cover of episode 39. BREXIT: All the Essential Vocabulary! (English Vocabulary Lesson)

39. BREXIT: All the Essential Vocabulary! (English Vocabulary Lesson)

2021/1/4
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Thinking in English

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Brexit. I’m sure you must have heard about Brexit at some point in the last four years, and the UK finally left the EU on January 1st 2020. I often get asked about Brexit by English students and foreign friends, and one of the biggest challenges people face is the vocabulary. It can be complicated, confusing, and full of political and economic jargon! So on this episode, I will introduce some of the key vocabulary that could help you to understand and read about Brexit!

TRANSCRIPT - https://thinkinginenglish.blog/2021/01/04/39-brexit-all-the-essential-vocabulary-english-vocabulary-lesson/)

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VOCABULARY LIST

Departure (n) - the act leaving somewhere, or an occasion when this happens

Our departure was delayed because of bad weather

Union (n) - the act or the state of being joined together

The debate on European political and monetary union continues

To coin (v) - to invent a new word or expression, or to use one in a particular way for the first time

Allen Ginsberg coined the term “flower power”

Divisive (adj) - used to describe something that causes great and sometimes unfriendly disagreement within a group of people

The Vietnam war was an extremely divisive issue in the US

To trigger (v) -  to cause something to start

Some people find that certain food trigger their headaches

To reach (v) - to achieve something after careful thought or discussion

After hours of discussion, the committee finally reached a decision

Tariff (n) - a charge for services or on goods entering a country

The US has imposed new tariffs on chocolate from Brazil

Regulation (n) - an official rule or the act of controlling something

New safety regulations have been brought in

contention (n) - the disagreement that results from opposing arguments

There’s a lot of contention about that issue - for every person firmly in favour, there’s someone fiercely against it


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