YOUR PROGRESS
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🧠 EMOTIONS
shut down
come around

Some feelings close you off. Time — and the right people — can bring you back.

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shut down
To emotionally withdraw; to stop responding or engaging as a protective response to pain or conflict.
💡 After the fight, she shut down and refused to discuss it further.
INFORMAL
come around
To gradually change your attitude; to become more open or willing to reconnect after a period of resistance.
💡 He was skeptical at first, but he eventually came around.
INFORMAL

Test your knowledge — 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 → speak out loud → record yourself → compare.

Shadowing practice
Use your phone to record yourself repeating each sentence. Play it back and compare your pronunciation with the audio.
SHUT DOWN
1 of 6
1
Listen to the audio
2
Repeat out loud — record yourself if you can
3
Write what you heard, then click Check to compare
🎙️ RECORD YOUR PRONUNCIATION
Her parents didn't approve at first, but they once they saw how happy she was.
Hint: think about which phrasal verb means 'to gradually change your position and accept something'.
STORY 1 OF 2 · SHUT DOWN
shut down

After the argument, Daniel shut down. Not dramatically — not with slamming doors or harsh words. He simply became quiet in the way that certain people do when they've been hurt past the point of immediate processing. He answered questions with single syllables. He made coffee, went to work, came home. He was present in every physical sense and entirely absent in every other. His partner, Ana, had learned not to push during these periods. She had made the mistake of pushing early in their relationship and discovered that it only drove him deeper inside himself. So she waited. She cooked. She left a book she knew he'd like on his desk. On the second morning, he appeared in the doorway of the kitchen with an expression that was part apology and part exhaustion. "I do that," he said, without further explanation. "I know," she said. "Coffee?"

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