
English Vocabularyđ„
English Vocabulary for EFL, (German) Learners of Englishđ„
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6 songs
2:08

hip hop London drill beat very fast
4:59

The educational Hip-Hop North Californian drill track kicks off with filtered synth hits and a spoken intro over sparse hi-hats, inviting kids to "bounce and learn, " At 95 BPM, crisp kicks anchor each verse, with deep bass and concise melodic loops, The first verse enters, spotlighting letters E, G, H, and I, each paired with a vocal call ("E for Elephantâecho it back!"), followed by class-style crowd responses and energetic ad-libs (âYeah!â âSay it!â), Punchy phrasing and fluid rhymes in Northern Californian Englsih power the flow, The motivational chorus enters with vocal stacks, US gang chants, and a hook that repeats key letters for memorability, Verses two and three highlight the remaining tricky letters (J, K, Q, R, U, V, W, Y, Z), each with rhythmic wordplay and layered vocals, keeping engagement high, Brief drops strip the mix before each new section, The outro slows the beat as playful back-and-forth vocals explain âZee versus Zed, â ensuring an empowering, memorable finish
4:33

At 80 BPM, a vibrant trap beat anchors the track with layered punchy kicks, slow explosive syncopated hi-hats, and snare rolls, A bright, playful indie synth melody weaves over a deep 808 bass, while emotional indie female vocals in clear German and clear English guide crisp verses and hooks, The melodious chorus is sung with layered emotional indie vocals, The verses are slowly rapped with clear indie vocals, The drop at 80 BPM arrives after a sharp 808 bass and snare cue, shifting into a lively, syncopated groove that elevates the playful and happy energy at 80 BPM
4:25

dubstep, reggae, pop, beautiful melody, cute female vocals, proper german pronunciation
3:53

funk, r&b, modern beat, male vocals, baseline, MarĂmbula, Bass-Kalimba, Rumba-Box, Carribean style
4:11

very slow, happy, tribal, african folk, kids, koto, djembe, guitar, rap, bassline, afro style, female voice, very slow
