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🧠 EMOTIONS
bottle up
let out

Emotions aren't meant to be stored. They're meant to be let out.

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bottle up
To keep emotions locked inside without expressing them; to suppress feelings rather than releasing or sharing them.
πŸ’‘ She bottled up her sadness and pretended everything was fine.
INFORMAL
let out
To release or express an emotion that has been suppressed or held inside; to allow a feeling to come out freely.
πŸ’‘ He finally let out the frustration he had been carrying for weeks.
INFORMAL

Test your knowledge β€” read the sentence and choose the right phrasal verb. Click to answer.

QUESTION 1 OF 3

Shadowing is one of the most powerful techniques for improving your English pronunciation and fluency. Listen β†’ speak out loud β†’ record yourself β†’ compare.

Shadowing practice
Use your phone to record yourself repeating each sentence. Play it back and compare your pronunciation with the audio.
BOTTLE UP
1 of 6
1
Listen to the audio
2
Repeat out loud β€” record yourself if you can
3
Write what you heard, then click Check to compare
πŸŽ™οΈ RECORD YOUR PRONUNCIATION
After months of holding everything in, she finally broke down and all the grief she had been hiding.
Hint: think about which phrasal verb means 'to release emotions that have been suppressed'.
STORY 1 OF 2 Β· BOTTLE UP
bottle up

When the redundancy letter arrived, Maya read it three times and then put it face-down on the desk. She finished her coffee. She answered two more emails. She went to the team meeting and participated. She told no one. On the way home she listened to a podcast about something entirely unrelated. She cooked dinner. She watched forty minutes of television without seeing any of it. She went to bed and lay very still in the dark. She was not unaffected β€” she was simply very good at containing things. She had been bottling up difficult feelings since she was a child, and she was, by any measure, excellent at it. The question she had never fully asked was: where did it all go?

Alessandra Fernandes NΓ³brega
Alessandra Fernandes NΓ³brega
History teacher and educational content creator. M.A. in History of Education (UFPB). Creator of WeeklyCross, FlipVerbs and Flowglish β€” a connected ecosystem for learning English through context, not memorisation.