The correct collocation is "Peace and quiet," which is a phrase that describes a state of tranquility, free from noise or disturbances.
Vocabulary for B1/Intermediate
- Opinion & argument: I believe, in my opinion, it depends on, although, however
- Abstract concepts: opportunity, responsibility, environment, relationship
- Emotions refined: disappointed, frustrated, relieved, grateful (not just happy/sad)
- Wider phrasal verbs: come up with, look forward to, get along with
B1 vocabulary = ~2,500–4,000 words. Opinion language, abstract nouns, news vocabulary, refined emotions, more phrasal verbs. The level where small talk becomes real conversation.
Focus: discourse markers (however, although, therefore), opinion verbs (believe, consider, assume), and the abstract nouns that let you discuss ideas, not just things.
Vocabulary
- A1: ~500–800 words (survival: family, food, numbers)
- A2: ~1,500–2,500 (routine: work, leisure, basic phrasal verbs)
- B1: ~2,500–4,000 (opinions, news, abstract topics)
- B2: ~4,000–6,000 (register precision, hedging, idioms)
- C1: ~6,000–10,000 (academic, register sensitivity)
- C2: 10,000+ (literary, rare, full style range)
Vocabulary covers word-level practice: individual words, collocations, phrasal verbs, idioms. Organised by CEFR level. Grammar tells you HOW to build sentences; vocabulary gives you WHAT to put in them.
Collocations
- ✅ make a decision — ❌ do a decision
- ✅ strong coffee — ❌ powerful coffee
- ✅ heavy rain — ❌ strong rain
- ✅ highly unlikely — ❌ very unlikely (grammatical, but less natural)
Collocations are word pairs that English habitually puts together. Both options may be grammatically valid, but one sounds native and the other doesn't.
Pattern: there's no logic to predict them — you make decisions but do homework, you have strong coffee but heavy rain. They must be learned as chunks, not deduced from rules.
Easy
- She is a teacher. — one verb form, one rule
- I have two cats. — basic possession, short sentence
- He doesn't like coffee. — simple negation with do-support
- Only one answer is clearly correct; distractors are obviously wrong.
Easy marks beginner-level challenges: A1–early A2, one rule at a time, everyday vocabulary, no trick questions.
Use "Easy" when you want to build confidence on a specific rule without interference from other grammar or tricky contexts.