Lyrics & Translation
Key Vocabulary
| Vocabulary | Meanings |
|---|---|
|
take /teɪk/ A1 |
|
|
kill /kɪl/ B2 |
|
|
channel /ˈtʃænəl/ B1 |
|
|
vehicle /ˈviːhɪkəl/ B1 |
|
|
armored /ˈɑːr.mɚd/ B2 |
|
|
soft‑skinned /sɒft ˈskɪnd/ B2 |
|
|
threat /θrɛt/ B2 |
|
|
danger /ˈdeɪnʤər/ B1 |
|
|
instructions /ɪnˈstrʌkʃənz/ B2 |
|
|
target /ˈtɑːrɡɪt/ B1 |
|
|
passenger /ˈpæsɪnʤər/ B1 |
|
|
broadcast /ˈbrɔːdkæst/ B2 |
|
|
officer /ˈɒfɪsər/ B1 |
|
|
weapon /ˈwɛpən/ B1 |
|
|
understand /ˌʌndərˈstænd/ A2 |
|
|
copy /ˈkɒpi/ B2 |
|
|
operations /ˌɒpəˈreɪʃənz/ B2 |
|
“take, kill, channel” – got them all figured out?
⚡ Dive into vocabulary challenges in the app and lock in your knowledge right after jamming to ""
Key Grammar Structures
-
They're going to take him out.
➔ Future intention with 'be going to'
➔ The phrase "going to" is used to talk about plans or intentions that will happen in the future.
-
Who are they going to take out?
➔ Wh‑question with future "be going to"
➔ "Who" asks for the person affected, and "are they going to" forms the future‑time reference.
-
Tell him to get on channel 3 special ops.
➔ Imperative sentence with infinitive complement
➔ "Tell" is a command, and the infinitive "to get" shows what action should be performed.
-
Do you understand?
➔ Yes‑no question in simple present
➔ "Do" is the auxiliary verb used to form a question; "understand" is the main verb in present simple.
-
Is your vehicle armored or soft‑skinned?
➔ Alternative (either/or) question with the verb "to be"
➔ "Is" is the present form of "to be"; the question offers two possible descriptions: "armored" or "soft‑skinned".
-
I don't carry.
➔ Simple present negative statement
➔ "don't" is the contraction of "do not", used to make the verb "carry" negative in present simple.
-
What should I do?
➔ Modal verb "should" + base verb (advice)
➔ "should" expresses recommendation; it is followed by the base verb "do".
-
There's an active threat.
➔ Existential "there is" construction
➔ "There" acts as a dummy subject; "is" is the verb, and "an active threat" is the real subject complement.
-
From this moment on, I need you to follow my instructions the second I give them.
➔ Complex sentence with temporal clause, modal verb "need" + infinitive, and adverbial clause "the second I give them"
➔ "From this moment on" sets a starting point; "need" expresses necessity; "to follow" is the infinitive complement; "the second I give them" indicates the exact time of action.
Related Songs