Human memory
Travel & tourism
Prepositions and verbs
Language skills
100

A verb that means "to remember sth incorrectly":

to misremember sth

100

What's the difference between "swim" and "float"?

swim = a living thing moving through water

float = a living thing or inanimate object staying on the surface of water

100

to __ a picture (photography)

TAKE

100

What's the difference in how we use "so" and "such"?

"so" = thing + "be" + so + adjective --> this dog is so nice!

"such" = thing/indication + "be" + such + a/an + adjective + thing --> he/this is such a nice dog!


200

A word we use to describe sth that looked like news or a big discovery but was revealed to be fake:

a hoax

200

An adjective that describes sth or someone that is aggressively difficult, kind of like an enemy:

to be hostile

200

sth is unfair __ someone

TO / TOWARDS

200

Use the second conditional to transform and complete the prompt below:

I win the lottery --> I travel to...

If I won the lottery, I would travel to...

300

A verb that means "to prove sth isn't true, to reveal that it's a myth or a lie":

to debunk sth

300

A period of time during which sth is possible:

the window of time

300

to associate X __ Y

WITH

300

What's the difference between "must have" and "should have"?

must have = strong deduction about the past

should have = realised past mistake + see the correct option

400

A modern idiomatic expression that means "I'm going to theorise and speculate wildly, I'm going to sound crazy":

I'm going to put on my tin foil hat

400

A verb that means "to show respect and memory to someone or an important event":

to commemorate sth/someone

400

to be suspicious __ sth/someone

OF

400

Use the second conditional to transform these prompts (cause and effect):

I not have so much work --> I travel to...

If I didn't have so much work, I would travel to...

500

What is the name of a common psychological phenomenon where a lot of people remember sth incorrectly despite not being connected?

The Mandela Effect

(a lot of people all over the world have the incorrect "memory" of Nelson Mandela dying in prison)

500

A phrase that means "to do sth because you're fascinated with how disgusting/horribke/scary it appears":

to do sth out of morbid curiosity

500

to be __ the hospital

AT = visiting

IN = sick

500

What's the difference between "could have", "was supposed to" and "had to"?

could have = a deduction about the past / speculation about a diffetent outcome

was supposed to = an instruction/expectation in the past


had to = a need/order in the past

M
e
n
u