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Train English Through Brain Routes, Not Translation.

This page helps you stop memorizing isolated translations and start understanding a word through its shared mental image, native-style thinking, and practical training steps.

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living - Master This Word

Master this word with our 5-step learning method – Learn English in English

living Word Meanings

  • to be alive
  • to have a life in a particular way
  • to live in a specified manner
Illustration for this word

living Example Sentences

Example sentences are the start of understanding. Don't rush to memorize. First feel how the word works in a sentence.

living Phonetic & Pronunciation

Pronunciation
UK /lɪv/
US /lɪv/
Syllables
live

living Word Etymology

live: *lif (root) + -e (verb form); Old English lifian (to live); Imagine a vibrant forest where creatures thrive, depicting the essence of life; connecting this to various ways of living.

Note 1: These definitions and etymologies are not standard dictionary definitions, but extended explanations provided to help with memorization and understanding of the actual application of words. Through this background information, we strive to make words more vivid and easier to understand, and help you remember their meanings in real life.

Note 2: LexiTalk designs the learning flow around the linguistics principle of “Comprehensible Input.” When learners encounter material that is slightly above their level but still understandable from context, the brain naturally absorbs the language. That’s why we keep every word inside authentic contexts, using examples and associations to help you understand it and use it flexibly.

Read the FAQ explanation of Comprehensible Input

English Brain Route

I sit up and push the sheets aside, feet finding the floor. I move through the morning ritual, turning on a light and adjusting the blinds. I hold my breath for a beat, then exhale as the day begins to take shape, deciding how I want to live this moment. With a steady breath and a small, deliberate pace, I set my mood and keep going, letting the day reveal its own meaning.

Real Context

Live is a versatile verb that centers on existence and the way a person or thing continues to exist or behave. It covers being alive, having a life in a certain style, and choosing to inhabit a particular manner of living. Learners often mix up live with life, or confuse living in a place with living a certain quality of life. The sense can also extend to performing or appearing in real time, as in broadcasting live. The core idea is continuity of life and method: how someone exists, how they spend their days, and how a culture or environment shapes that existence.

Usage Reminders

  • - Remember live can mean existing or being alive, as well as living in a certain way
  • - Use live in phrases like live in a city or live a simple life to talk about where you stay and how you live
  • - Distinguish the real-time sense (live broadcast) from the general sense of existence
  • - Learn the past tense: lived (not 'liv'd') for past habits or states
  • - Watch for pronunciation: /lɪv/ (verb) vs /laɪv/ (adjective for 'in real time')
  • - Practice similar verbs like stay, reside, exist to compare nuances

Common Misconceptions

  • Live always means being alive in the sense of biology
  • Confusing live with life as a noun
  • Thinking live only refers to live broadcasts
  • Mixing up live with lived or life in tense
  • Using the wrong preposition after live (e. g., live in a city is correct, not live on a city)

Thinking Differences

Explain to an English speaker: English uses live across senses (existence, lifestyle, real-time broadcast); learners must notice context to pick the right sense and prepositions.

Learning Tips

  • Practice all senses in context (existence, lifestyle, live broadcast).
  • Make flashcards for common collocations (live in, live a life, live on).
  • Record and compare pronunciation of /lɪv/ vs /laɪv/.
  • Use past tense correctly: lived for past habits.
  • Create mini-dialogues illustrating different meanings.
  • Read/listen to authentic materials featuring 'live' in varied contexts.

5-Step Learning Method - Learn English in English

Step 1: Meaning

What does the word 'living' mean?

A.Flying
B.Breathing
C.Sleeping
D.Running
Step 2: Usage

Which sentence uses the word 'living' correctly?

A.She enjoys living at the zoo.
B.He is living in a treehouse.
C.The living room needs new furniture.
D.Living is important for good health.
Step 3: Similar Words

Which word is most similar to 'living'?

A.Crying
B.Dancing
C.Existing
D.Swimming
Step 4: Opposite Words

What is the opposite of 'living'?

A.Laughing
B.Singing
C.Dead
D.Playing
Step 5: Mastery

Can you think of a real-life scenario involving 'living'?

A.She enjoys gardening every day.
B.He loves to read books for hours.
C.Going for a walk in the park is relaxing.
D.Playing soccer with friends on weekends is fun.

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