen said it is no longer seeking a buyer |
capitalism | an economic and political system in which businesses belong mostly to private owners, not to the government | He noted that capitalism and socialism had opposed each other while mutually influencing the way they had developed |
critic | a person who expresses an unfavourable opinion of something | Critics of the scheme have said that it will not solve the problem of teenage crime |
criticise | to express your disapproval of someone or something, or to talk about their faults | Jon criticised me of complaining all the time. |
favourite | best liked or most enjoyed | I love chocolate ice-cream – it's my favourite! |
favour | approval, support, or liking for someone or something | Could you do me a favour and tell Kelly I can't make it? |
friend | a person who you know well and who you like a lot, but who is usually not a member of your family | All my friends like rock music. |
unfriendly | showing dislike and no sympathy | The crowd was unfriendly and dangerous. |
hero | someone who does something brave or good, which people respect or admire them for | But he knows that his daughters were heroes and thanks them every day for saving his life. |
heroic | extremely brave or determined, and admired by many people | She made heroic efforts to save her family. |
ideal | the best or most suitable that something could possibly be | He's my ideal man. |
race | a competition in which people, animals, cars, etc. try to go faster than each other | He won the race easily. |
racism | when someone believes that people of their own race are better than people of other races | UEFA is trying to fight against racism |
tour | a visit to a place or area, especially one during which you look around the place or area and learn about it | A bus took us on a sightseeing tour of the city. |
tourist | a person who is travelling or visiting a place for pleasure | Cambridge is always full of tourists in the summer. |
vegetarian | a person who does not eat meat for health or religious reasons | She's been a vegetarian for ten years now. |
do good | to have a positive effect on someone | Working as a volunteer will do Francesca good. |
do harm | to damage something or make something worse | Hard work won't do you any harm! |
do the right thing | to act or behave correctly, appropriately, or with the best intentions. | Orla is a kind and considerate person who always tries to do the right thing. |
do (my, your, etc.) duty | to do, undertake, or accomplish that which is expected or required from one | Helping to clean local parks is one way of doing your duty for your community. |
make a difference | to improve a situation | Even a small donation to the charity will make a difference. |
make an excuse | to explain why you are not able to do something | Jordan forgot her homework again and made another silly excuse. |
make sense | if something makes sense, there seems to be a good reason or explanation for it | Studying when you feel tired doesn't make sense. |
careful | giving a lot of attention to what you are doing so that you do not have an accident, make a mistake, or damage something | Olivia loves bikes but she's a very careful cyclist. |
caring | kind and giving support | The best nurses are the ones who are caring towards their patients. |
famous | known and recognized by many people | Many vloggers have become famous as a result of their online videos. |
infamous | Having a bad reputation; of bad report; notoriously vile; detestable | Police have arrested a member of the infamous gang of computer hackers. |
kind | one of the different types of a person or thing that belong to the same group | The residents at the home where Oscar works really love him because he's so kind to them. |
ordinary | average, common, or usual, not different or special | Despite being rich and famous, famous, they live like ordinary people. |
polite | someone who is polite behaves towards other people in a pleasant way that follows all the usual rules of society | The teacher insists that we're always polite to each other in class, even when we disagree. |
popular | liked or admired by many people or by a particular person or group. | Alfie is the most popular boy in the class; everyone likes him. |
sensible | someone who is sensible behaves in a way that seems reasonable and practical | Poppy's sensible and always gives good advice. |
sensitive | easily affected or damaged by something such as a substance or temperature | She is very sensitive to changes in temperature. |
typical | showing all the characteristics that you would usually expect from a particular group of things | Is there really any such thing as a typical teenager? |
unknown | not famous | An unknown man who rescued two children child from a house fire received an award. |