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Cómo estudiar sus tarjetas
Teclas de Derecha/Izquierda: Navegar entre tarjetas.tecla derechatecla izquierda
Teclas Arriba/Abajo: Colvea la carta entre frente y dorso.tecla abajotecla arriba
Tecla H: Muestra pista (3er lado).tecla h
Tecla N: Lea el texto en voz.tecla n
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106 Cartas en este set
- Frente
- Atrás
adventurer
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to attend
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ballon
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baseball
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to brush
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circus
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clown
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crab
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to discover
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drivig test
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entertainment
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envelope
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facts
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to fail
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to feed
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flower
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frigthtened
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golf
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ground
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gymnastics
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hammer
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handle
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hockey
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to introduce
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to invent
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judo
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noun [ U ] us uk /ˈdʒuːdəʊ/
a sport from Japan in which two people try to throw each other to the ground |
juggling
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nails
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throw
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verb [ T ] us uk /θrəʊ/ past tense threw, past participle thrown
THROUGH THE AIR A2 to make something move through the air by pushing it out of your hand: Amy threw the ball to the dog. He threw the book at the wall. [ + two objects ] Throw me a chocolate. How far can you throw? –Más ejemplos The trouble started after a group of drunken football fans started to throw bottles. She screwed the letter up and threw it in the bin. With a flick of her wrist, she threw the pebble into the water. She threw the stick for the dog to fetch. Protestors threw stones at the police. |
needle
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noun [ C ] us uk /ˈniːdl/
MEDICAL the thin, sharp, metal part of a piece of medical equipment used to take blood out of the body, or to put medicine or drugs in SEWING B2 a thin, pointed metal object with a small hole at one end for thread, used in sewing: a needle and thread MEASURING a thin, pointed piece of metal or plastic that moves to point to numbers on equipment used for measuring things → See also pins and needles |
net
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notepaper
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paint
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pins
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poetry
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pot
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to present
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racket
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refreshing
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safety (rules)
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sailing
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noun [ U ] us uk /ˈseɪlɪŋ/
A2 a sport using boats with sails: UK a sailing boat |
scissors
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sail
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verb us uk /seɪl/
TRAVEL [ I ] B1 to travel in a boat or a ship: We sailed to Malta. CONTROL BOAT [ I, T ] B1 to control a boat that has no engine and is pushed by the wind: I learned to sail when I was a child. She sailed the small boat through the storm. START JOURNEY [ I ] When a ship sails, it starts its journey, and if people sail from a particular place or at a particular time, they start their journey: This ship sails weekly from Florida to the Bahamas. |
seeds
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noun us uk /siːd/
B2 [ C, U ] a small round or oval object produced by a plant that a new plant can grow from: Sow the seeds (= plant them) near the surface. (the) seeds of sth the beginning of something: the seeds of hope/change → See also sesame seed |
ski /skiing
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verb [ I ] us uk /skiː/ present
participle skiing, past tense and past participle skied B1 to move over snow wearing skis |
skill
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to slide
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spade
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stamp
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table tennis
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to take up
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training
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tunnel
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watering can
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windsurfing
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workshop
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accident
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to ache
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ambulance
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aspirin
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benefit
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blood
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to consider
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to cure
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deaf
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deep
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dentist
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disease
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documentary
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to fall over
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flu
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noun [ U ] us uk /fluː/
B1 an illness like a very bad cold, that makes you feel hot and weak: I had the flu last week. |
get well
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grateful
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healthy
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hearing (aid)
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hospital
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hurt
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jog / jogging
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verb us uk /dʒɒɡ/ present
participle jogging, past tense and past participle jogged jog verb us uk /dʒɒɡ/ present participle jogging, past tense and past participle jogged RUN SLOWLY [ I ] B1 to run slowly for exercise: I jog through the park every morning. HIT GENTLY [ T ] to hit something gently by mistake: He jogged her arm. jog sb's memory to make someone remember something: They hoped the photographs would jog his memory. jog noun [ no plural ] Let's go for a jog. jogging noun [ U ] |
lifestyle
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to look (after)
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opportunity
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patient
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sickness
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sore throat
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stress
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to take care (of)
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toothache
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unhealthy
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valuable
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action (film)
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actor
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audience
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backig (group)
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camera
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channel
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characters
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chat room
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to clap
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clubbing
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to come up
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comedian
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commercial
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crew
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noun [ group ] us uk /kruː/
SHIP/AIRCRAFT B1 the people who work together on a ship, aircraft, or train: a crew member TEAM B2 a team of people with special skills who work together: Fire and ambulance crews were at the scene. |
curtain
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noun [ C ] us uk /ˈkɜːtən/
A2 a piece of material that hangs down to cover a window, stage, etc: to draw the curtains (= open or close them) The curtain goes up (= the performance starts) at 8 o'clock . |
dancer
delicious director disc jockey drummmer film critic interval interviewer lead (singer) lines performance pianist play plot pop group to practise presenter programme region reviews screen series singer soap opera (to be) sold out stage studio violinist wet communication confused to contact face-to-face fax letters misundestanding to pay attention to phone recent relaxed respect (for) screen skills word-processing |
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