This post gives some useful vocabulary about the topic "If You Could Master One New Skill Instantly"
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This post gives some useful vocabulary about the topic "If You Could Master One New Skill Instantly" |
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Topic site:https://zh.purasbar.com/post.php?t=33657
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Vocabulary List for Our Topic Nouns (Words for Things, Ideas, or People) Skill: The ability to do something well. Life: Your time and activities from when you are born until you die. Goal: Something you hope to do or achieve. Hobby: An activity you do for fun in your free time. Challenge: Something that is difficult to do. Time: The hours, minutes, and seconds we live in. Task: A piece of work, or a job you need to do. Problem: A difficult situation that needs to be solved. Way: A method, or how you do something. Tool: Something that helps you do a job (like a hammer or an app). Verbs (Action Words) To master: To learn something completely and perfectly. To learn: To get new knowledge or a new skill. To help: To make something easier or better for someone. To improve: To make something better, or to become better. To save: To keep something to use later (like time or money). To manage: To control or organize something. To cook: To prepare food. To fix: To repair something that is broken. To communicate: To share information with others by talking, writing, etc. To choose: To decide which thing you want. Adjectives (Words that Describe Things) New: Not old, recently made or learned. Useful: Helpful for doing a job. Easy: Not difficult, simple to do. Difficult: Not easy, hard to do. Fast: Quick, using very little time. Important: Having great value or meaning. Daily: Happening every day. Useful phrase: In an instant: Very quickly, in a moment. Helpful Phrases Get better at: To improve. Save time: To do something faster, so you have more free time. Make life easier: To reduce problems and difficulties in your day. For example: Used to give an example. Such as: Used to give examples. |
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Advanced Vocabulary List Nouns Acquisition: The process of gaining a new skill or knowledge. Proficiency: A high level of skill or ability in something. Efficiency: The ability to do something well without wasting time or energy. Productivity: The rate at which you complete useful work. Dexterity: Skill in using your hands with ease and coordination. Resilience: The ability to recover quickly from difficulties. Articulacy: The ability to express your ideas and thoughts clearly. Culinary: Related to cooking or the kitchen. Mindfulness: A mental state where you focus on the present moment. Automation: The use of technology to perform tasks without human effort. Verbs To Acquire: To get or learn something new. To Streamline: To make a process more efficient and simpler. To Optimize: To make something as effective or perfect as possible. To Attain: To succeed in achieving something after effort. To Leverage: To use something to its maximum advantage. To Decipher: To figure out something difficult or complex. To Mediate: To help two opposing sides to reach an agreement. To Navigate: To plan and direct a course, often through a complex situation. To Synthesize: To combine different ideas or information into a new whole. Adjectives Indispensable: Absolutely necessary; extremely useful. Versatile: Able to do many different things well. Cognitive: Related to mental processes like thinking, remembering, and learning. Practical: Useful and effective in real situations. Seamless: Smooth and continuous, without any noticeable changes or problems. Intuitive: Easy to understand or use without conscious thought. Holistic: Considering a whole system, rather than just its individual parts. Resourceful: Good at finding quick and clever ways to solve problems. Useful Phrases and Collocations Muscle memory: The ability to do a physical task automatically through repetition. Steep learning curve: Something that is very difficult to learn quickly. Second nature: Something you can do easily and automatically, without thinking. Streamline one's routine: To make your daily habits more efficient. Cognitive load: The total amount of mental effort being used. Acquire proficiency in: To become highly skilled at something. Leverage a skill: To use a skill to get a benefit or advantage. Optimize for efficiency: To make changes to get the best possible results with the least waste. |
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Advanced Vocabulary List (Postgraduate Level) Nouns Acquisition: The process of gaining possession or mastery of something. Automatization: The process of making a task automatic, requiring little conscious thought. Heuristic: A mental shortcut or practical method that is not guaranteed to be perfect, but is sufficient for reaching an immediate goal. Metacognition: The awareness and understanding of one's own thought processes. Neuroplasticity: The brain's ability to change and adapt throughout life by forming new neural connections. Precision: The quality of being exact, accurate, and meticulous. Proficiency: A high degree of competence or skill; expertise. Synergy: The interaction of elements that, when combined, produce a total effect greater than the sum of the individual elements. Virtuosity: Great skill in music or another artistic pursuit, but applicable to any skill performed with masterful ability. Verbs To Automatize: To make a process automatic. To Cultivate: To try to develop and improve something. To Internalize: To make attitudes, beliefs, or skills fully part of one's own understanding. To Optimize: To make the best or most effective use of a situation or resource. To Synthesize: To combine different ideas, influences, or pieces of information into a coherent whole. To Transcend: To go beyond the limits of ordinary experience or capability. Adjectives Ambidextrous: Literally, able to use both hands equally well; figuratively, very skillful and versatile. Cognitive: Relating to mental processes such as perception, memory, and judgment. Efficacious: Effective and producing the desired result. Epistemological: Relating to the theory of knowledge, particularly its methods, validity, and scope. Intuitive: Based on what feels to be true without conscious reasoning; understood immediately. Paradigmatic: Serving as a typical example or a clear model. Tacit: Understood or implied without being directly stated, as in tacit knowledge gained through experience. Useful Phrases and Conceptual Terms Cognitive load: The total amount of mental effort being used in working memory. Deliberate practice: A highly structured activity engaged in with the specific goal of improving performance. Kinesthetic intelligence: The ability to use one's body with great skill and to handle objects deftly. Learning curve: The rate of a person's progress in gaining experience or new skills. Mental model: An internal representation of how something works in the real world. Second-order effect: The indirect, less obvious consequences of an action or decision. Tacit knowledge: Personal, context-specific knowledge that is difficult to formalize or communicate. Transtheoretical model: A model of behavior change that assesses an individual's readiness to act on a new, healthier behavior. |