 2. Test your English vocabulary. Daily activities. How well do you know English vocabulary words? This video lesson will test your knowledge of words and phrases about common daily activities. Note, this lesson is mostly for lower level students. For higher levels, see the links below. Here are some activities you might do every day. When you see the picture, say the English words for them. For example, you will see a picture like this. You will say, drive a car. Ready? Let's begin. Pictures 1 through 4. 1, 2, 3, 4. Wake up. Take a shower. Eat breakfast. Brush my teeth or brush your teeth. Notes on vocabulary words and phrases. Get up and wake up. What's the difference? Wake up means when you open your eyes after sleeping in the morning. You're still in bed. Get up means you get out of the bed. Take a shower and take a bath. Take a shower, you're standing and letting the water spray all over your body. With taking a bath, you are sitting in a bathtub and washing your body that way. Look at the picture on the right. The bathtub is the thing in the back of that picture. Eat breakfast and have breakfast. With eat breakfast, you're focusing on the food. With have breakfast, you're focusing on the experience, maybe of being together with your family, sitting around the table or reading the newspaper and watching television while you're having breakfast. Brush my, your, his, or her teeth. We seldom say brush teeth by itself. We almost always put a pronoun in between brush and teeth. For example, brush my teeth, brush your teeth, brush his teeth, brush her teeth. Other words and phrases like this. Brush your teeth, wash your face, wash your hands, wash your hair, dry your hair, brush your hair, comb your hair, tie your shoes. More daily activities, five through eight. Picture five, picture six, seven, eight. Have coffee or drink coffee. Remember what we said about this. Drink is about the beverage itself. Drink coffee. Have is about the whole experience, maybe sitting down with your friends and enjoying the coffee. Ride the bus or take the bus. Go to work or go to the office. Go to school or go to class. Other words like these. Take the subway, metro, or train. The words here may depend on the city or area that you are in. For example, in New York they usually say take the subway. In the Washington D.C. area they say take the metro. In Chicago they might say take the train. More notes on this. Get on the bus or get off the bus. Get in the car or get out of the car. What's the difference here? With get on and get off, you walk on. When you enter the bus, you are standing. With get in and get out of, when you enter the vehicle, you have to bend your body down to get in. More words and phrases. These are related to school. Nine, ten, eleven, and twelve. What are they? Take a class or go to class. Take a class is more general. Something you do the whole semester. For example, I'm taking a biology class this semester. Go to class is something you do every day. I go to my biology class every day at nine o'clock. Study. Take a test or take a quiz. A test is usually longer and has more points than a quiz. Do schoolwork. There are different types of schoolwork. In class you might listen to a lecture, read a book or read a textbook, watch a video, have a discussion, or work on a project. Out of class, you do homework or do your homework. More words and phrases. Thirteen to sixteen are related to work in the office or at a company. There are many different kinds of work but we'll focus on office work here. Picture thirteen. Picture fourteen. Picture fifteen. Picture sixteen. There are many answers for these so your answers might be a little bit different from mine. Meet clients or customers. Have a meeting. Work together or collaborate. Write a report or do a report. Other activities at school or work. Seventeen to twenty. Again you may have other ideas on what these are. Seventeen. Eighteen. Nineteen. Twenty. Have lunch. Take a break. Get out of school or get out of class. Finish work. After work or school. Pictures twenty-one through twenty-four. Twenty-one. Twenty-two. Twenty-three. Twenty-four. Come home or get home. Go to the store or go to the supermarket. Sometimes we say go shopping. Work on a computer. Serve the internet. Clean the house. At home. Pictures twenty-five through twenty-eight. Twenty-five. Twenty-six. Twenty-seven. Twenty-eight. Have dinner or have supper. Spend time with family. Relax. He's reading a magazine to relax. Go to bed or go to sleep. Go to bed means when you get into bed. Go to sleep or sleep means when you close your eyes and start sleeping. Let's practice the words you learned. Talk about your daily routine. What do you do every day? In the morning, I think of the vocabulary words. In the daytime, I, what are some things you do in the daytime? In the evening, I, do what? Pause the video and take as much time as you'd like to talk about these things. Next exercise. Make a daily schedule of your activities. Then, have a conversation with a partner about your own activities or his or her schedule. For example, what do you do at nine o'clock a.m.? Or, what time do you, at seven o'clock, I wake up, then I get up, take a shower, and have breakfast? What do you do at seven o'clock in the morning? Take as much time as you'd like to talk about your daily activities. You can pause the video for this. What are some specific things you do every day? For example, what are some things you do at home? What are some specific things you do at school? What do you do at the office? Again, you can stop the video and talk to other people about this. Review what you learned. Here are the vocabulary words and phrases from this lesson. As you repeat them, picture the activity in your mind. Typical morning activities. Wake up. Get up. Take a shower. Take a bath. Eat breakfast. Have breakfast. Drink coffee. Have coffee. Brush your teeth. Wash your face. Wash your hands. Wash your hair. Dry your hair. Brush your hair. Comb your hair. Tie your shoes. Going to work or school. Take the bus. Take the metro. Take the subway. Take the train. Take a class. Go to class. Go to work. Ride the bus. Get on the bus. Get off the bus. Get into a car. Get out of a car. Drive a car. School related activities. Take a class. Go to class. Do schoolwork. Listen to a lecture. Read a book. Or read a textbook. Watch a video. Do a project. Have a discussion. Take a test. Take a quiz. Study. Get out of class. Do homework. Or do your homework. Work or office related activities. Go to work. Meet clients. Or customers. Have a meeting. Work together. Collaborate. Work on a computer. Work on a project. Write reports. Do reports. Have lunch. Take a break. Finish work. After work or school. Come home. Get home. Go to the store. Go to the supermarket. Go shopping. Surf the internet. Clean the house. Have dinner. Have supper. Spend time with the family. Relax. Go to bed. Sleep. Hope that was helpful. If you learned from this video please give it a thumbs up in the comment section below. And don't forget to subscribe to our channel. Thanks for watching. If you have ideas for our next video please let us know. This video was brought to you by the following English learning websites.