Lyrics & Translation
Key Vocabulary
| Vocabulary | Meanings |
|---|---|
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invite /ɪnˈvaɪt/ B1 |
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crew /kruː/ A2 |
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humorous /ˈhjuːmərəs/ B2 |
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clearly /ˈklɪərli/ B1 |
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money /ˈmʌni/ A2 |
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bills /bɪlz/ A2 |
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remember /rɪˈmembər/ A2 |
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complicated /ˈkɒmplɪkeɪtɪd/ B2 |
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action /ˈækʃən/ A2 |
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sample /ˈsæmpl/ B1 |
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wins /wɪnz/ A2 |
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awesome /ˈɔːsəm/ A2 |
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joke /dʒoʊk/ A2 |
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rookie /ˈruːki/ B1 |
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crazy /ˈkreɪzi/ A2 |
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garden /ˈɡɑːrdən/ A1 |
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snail /sneɪl/ A1 |
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Key Grammar Structures
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I'm here to invite you to join our crew
➔ Present simple + infinitive of purpose
➔ The clause "to invite you to join our crew" uses the infinitive "to invite" to express purpose.
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you guys are you know kind of slow yes
➔ Present simple + discourse marker "you know"
➔ The phrase "you know" is a discourse marker that softens a statement: "you guys are ...".
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what are you doing now
➔ Present continuous question
➔ "are" + verb‑ing "doing" forms the present continuous to ask about an activity happening now.
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I'm gonna pretend that in here what I clearly just heard it heard what I didn't hear anything
➔ Future intention with "gonna" + past simple for reported speech
➔ "gonna" (going to) expresses a planned action; the clause "what I didn't hear anything" uses past simple for reported negativity.
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well then you better put your money where your mouth is
➔ Imperative with modal "better" (suggestion/obligation)
➔ "you better" is a colloquial imperative meaning "you should"; it urges immediate action.
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snails don't have money otherwise we'd be able to pay the bills
➔ Second conditional (if‑clause omitted)
➔ "otherwise we'd be able to..." shows an unreal present situation: if snails had money, they could pay the bills.
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remember your trash talk is needlessly complicated
➔ Imperative + present simple for advice
➔ "remember" is an imperative verb; the clause after it uses present simple to state a fact.
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it's time for action
➔ Idiomatic expression "it's time + noun/gerund"
➔ "it's time" is followed by a noun or gerund to indicate that the moment for something has arrived.
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let me get my calendar so I could time you
➔ Polite request with "let me" + modal "could" for purpose
➔ "let me" is used to ask for permission; "could" expresses a possible action in the future for the purpose of "timing".
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