The correct collocation is "Fast food," which refers to food that can be prepared and served quickly, often in a restaurant or takeout setting.
Collocations
Collocation vs idiom: both are fixed expressions, but collocations are transparent (you can guess the meaning from the words: heavy rain = a lot of rain), while idioms are opaque (kick the bucket ≠ literally kick anything). Collocations are about which words pair naturally; idioms are about hidden meaning.
Collocations are habitual word combinations: make a decision, strong coffee, take a shower. Grammar allows alternatives, but fluency demands the conventional pairing.
Diagnostic: if the meaning is clear but the combination sounds "off" to native ears (do a mistake instead of make a mistake) — it's a collocation issue.
Vocabulary for A2/Elementary/Pre-Intermediate
A2 vs B1 vocabulary: A2 handles routine situations (shopping, directions, small talk). B1 adds opinion and abstract language (I believe, unfortunately, it depends on). The jump is from concrete/social to abstract/argumentative. If you can describe your weekend but can't discuss the news → you're at A2.
A2 vocabulary = ~1,500–2,500 words. Work, leisure, routine social interactions, basic phrasal verbs, common collocations.
Diagnostic: can you handle small talk and routine social situations? Yes → A2. Can you discuss opinions, news, and abstract topics? No → need B1 vocabulary.
Vocabulary
Vocabulary vs grammar: grammar is the system of rules for combining words. Vocabulary is the stock of words themselves. You can have perfect grammar and still sound limited if your word stock is narrow (good instead of outstanding/remarkable/decent). Most fluency-feel above B1 comes from vocabulary breadth, not grammar complexity.
Vocabulary = word-focused learning: words, collocations, phrasal verbs, idioms, across CEFR A1–C2.
Diagnostic: can you express the idea but it sounds "flat" or overly simple? → vocabulary issue. Can't construct the sentence at all? → grammar issue.
A2 | Elementary | Pre-intermediate
A2 vs B1: A2 handles routine transactions and simple past narration. B1 handles connected discourse, explaining reasons, and understanding main points in clear standard speech. If you can tell what happened but not why it matters, you're still A2.
A2 is the elementary level of the CEFR: past simple, present perfect, first conditional, basic modals, and routine communication about familiar topics.
Diagnostic: can you link ideas with because, although, so that and hold a conversation beyond scripted topics? No → A2. Yes → moving into B1.
Easy
Easy vs Medium vs Hard: Easy = one rule, obvious answer, A1–A2. Medium = one rule but realistic distractors, A2–B1. Hard = interacting rules, edge cases, B2+. Start Easy to check you have the basics before moving up.
The Easy tag filters for single-rule, short-sentence, common-vocabulary challenges designed for beginners or for anyone wanting a confidence check on fundamentals.
Diagnostic: if you get Easy questions wrong, stay here — your foundations need work. If they feel trivial, move to Medium.