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Navigate Intermediate Wordlist Unit 11 PDF

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
442 views

Navigate Intermediate Wordlist Unit 11 PDF

Uploaded by

joel zapana
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Name

Intermediate Wordlist Unit 11

Here is a list of useful or new words from Unit 11 of Navigate Intermediate Coursebook. You can insert your own translation.
Words marked with a key ( ) all appear in the Oxford 3000.
adj = adjective conj = conjunction phr v = phrasal verb phr = phrase pron = pronoun
adv = adverb n = noun pl = plural prep = preposition v = verb

arrest   v  /əˈrest/ The police are close to arresting him.


bandit  n  /ˈbændɪt/ They call him the ‘barefoot bandit’.
barefoot  adj  /ˈbeəfʊt/ He’s known as the ‘barefoot bandit’, as he often carries out his
robberies with no shoes on.
blog  v  /blɒɡ/ It led to people blogging or tweeting about the issue.
burglar  n  /ˈbɜːɡlə(r)/ A burglar was caught on Friday night, after getting stuck in a
bathroom window.
burglary  n  /ˈbɜːɡləri/ His burglaries have terrified local residents.
candidate   n  /ˈkændɪdət/ They should’ve given him the job anyway if he was the best
candidate.
capture   v  /ˈkæptʃə(r)/ The police have been trying to capture 19-year-old Cotton
Harris-Moore for nearly two years.
careless   adj  /ˈkeələs/ I thought it was very careless and unpleasant of him.
change   v  /tʃeɪndʒ/ The school buildings have changed very little since I was at
school.
consequence   n  /ˈkɒnsɪkwəns/ The idea of unintended consequences is an important one in
politics and economics.
crash-land  v  /kræʃ ˈlænd/ That didn’t stop him from crash-landing in the sea.
criminal   n  /ˈkrɪmɪnl/ There are examples of criminals who actually did some good.
cyberbullying  n  /ˈsaɪbəˌbʊliɪŋ/ This can therefore result in a careless or unpleasant tweet, or
at worst, cyberbullying.
delay   n  /dɪˈleɪ/ I apologize for the delay in replying.
escape   v  /ɪˈskeɪp/ He escaped from prison.
extension   n  /ɪkˈstenʃn/ It would have been better to ask for an extension earlier.
fine   n  /faɪn/ The doctor made the patients pay a fine if they missed an
appointment.
illegally  adv  /ɪˈliːɡəli/ They entered the building illegally.
inconvenience  n  /ˌɪnkənˈviːniəns/ I apologize for the inconvenience.
issue   n  /ˈɪʃuː/ I have had some problems completing work in the last month
due to family issues.
insult   v  /ɪnˈsʌlt/ They are more likely to insult each other when the
communication is not face-to-face.
interaction  n  /ˌɪntərˈækʃn/ More than half of the 2,000 people surveyed said that they felt
social media had replaced face-to-face interaction.
light   n  /laɪt/ Please can you turn on the light. It’s very dark in here.
match   n  /mætʃ/ Are you going to watch the match this evening?
nasty  adj  /ˈnɑːsti/ More than a quarter (26%) admitted they have said something
nasty on a social media website.
outlaw  n  /ˈaʊtlɔː/ The outlaw became an internet sensation.
passionate  adj  /ˈpæʃənət/ They felt passionate about it.
permission   n  /pəˈmɪʃn/ The DVDs were taken without permission.
prison   n  /ˈprɪzn/ He is in prison.

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Name

Intermediate Wordlist Unit 11

punishment   n  /ˈpʌnɪʃmənt/ The court will decide on his punishment later today.
regret   v  /rɪˈɡret/ More than a quarter of all users of Twitter and other social
networking sites send messages they later regret.
reportedly  adv  /rɪˈpɔːtɪdli/ He had reportedly taught himself to fly, using information he
found on the internet.
rob   v  /rɒb/ They were planning to rob the bank.
robber  n  /ˈrɒbə(r)/ The robber is known to the police.
say (something) to (someone’s) face  phr  Online, people are more likely to say something rude or nasty
/seɪ (ˌsʌmθɪŋ) tə (ˌsʌmwʌns) ˈfeɪs/ that they would never say to someone’s face.
sensation  n  /senˈseɪʃn/ He became an internet sensation, with a Facebook fan page
collecting thousands of ‘likes’.
sentence   v  /ˈsentəns/ He was sentenced to seven years in prison.
spare   adj  /speə(r)/ I thought it would be good to offer her my spare ticket.
speak up  phr v  /spiːk ˈʌp/ Nearly two in five people said they used social media to speak
up about something.
square   n  /skweə(r)/ Let’s meet in the town square this afternoon.
stolen  adj  /ˈstəʊlən/ He escaped by flying a stolen plane all the way from Indiana to
the Bahamas.
stop (someone) from (doing)  phr  That didn’t stop him from crash-landing in the sea.
/stɒp (ˌsʌmwən) frəm (ˈduːɪŋ)/
submission  n  /səbˈmɪʃn/ Please accept my apologies for the late submission of this
term’s work.
suspect   v  /səˈspekt/ He is suspected of more than 100 thefts in the United States
and Canada.
theft  n  /θeft/ There have been a lot of thefts recently.
thief   n  /θiːf/ The thief was caught by the police earlier this morning.
unfashionable  adj  /ʌnˈfæʃnəbl/ The problem is that wearing crash helmets is very ‘uncool’ or
unfashionable.
unintended  adj  /ˌʌnɪnˈtendɪd/ The idea of unintended consequences is an important one in
politics and economics.
unprofessional  adj  /ˌʌnprəˈfeʃənl/ Now my boss thinks I’m really unprofessional.
upload  v  /ˌʌpˈləʊd/ I was uploading a different video and accidentally clicked on
this video, too.
upset   v  /ʌpˈset/ I didn’t mean to upset you.
victim   n  /ˈvɪktɪm/ None of his victims were actually injured.
violence   n  /ˈvaɪələns/ The thieves used unnecessary violence.

Photocopiable © Oxford University Press 2019 2

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