How to Learn New English Words Today Vocabulary Tips

Well hey there I’m Emma from mmmEnglish.

Today I’ve got four tips to help you learn new words and to expand

your active vocabulary.

Now we all know that

learning new words isn’t actually the hardest part,

it’s remembering them and then being able to use them correctly

in a sentence when the time comes.

This lesson is going to help you to unlock the words

that you’ve learnt but you don’t use

and give you the tools to maintain and retain that knowledge.

More importantly, I’ll show you how to do all of that in a way that

makes sense to you.

I’m really excited about this lesson. Let’s get started!

Have you ever been mid-sentence and found yourself completely

stuck? Trying to remember a word?

I know you have, we all have.

But then five minutes later when the moment’s completely passed,

you’re like

cabbage,

that was the word. Cabbage. I know that word.

So why can’t you recall that word when you actually need it?

I’ll tell you why, it’s because it’s part of your passive vocabulary.

It’s a word that you know but you never actually use yourself.

It’s not part of your active vocabulary.

So your active vocabulary are the words that you use regularly.

They pop into your head with ease,

you never have to worry about it.

So today the first thing I’m going to show you is how to make

your passive vocabulary active,

how to take advantage of the words that you do actually already

know but you just don’t use them enough to remember them.

Your active vocabulary is made up of the words that you use most.

And it’s also much smaller in size than your passive vocabulary  

and that’s totally normal. Even though English is my first language

my passive vocabulary is also so much greater

than my active vocabulary, it’s very normal.

This is what helps us to understand the meaning of the words

on the page or when you’re listening to someone talking

without actually really

understanding and being able to use those words ourselves.

But learning how to harness those words that make up our passive

vocabulary is a really good way to increase our active vocabulary

without actually having to learn completely new words, right?

These words are already in there somewhere.

How cool is that?

So I know you’re asking the question:

How do we do this? How do we get at those words?

Well we’ll have to start by doing a bit of research,

spending some time analysing the words that you use

and the ones that you don’t.

So you need to

get started with a notebook and start taking some notes.

Now this is going to take a little bit of time, okay? We can’t just

sit down and write a big list of all of the words of our

passive vocabulary. We’ve got to go looking for them,

we’ve got to be paying attention when we’re reading

or when we’re listening when someone else is talking

or we’re watching telly.

So you want to look out for the words that

you kind of know but you know that you don’t use very much.

You want to take those words from your passive vocabulary

and move them across to your active vocabulary.

So you write these words down. The next part is really simple.

Once you’ve got this list

pick just one word each day and focus on that word.

Focus on using that word and that means speaking and writing.

Some of the tips that I’m sharing today are going to inspire you

how to do this, all right?

So let’s say you’ve identified the word decline.

It’s in your passive vocabulary,

you already know that it’s a verb and that it means refuse,

it means to say no in a polite way.

But you don’t use it regularly yourself.

So the first thing you’ve got to do is practise using this verb

in context by writing a few sentences down yourself. Get creative.

I invited him to the party but he declined.

She declined my offer of help.

You can keep going until you start feeling like you’ve got

a few different examples and you know how to use this word.

Next thing is to start exploring. Google this word and then switch

over to the news tab. So you’ll find heaps of real world examples

of this word used in context. Write them down as well.

And this is also a really good chance to check for context.

Does this word actually have more than one meaning?

Yeah.

The verb decline also means to gradually become less

or worse or lower.

After all of those scandals,

the prime minister’s popularity has declined.

Now I know you can manage this. Spending just a few minutes

each day focusing on one word from your passive vocabulary.

By the end of the week, you’re gonna have seven brand new words

that you’ve shifted into your active vocabulary, right?

So this next tip is something that I’m really passionate about.

It’s something that’s going to help you in every aspect

of your language journey while you’re listening, you’re speaking,

your writing, your general understanding.

Your pronunciation, your grammar, your vocabulary, you name it,

it’s all there and I’m talking about creating an English bubble.

You might have heard people say that the best way to learn

a language is to actually go to a country where they speak it

and you’re surrounded by it, you’re living in that country.

Well that’s not always an option, especially right now.

But when you live in an English-speaking country, you are

immersed in the English language, right?

It’s all around you, you hear it all the time.

You see English all the time and you’re

forced to speak English often.

So when you can’t travel to an English-speaking country

then creating your own English language bubble

is the next best thing. You want to surround yourself,

immerse yourself in English. Now there are lots of easy ways

that you can do this okay? We’re very lucky in this day and age.

You can immerse yourself in an online English community,

show up there every day, be surrounded by activities, ideas

and people all communicating in English.

Now I’ve added links to a few different online communities,

English communities down below including mine

which is an online community for women learning English

and we meet and speak and practise and learn every day.

It’s about creating that bubble.

Now you can also be listening to the radio or podcast

so easily now. Listening to English in the background

while you’re tidying up, your cooking, you’re driving,

you’re walking, all of this is boosting

your passive vocabulary and training your ears to recognise

the sounds of English.

You can watch movies and TV shows to do this as well,

turn the subtitles off.

But just so you know you don’t have to watch the whole movie

in English without subtitles, just watch the first ten minutes,

write down any new words that you hear or

words that you want to look into a little bit more.

After that, put the subtitles back on if you need them and just

relax and enjoy the movie!

Another thing that you can do and you should be doing this

if you’re not already, change the language on your computer

or on your phone to English. It’s a really easy and effective way

to activate passive vocabulary because every time you’re on your

computer, you’re navigating and you’re practising lots of really

functional verbs in English to help you get familiar with them,

get comfortable with them.

You know, this is really functional language,

the kind of thing that you’re not going to get out of a textbook

but you’ve got the power to do this right in front of you.

You carry it with you all the time.

There are so many different ways that you can bring more English

into your life.

In fact, if you can think of some other ways

or other things that you can bring into your English bubble,

add them down in the comments below.

I’d love to hear your thoughts about that.

The most important thing is that each of these things

that you’re doing is something that’s

interesting and relevant to you.

That’s the most important thing because you’ve got to be

loving it, enjoying it, interested in it, right?

Find those things and bring them closer to you, bring them inside

your bubble.

My next tip is to use a really good English to English dictionary.

Don’t use a translator unless you really really have to okay.

Try to understand the meaning of a word or a phrase in English.

By doing this, again you’re exposing yourself to many more English

words than if you’re using a bilingual dictionary

or you’re translating you know using Google Translate.

I’ve shared links down in the description to my favourite online

dictionaries but I definitely love Cambridge English

learners dictionary. It’s an amazing resource. What I want to do

is help you to see some of the cool things that you can find

in this dictionary that you might not know about.

I’m going to show you how to make use of it.

So obviously we type in our word at the top,

straight away we can see that decline as a verb means to go down,

to gradually become less, worse or lower.

We can also see the phonemic script which helps us to understand

how we need to pronounce this word, how to say it clearly.

We can hear it in both British English and American English.

So you can listen to the pronunciation and practise out loud.

Move a little further down the page and you can see some

examples. So we can see how this verb is being used in context.

Watch out for some extra information

like right here we can see that the way that decline

is used in this sentence

is more formal. And down here we can expand

any of these tabs to get more information about this verb.

We can see some more example sentences, some synonyms.

Keep going, we can see some more examples

how declined has been used in lots of different ways,

what other words it’s often used with.

We can start to see the patterns here.

We’re looking for groups of words and phrases that relate

to declined. If we keep going down and we keep exploring,

we can see that decline

has a second meaning as a verb. It can mean refuse.

We can see it being used in the context of an idiom

and as a noun.

So there are so many amazing bits of information

and things that you can use to understand

how this word is being used.

Spending the time exploring and building on words

through a fantastic online dictionary will definitely help you to

improve your vocabulary and your ability to use new words

in context.

Now that you’ve created all of these amazing opportunities to learn

new words and new vocabulary,

you need to find a way to use it, right?

So this is hands down the best way to remember new words,

phrases and expressions, even grammar structures.

By using it yourself and to do it regularly.

One of my favourite ways to do this and ways that I recommend

to my students often is to write.

You only need to spend ten minutes a day doing this.

Find a regular time to do it to build that habit.

You know maybe while you’re having your morning coffee

or before you go to bed in the evening.

You can write a few sentences about what happened that day

or describe a dream that you had or write a list of all of the things

in your kitchen cupboard, for example.

This task is so versatile, you can really use it in so many ways.

You can use it to identify gaps in your knowledge or test yourself.

You know, look around your kitchen. Do you know the names of

all the items in your kitchen?

Can you describe that man you sat next to on the tram?

You know describe his personality or the personality

you think that he has.

So taking the time to actually produce sentences in English

by writing them down, this is the best way to help you remember

what you’re learning or find those gaps.

You know you’re using the language in a really meaningful way.

It’s making those connections in your brains and building  

association. Of course, you can memorise a word right but it

won’t actually help you to produce it when you need to.

You need context in order to make that word useful and relevant.

So practise, practise, practise, practise, practise, practise

every day, ten minutes a day. Honestly.

Write to me about it, share a comment down below,

a random story.

Tell me what’s in your fridge.

I don’t mind honestly, as long as you’re practising

that makes me so happy.

Okay you might be thinking

Emma that’s kind of daggy. Flashcards and post-it notes?

This is one of my favourite ways to learn and remember

tricky words or tricky grammar structures and collocations.

I think it’s something about physically writing down these ideas

and these words that helps to commit it to memory  

and it’s not just useful for vocabulary.

You can use this same method to learn collocations,

phrases, idioms even grammar points, I’ve found.

Physically sticking notes around your house helps you to

see them often and be reminded of them often.

And no I’m not talking about sticking a note on the fridge

that says fridge, I think we’re a little beyond that now, right?

So what I would suggest is that you write down multiple words,

phrases or even whole sentences that you want to learn.

For example, let’s look at decline here.

The first thing that I would say:

What words does it collocate with?

Write all of these words on your flashcard.

Write them together so you’re learning them together as a pattern.

Stick them around the house where you’re going to

see them often, you’re going to be reminded of them often.

Maybe you heard the perfect example of a sentence

in the past perfect continuous.

You heard it while you were listening to a podcast.

They had been waiting their whole lives for this moment.

Write that down, write it down.

Stick it to the outside of your shower screen

so you can memorise it while you’re washing your hair

or on your mirror while you’re brushing your teeth.

You stick these cards in places where you often spend some time

doing something else, you’re sort of stuck there.

Maybe at the kitchen sink while you’re doing the dishes

or next to the TV or next to your computer.

So by doing this, you’re just creating lots of little moments

of incidental learning all right?

You’re not sitting down to study

you’re just seeing it and you’re being reminded of it often

and it’s that repetition, that frequency

that makes things, words, ideas, collocations stick in your mind.

If you’re struggling with interested, you keep saying interested for

instead of interested in,

make it the screensaver on your computer

so that every time you come back to your desk you get reminded

that in goes with interested, interested in.

And I promise you it won’t be long before it becomes natural

and easy to say interested in.

You won’t even remember how you used to say it!

So there you have it! My tips to learn new words

and to expand your active vocabulary.

Maybe some of the ideas I shared here today are useful for you.

Maybe some of them aren’t.

Maybe you use your own strategies already

to learn new vocabulary.

Tell me about them down in the comments,

you know that I love to hear from you there.

Of course, there are lots of language videos on the

mmmEnglish channel, lots of vocabulary, grammar,

pronunciation, speaking videos.

Here are a couple of my favourites that I think you’ll like.

I will see you in there.

Bye for now!

嘿嘿,我是 mmmEnglish 的 Emma。

今天我有四个技巧可以帮助你学习新单词并扩大

你的活跃词汇量。

现在我们都知道,

学习新单词实际上并不是最难的部分,

而是记住它们,然后

在时机成熟时能够在句子中正确使用它们。

本课程将帮助您解开

已学但未使用的单词,

并为您提供维护和保留这些知识的工具。

更重要的是,我将向您展示如何以对您有意义的方式完成所有这些工作

我对这节课感到非常兴奋。 让我们开始吧!

您是否曾经在句子中间发现自己完全

卡住了? 试图记住一个词?

我知道你有,我们都有。

但是五分钟后,当这一刻完全过去时,

你就像

卷心菜一样

,就是这个词。 卷心菜。 我知道那个词。

那么,当你真正需要它时,为什么你不能回忆起那个词呢?

我会告诉你为什么,因为它是你被动词汇的一部分。

这是一个你知道但你从未真正使用过自己的词。

它不是你活跃词汇的一部分。

因此,您的活跃词汇是您经常使用的词汇。

它们很容易出现在您的脑海中,

您永远不必担心。

所以今天我要向你展示的第一件事是如何让

你的被动词汇变得活跃,

如何利用你实际上已经

知道但你没有足够使用它们来记住它们的单词。

您的活跃词汇由您最常用的单词组成。

而且它的大小也比你的被动词汇小得多

,这是完全正常的。 尽管英语是我的第一语言,但

我的被动词汇量也

比我的主动词汇量大得多,这很正常。

这有助于我们理解页面上单词的含义,

或者当您在听某人说话时

我们自己并没有真正理解并能够使用这些单词。

但是学习如何利用那些构成我们被动

词汇的单词是增加我们的主动词汇量的好方法,

而无需真正学习全新的单词,对吧?

这些话已经在某个地方。

多么酷啊?

所以我知道你在问这个问题:

我们如何做到这一点? 我们如何理解这些词?

好吧,我们必须先做一些研究,

花一些时间分析您使用的单词和不使用的单词

因此,您需要

开始使用笔记本并开始做一些笔记。

现在这需要一点时间,好吗? 我们不能只是

坐下来写下我们被动词汇中所有单词的大清单

。 我们必须去寻找它们,

当我们阅读时,

或者当我们在听别人说话

或看电视时,我们必须保持注意力。

因此,您要注意那些

您知道但您知道自己不经常使用的词。

你想从你的被动词汇中提取这些词,

并将它们转移到你的主动词汇中。

所以你把这些话写下来。 下一部分非常简单。

获得此列表后,

每天只选择一个词并专注于该词。

专注于使用这个词,这意味着说和写。

我今天分享的一些技巧会启发你

如何做到这一点,好吗?

因此,假设您已经确定了“拒绝”这个词。

它在你的被动词汇中,

你已经知道它是一个动词,它意味着拒绝,

它意味着以礼貌的方式说不。

但是您自己并不经常使用它。

所以你要做的第一件事就是

通过自己写几句话来练习在上下文中使用这个动词。 发挥创意。

我邀请他参加聚会,但他拒绝了。

她拒绝了我的帮助。

你可以继续下去,直到你开始觉得你

有几个不同的例子并且你知道如何使用这个词。

接下来就是开始探索了。 谷歌这个词,然后

切换到新闻标签。 因此,您会发现

在上下文中使用该词的大量真实示例。 把它们也写下来。

这也是检查上下文的好机会。

这个词实际上有多个含义吗?

是的。

动词下降也意味着逐渐变得更少

或更糟或更低。

在所有这些丑闻之后

,总理的声望下降了。

现在我知道你可以做到这一点。 每天只花几分钟

专注于被动词汇中的一个词。

到本周末,您将有七个全新的单词

转移到您的活跃词汇中,对吗?

所以下一个技巧是我非常热衷的事情。

当您在听、说、写和一般理解时,它会在您的语言之旅的各个方面为您提供帮助

你的发音,你的语法,你的词汇,你的名字,

这一切都在那里,我说的是创造一个英语泡泡。

您可能听说过人们说,学习

一门语言的最佳方式是去一个他们说这种语言的国家,

而你被它所包围,你就生活在那个国家。

好吧,这并不总是一种选择,尤其是现在。

但是当你生活在一个说英语的国家时,你会

沉浸在英语中,对吧?

它就在你身边,你一直都能听到。

你总是看到英语,你

被迫经常说英语。

因此,当您无法前往说英语的国家/地区时,

创建您自己的英语泡泡

是下一个最好的选择。 你想包围自己,

沉浸在英语中。 现在有很多简单的

方法可以做到这一点,好吗? 在这个时代,我们非常幸运。

您可以沉浸在在线英语社区中,

每天都出现在那里,被各种活动、想法

和用英语交流的人所包围。

现在我添加了几个不同的在线社区的链接,

下面的英语社区包括我的

,这是一个女性学习英语的在线社区

,我们每天见面、说话、练习和学习。

这是关于创造那个泡沫。

现在,您现在也可以如此轻松地收听广播或播客

了。

在你收拾东西、做饭、开车、

走路时在后台听英语,所有这些都在增加

你的被动词汇量,并训练你的耳朵识别

英语的声音。

您也可以观看电影和电视节目来执行此操作,

关闭字幕。

但是为了让您知道,您不必

在没有字幕的情况下用英语观看整部电影,只需观看前十分钟,

写下您听到的任何新单词或

您想进一步研究的单词。

之后,如果您需要字幕,请重新打开字幕,然后

放松并欣赏电影!

你可以做的另一件事,如果你还没有这样做,你应该这样做

,将计算机

或手机上的语言更改为英语。 这是激活被动词汇的一种非常简单有效的

方法,因为每次你在

电脑上时,你都在导航,你正在练习许多真正

实用的英语动词,以帮助你熟悉它们,

适应它们。

你知道,这是一种真正的函数式语言

,那种你不会从教科书中学到的东西,

但你有能力在你面前做到这一点。

你随身携带它。

有很多不同的方式可以让您将更多的英语

带入您的生活。

事实上,如果你能想到一些其他方法

或其他东西可以带入你的英语泡泡,

请将它们添加到下面的评论中。

我很想听听你对此的看法。

最重要的是

,您正在做的每一件事都是

有趣且与您相关的事情。

这是最重要的事情,因为你必须

热爱它、享受它、对它感兴趣,对吧?

找到那些东西,让它们离你更近,把它们带到

你的泡泡里。

我的下一个提示是使用一本非常好的英英词典。

不要使用翻译器,除非你真的必须没事。

试着理解一个单词或一个短语在英语中的意思。

通过这样做,与

使用双语词典

或使用 Google 翻译进行翻译相比,您再次接触到更多的英语单词。

我在描述中分享了我最喜欢的在线

词典的链接,但我绝对喜欢剑桥英语

学习者词典。 这是一个了不起的资源。 我想要做的

是帮助你看到一些你可以

在这本词典中找到但你可能不知道的很酷的东西。

我将向您展示如何使用它。

所以很明显,我们在顶部输入我们的单词,

我们可以立即看到作为动词的衰落意味着下降

,逐渐变得更少、更差或更低。

我们还可以看到音位文字,它可以帮助我们

理解我们需要如何发音这个词,如何清楚地说出来。

我们可以在英式英语和美式英语中听到它。

因此,您可以听发音并大声练习。

将页面向下移动一点,您可以看到一些

示例。 所以我们可以看到这个动词是如何在上下文中使用的。

注意一些额外的信息,

就像这里我们可以看到,

这句话中使用下降的方式

更正式。 在这里,我们可以展开

这些标签中的任何一个,以获取有关此动词的更多信息。

我们可以看到更多的例句,一些同义词。

继续往下看,我们可以看到更多示例,它是

如何以多种不同方式使用的,

以及它经常与哪些其他词一起使用。

我们可以开始看到这里的模式。

我们正在寻找与拒绝相关的单词和短语组

。 如果我们继续往下走,我们继续探索,

我们可以看到下降

作为动词有第二个含义。 这可能意味着拒绝。

我们可以看到它被用于成语和名词的上下文中

因此,您可以使用许多令人惊奇的信息

和事物来

了解该词的使用方式。

花时间

通过出色的在线词典探索和构建单词肯定会帮助

您提高词汇量和在上下文中使用新单词的能力

既然您已经创造了所有这些学习

新单词和新词汇的绝佳机会,

您需要找到一种使用它的方法,对吗?

因此,这是记住新单词、

短语和表达,甚至是语法结构的最佳方式。

通过自己使用并定期进行。

我最喜欢的方法之一以及

我经常向学生推荐的方法是写作。

你只需要每天花十分钟来做这件事。

找一个固定的时间来养成这种习惯。

您可能会在早上喝咖啡时

或晚上睡觉前知道。

例如,您可以写几句话来描述那天发生的事情,

或者描述您的梦想,或者写下

厨房橱柜中所有物品的清单。

这项任务用途广泛,您可以通过多种方式真正使用它。

您可以使用它来识别您的知识差距或测试自己。

你知道的,看看你的厨房。 你知道

厨房里所有物品的名称吗?

你能描述一下你在电车上坐在旁边的那个人吗?

您知道描述他的个性或

您认为他具有的个性。

因此,花时间通过写下来实际生成英语句子

,这是帮助您记住

所学内容或找到这些差距的最佳方法。

您知道您正在以一种非常有意义的方式使用该语言。

它在你的大脑中建立这些联系并建立

联系。 当然,您可以正确记住一个单词,但它

实际上并不能帮助您在需要时产生它。

您需要上下文才能使该词有用且相关。

所以练习,练习,练习,练习,练习,每天练习,

每天十分钟。 诚实地。

写信给我,在下面分享评论,

一个随机的故事。

告诉我你的冰箱里有什么。

老实说,我不介意,只要你在练习

,这让我很开心。

好吧,你可能会认为

艾玛有点笨拙。 抽认卡和便利贴?

这是我最喜欢的学习和记住

复杂单词或复杂语法结构和搭配的方法之一。

我认为把这些想法

和这些词写下来有助于记忆

,这不仅仅是对词汇有用。 我发现,

你可以使用同样的方法来学习搭配、

短语、习语甚至语法点。

在你的房子周围贴上纸条可以帮助你

经常看到它们并经常被提醒。

不,我不是在说在冰箱上贴一张纸条

,上面写着冰箱,我想我们现在有点超出了,对吧?

所以我建议你写下

你想学习的多个单词、短语甚至整个句子。

例如,让我们看看这里的下降。

我要说的第一件事:

它与什么词搭配?

在您的抽认卡上写下所有这些单词。

把它们写在一起,这样你就可以把它们作为一个模式一起学习。

把它们贴在你会

经常看到它们的房子周围,你会经常想起它们。

也许你听过完美

的过去完美连续句的例子。

您在收听播客时听到了它。

他们一生都在等待这一刻。

写下来,写下来。

把它贴在淋浴屏的外面,

这样你就可以在洗头时记住它,

或者在刷牙时把它放在镜子上。

你把这些卡片贴在你经常花一些时间

做其他事情的地方,你有点卡在那里。

也许在你洗碗的时候在厨房水槽

旁,或者在电视旁边或电脑旁边。

所以通过这样做,你只是在创造很多

附带学习的小时刻,好吗?

你不是坐下来学习

你只是看到它,你经常被提醒它

,正是这种重复,那种频率

让事情、单词、想法、搭配牢牢地留在你的脑海中。

如果你在兴趣中挣扎,你会一直说有兴趣

而不是感兴趣,

让它成为你电脑上的屏幕保护程序,

这样每次你回到办公桌前都会提醒你

感兴趣,感兴趣。

我保证 用不了多久,它就会变得很自然

,很容易说出来感兴趣。

你甚至不会记得你以前是怎么说的!

所以你有它! 我学习新单词

和扩大活跃词汇量的技巧。

也许我今天在这里分享的一些想法对你有用。

也许其中一些不是。

也许您已经使用自己的策略

来学习新词汇。

在评论中告诉我他们,

你知道我喜欢在那里收到你的来信。

当然,mmmEnglish 频道上有很多语言视频

,很多词汇、语法、

发音、口语视频。

以下是我认为您会喜欢的一些我的最爱。

我会在那里见到你。

暂时再见!