English vocabulary B2 represents an upper-intermediate level, where learners can handle complex texts, discuss abstract topics, and express opinions clearly and in detail. It includes richer, more nuanced language for work, study, and fluent social interaction.
to assess – to judge or decide the amount, value, quality, or importance of something;
to assume – to accept something to be true without question or proof;
to acquire – /əˈkwaɪər/ to get or obtain something;
to award – to give money or a prize following an official decision;
to bother –
1.(make an effort)to make the effort to do something;
2. (worry)to make someone feel worried or upset;
to chase – to hurry after someone or something in order to catch him, her, or it;
to concern – /kənˈsɜːn/ – to be important to someone or to involve someone directly;
ex: Matters of pollution and the environment concern us all.
ex: What I have to say to Amy doesn’t concern you.
to cope – to deal successfully with a difficult situation
to disturb – / dɪˈstɜːb / – to interrupt what someone is doing;
to emerge – /ɪˈmɜːdʒ/ – to appear by coming out of something or out from behind something;
to envy /ˈen.vi/ to wish that you had something that another person has;
to estimate – to guess or calculate the cost, size, value, etc. of something
to expand – /ɪkˈspænd/ – to increase in size, number, or importance, or to make something increase in this way;
to establish – /ɪˈstæb.lɪʃ/ – to start a company or organization that will continue for a long time;
to deliberate – to think or talk seriously and carefully about something;
to gather – to collect several things, often from different places or people;
to justify – to give or to be a good reason for;
to query – to ask questions, especially in order to check if something is true or correct;
to preserve /prɪˈzɜːv/ – to keep something the same or prevent it from being damaged or destroyed;
examples: to preserve peace;
to preserve the environment;
to reckon – to think or believe;
to reflect – to think carefully, especially about possibilities and opinions;
to reveal – /rɪˈviːl/ – to give someone a piece of information that is surprising or that was previously secret;