0% found this document useful (0 votes)
504 views2 pages

Navigate Intermediate Wordlist Unit 11 PDF

Uploaded by

joel zapana
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
504 views2 pages

Navigate Intermediate Wordlist Unit 11 PDF

Uploaded by

joel zapana
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 2

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.

Photocopiable © Oxford University Press 2019 1


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

You might also like