A collocation is two or more words that go together naturally.
Learning collocations is essential for making your English sound fluent and natural!
Today we'll learn 50 English collocations with the words big, great, large, deep, strong, and heavy. These words all seem rather similar, but they are used in DIFFERENT combinations of words.
WOW, those were a LOT of collocations – are you ready to see how well you learned them? Click here to take a quiz!
It’s so important to practice and review what you’re learning, and that’s why every lesson in my 1000 collocations e-book also has a quiz.
Each lesson in the e-book only takes about 10 minutes a day, so you can learn a lot of English in little time.
Which is right: FACE problems or FACE WITH problems?
CALL someone or CALL TO someone?
IN a long time or FOR a long time?
What's the rule for verb + infinitive or -ING form?
Difference between the GROUND floor and the FIRST floor?
Why can't we say "I'm going to home"?
How can I pronounce -STS at the end of words?
What's the difference between CLEVER, SMART, and WISE?
Why do people say "a beer" and "a coffee" if those are uncountable?
What does it mean to "take someone for granted"?
What's the difference between INCOMING and UPCOMING?
How do we pronounce acronyms in English?
What's the difference between a COOK and a CHEF?
I will travel, I am traveling, or I will be traveling?
Should we say IN the end or AT the end?
Can you end a sentence with a preposition in English?
Is LOOK an action verb or a state verb?
How to pronounce words starting with CON-?
What's the difference between RARE & SCARCE?
How well do YOU know prepositions?
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