Essential phrases include "bonjour", "bonsoir", "oui", "non", "s'il vous plaît". Common questions: "où?", "qui?", "quoi?", "quand?", "comment?", "pourquoi?"
New refers to something recently created or used. Novel describes something unfamiliar or unprecedented. New money represents something different from the old. New relationships or conditions are temporary. New moon refers to the new moon
"Veni, vidi, vici" means "I came, I saw, I conquered". Caesar used it in 47 BCE to announce victory against Pharnaces II. Caesar was in Egypt with Cleopatra during their son's birth
Vocabulary guide designed for YDT exam preparation. Contains 50 words across eight thematic units. Most words drawn from previous YDTs. Features mini dictionaries, collocations, prepositions, idioms
Latin phrase meaning "I came; I saw; I conquered". Attributed to Julius Caesar in 47 BC after Battle of Zela. Caesar used it in report to Roman friend Amantius. Displayed as inscription during Pontic triumph
Contains over 1500 frequently used English words for daily communication. Divided into six main sections: Nouns, Adjectives, Verbs, Adverbs, Technology, Numbers. Focuses on content words (nouns, adjectives, verbs, adverbs) and function words