Lyrics & Translation
Key Vocabulary
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Key Grammar Structures
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I believe kids oughta stay
➔ Modal verb “ought to” (colloquial “oughta”) for giving advice or recommendation.
➔ The verb "oughta" (short for "ought to") shows the speaker’s recommendation: "I believe "kids" "oughta" "stay"."
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Turn off the screen, go climb a tree, get dirt on their hands
➔ Bare infinitive after the verb “go” used to express purpose (go + verb).
➔ The verbs "go" "climb" and "get" are bare infinitives showing what to do after turning off the screen: "go" "climb" "a tree".
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Cause nobody gets a second chance to make new old friends
➔ Zero conditional with present simple in both clauses (if omitted, “cause” = because).
➔ The clause "nobody gets a second chance" uses present simple to state a general truth; "cause" functions as "because" linking cause and effect.
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I believe most people are good
➔ Use of “most” as a determiner before a plural noun; simple present for general statements.
➔ "most" quantifies the noun: "most" "people" are good – a general truth expressed with the simple present "are".
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I believe most mama's oughta qualify for sainthood
➔ Possessive apostrophe with singular noun ending in “a” (mama’s); modal “ought to” for obligation.
➔ "mama's" shows possession (the qualities of a mother) and "oughta" (ought to) expresses a moral recommendation: "most" "mama's" "oughta" "qualify".
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I believe most Friday nights look better under neon or stadium lights
➔ Comparative structure “look better” + prepositional phrase “under …” for location.
➔ "look" + comparative adjective "better" describes a quality, and "under neon or stadium lights" tells where this improvement is noticed.
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I believe this world ain't half as bad as it looks
➔ Negative contraction “ain’t” for “is not”; comparative “half as … as” structure.
➔ "ain't" replaces "is not" in informal speech; "half as bad as it looks" uses the pattern "half as + adjective + as" to compare degree.
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If you just go by the nightly news, your faith in all mankind would be the first thing you lose
➔ Second conditional: if + past simple, would + base verb (unreal present/future).
➔ "If you just go by the nightly news" (past simple) sets up an unreal situation; "would be" shows the imagined result: "your faith ... would be the first thing you lose".
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And every breath's a gift the first one to the last
➔ Contraction "'s" for "is"; noun phrase with appositive "the first one to the last".
➔ "breath's" contracts "breath is"; the appositive "the first one to the last" further describes the gift, meaning from beginning to end.
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