Word of the Week: Fallen Leaves

“Please rake all the leaves in the yard into a pile.” In autumn, leaves fall off the trees and pile up all over the ground. If someone talks about raking up leaves, you know they mean the fallen leaves. If they say the leaves are pretty, they probably mean the leaves...

Phrase of the Week: It Wasn’t That Scary

Mom: “That haunted house sure was scary! Are you okay? Not too scared?” Daughter: “It wasn’t that scary! They weren’t real ghosts!” If something was less scary than we expected, or not as scary as someone said it would be, we say it wasn’t “that scary”. You can use...

TOEIC Practice Question of the Week

It appears we gave you the wrong flyers. We apologize for the _____. Fill in the blank. A. mix-up B. switch C. mismatch D. wrong Dは形容詞ですが他はみな似た意味ですね。「The flyers were...

Trivia of the Week: Zombies

Zombies are dead bodies that come back to life. Zombies are different depending on which scary story they appear in. Many zombies move slowly. They can lose arm and legs and not be affected. They chase people to eat their brains. If a zombie bites you, you become a...

Idiom of the Week: Waltz Off

“You can’t just waltz into the demon king’s castle! You have to level up first!” A waltz is a kind of dance, but we say “waltz off” or “waltz into (somewhere)” to mean someone walks in a care-free way. It is often used when the speaker thinks the waltzer should take...