Lyrics & Translation
Key Vocabulary
| Vocabulary | Meanings |
|---|---|
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obsessed en:/əbˈsɛst/ B2 |
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Nintendo en:/nɪnˈtɛndoʊ/ A2 |
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princess en:/ˈprɪnsɛs/ A1 |
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monster en:/ˈmɒnstər/ A2 |
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restart en:/riːˈstɑːrt/ B1 |
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hilarious en:/hɪˈlɛriəs/ B2 |
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wonderful en:/ˈwʌndərfəl/ B2 |
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typical en:/ˈtɪpɪkəl/ B2 |
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episode en:/ˈɛpɪsoʊd/ B1 |
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beat en:/biːt/ B1 |
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baseball en:/ˈbeɪsbɔːl/ A2 |
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powerful en:/ˈpaʊərfəl/ B2 |
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scream en:/skriːm/ B1 |
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terrified en:/ˈtɛrɪfaɪd/ B2 |
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oxygen en:/ˈɑːksɪdʒən/ B1 |
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mask en:/mæsk/ A2 |
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pressure en:/ˈprɛʃər/ B2 |
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cabin en:/ˈkæbɪn/ B1 |
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scared en:/skɛrd/ A2 |
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brave en:/breɪv/ A2 |
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Key Grammar Structures
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when mimo and I are playing video games
➔ Present Continuous for ongoing action
➔ The phrase uses the present continuous ("are playing") to describe an activity happening *now* or around the time of speaking. It emphasizes the ongoing nature of the gaming session. The pronoun 'I' is used with 'mimo' to indicate a shared activity.
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you're losing life points do something
➔ Imperative mood
➔ The sentence uses the imperative mood ("do something") to give a direct command. The contraction "you're" (you are) indicates the person being addressed. The phrase 'losing life points' functions as context for the urgency of the command.
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eat sht eat it
➔ Imperative mood (repeated for emphasis)
➔ This is a highly emphatic use of the imperative mood. Repeating the command ("eat it") intensifies the aggression and insult. The preceding phrase "eat sht" is vulgar slang.
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you going to cry
➔ Present Continuous used as a future question
➔ While grammatically incomplete (missing 'are'), the phrase uses the present continuous ("going to cry") to inquire about a future action. It's a rhetorical question intended to taunt or provoke.
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she's completely out of it with a cigarette burning her Knuckles
➔ Present Participle as an Adjective
➔ The phrase 'burning her knuckles' uses the present participle 'burning' to describe the state of the cigarette. It acts as an adjective modifying 'cigarette', providing vivid detail about the scene. 'Out of it' is an idiomatic expression meaning intoxicated or unconscious.
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