| Level | Target Learner (CEFR) | Vocabulary Scope | Notable Features | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | A1–A2 (Beginner to low-intermediate) | ~1,250 words/phrases | Heavy use of pictures, simple example sentences, basic everyday topics (family, food, weather). | | Pre-intermediate & Intermediate | A2–B1 (Lower-intermediate to intermediate) | ~2,000 words/phrases | Introduction of word families, common collocations, and basic idiomatic expressions. More text-based presentations. | | Upper-intermediate | B2–C1 (Upper-intermediate to advanced) | ~3,000 words/phrases | Focus on nuance, connotation, register (formal/informal), and advanced synonyms. Includes units on discourse markers, rhetorical devices. | | Advanced | C1–C2 (Advanced to proficiency) | ~4,000+ words/phrases | Academic vocabulary, specialized jargon (law, finance, science), complex idioms, and subtle differences between near-synonyms (e.g., error vs. mistake vs. slip ). |
Common learner errors are highlighted in a " Common mistakes " box. For instance: "We say 'news is good' (not 'news are good')." English Vocabulary in Use
For anyone serious about achieving fluency, English Vocabulary in Use is not just a book. It is a path. | Level | Target Learner (CEFR) | Vocabulary
For tricky words, the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) transcription is provided (e.g., /ˈnəʊlɪdʒ/ for knowledge ). mistake vs
For over three decades, learners and teachers of English as a Second or Foreign Language have turned to a distinctive, two-color, left-and-right-page spread as a trusted companion in their language journey. That series is English Vocabulary in Use (EVIU), published by Cambridge University Press. It has become a global benchmark for self-study and classroom vocabulary instruction, selling millions of copies worldwide.
If you commit to 20 minutes a day, three days a week, you will progress through one level in 6-8 months. By the time you finish the Advanced book, you will have encountered, practiced, and reviewed over 8,000 of the most useful words and phrases in English—far more than most native speakers actively command.
EVIU consistently marks words with formal , informal , neutral , written , spoken , or dated labels. For example, in the Advanced book, you learn that "commence" is formal while "start" is neutral.
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