{"id":3933,"date":"2026-05-05T23:04:12","date_gmt":"2026-05-05T23:04:12","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/18kenglish.com\/build-english-vocabulary-collocations-method\/"},"modified":"2026-05-05T23:04:12","modified_gmt":"2026-05-05T23:04:12","slug":"build-english-vocabulary-collocations-method","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/18kenglish.com\/ja\/build-english-vocabulary-collocations-method\/","title":{"rendered":"Build English Vocabulary with Collocations | \u82f1\u6587\u642d\u914d\u8a5e: The Method Native Speakers Actually Use"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong>\u672c\u6587\u91cd\u9ede:<\/strong> \u672c\u6587\u4ecb\u7d39\u53f0\u7063\u4e0a\u73ed\u65cf\u5982\u4f55\u900f\u904e\u300c\u642d\u914d\u8a5e (collocations)\u300d\u9ad8\u6548\u5efa\u7acb\u82f1\u6587\u8a5e\u5f59\u3002\u6bd4\u8d77\u6b7b\u8a18\u55ae\u5b57,\u5b78\u7fd2\u81ea\u7136\u642d\u914d\u80fd\u8b93\u4f60\u7684\u82f1\u6587\u807d\u8d77\u4f86\u66f4\u9053\u5730,\u63d0\u5347\u5546\u696d\u82f1\u6587\u8207\u591a\u76ca\u5beb\u4f5c\u5206\u6578\u3002\u5167\u542b\u5be6\u7528\u5b78\u7fd2\u6cd5\u3001\u63a8\u85a6\u5de5\u5177\u8207\u6bcf\u9031\u7df4\u7fd2\u8a08\u756b,\u9069\u5408\u6240\u6709\u6b63\u5728\u9032\u884c\u82f1\u6587\u5b78\u7fd2\u7684\u8077\u5834\u4eba\u58eb\u3002<\/p>\n\n<p>Most Taiwan professionals (\u53f0\u7063\u4e0a\u73ed\u65cf) hit a vocabulary plateau around the 3,000-word mark. They can read business emails. They can survive a meeting. But when they speak or write, something sounds <em>off<\/em>. The grammar is correct. The words are correct. Yet a native speaker reading the email subtly winces and rewrites half of it.<\/p>\n\n<p>The hidden problem is almost never grammar or single words. It is <strong>collocations<\/strong> (\u82f1\u6587\u642d\u914d\u8a5e) \u2014 the unwritten rules that decide which words go together. &#8220;Make a decision&#8221; is correct; &#8220;do a decision&#8221; is not. &#8220;Heavy traffic&#8221; is natural; &#8220;strong traffic&#8221; is wrong. &#8220;Take a shower&#8221; is right; &#8220;have a shower&#8221; is right too \u2014 but only in British English. None of this is taught in most cram schools, yet it is the single biggest gap between a B2 learner and a fluent professional.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This guide shows you how to build English vocabulary with collocations \u2014 the same method used by serious language researchers, university English programs, and high-scoring TOEIC (\u591a\u76ca) candidates. It is slower than memorising flashcards in the short term, but it is the only method that actually closes the gap between knowing English and sounding like you know English.<\/p>\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">What Is a Collocation? | \u4ec0\u9ebc\u662f\u642d\u914d\u8a5e?<\/h2>\n\n<p>A collocation is a pair or group of words that habitually appear together in natural English. They are not idioms (the meaning is usually literal), and they are not fixed grammar rules. They are statistical patterns that native speakers absorb through millions of hours of input \u2014 and that non-native speakers must learn explicitly because they will never absorb enough natural input on their own.<\/p>\n\n<p>Examples that Taiwan learners typically get wrong:<\/p>\n\n<ul class=\"wp-block-list\"><li><strong>Make<\/strong> a mistake (not <em>do<\/em> a mistake)<\/li><li><strong>Pay<\/strong> attention (not <em>give<\/em> attention, except in formal writing)<\/li><li><strong>Heavy<\/strong> rain, <strong>\u5f37\u3044<\/strong> wind (the adjective is fixed by tradition, not logic)<\/li><li><strong>Highly<\/strong> recommend (not <em>strongly<\/em> recommend, although both are now acceptable)<\/li><li><strong>Catch<\/strong> a cold (not <em>get<\/em> a cold \u2014 actually <em>get<\/em> works, but <em>catch<\/em> is more common)<\/li><li><strong>Meet<\/strong> a deadline (not <em>arrive<\/em> a deadline)<\/li><li><strong>Reach<\/strong> a conclusion (not <em>arrive at<\/em> a conclusion is also fine, but <em>get<\/em> a conclusion is wrong)<\/li><\/ul>\n\n<p>Notice that the wrong versions are usually the result of literal translation from Chinese. &#8220;\u505a\u6c7a\u5b9a&#8221; sounds like &#8220;do a decision,&#8221; but English forces you to say &#8220;make a decision.&#8221; There is no logical reason \u2014 it is just the pattern English uses.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Why Collocations Beat Single-Word Memorisation | \u70ba\u4ec0\u9ebc\u642d\u914d\u8a5e\u6bd4\u55ae\u5b57\u8a18\u61b6\u6cd5\u66f4\u6709\u6548<\/h2>\n\n<p>Traditional Taiwan English education (\u82f1\u6587\u5b78\u7fd2) treats vocabulary as a list of equivalences: <em>delicious = \u7f8e\u5473\u7684<\/em>, <em>achieve = \u9054\u6210<\/em>. This works for reading comprehension but produces stiff, awkward output. Native speakers do not assemble sentences word by word. They produce chunks \u2014 pre-formed phrases stored as single units.<\/p>\n\n<p>When a fluent speaker says &#8220;I&#8217;d like to schedule a meeting for next Tuesday,&#8221; they are not building that sentence from individual words. They are reaching for the chunk &#8220;schedule a meeting,&#8221; the chunk &#8220;I&#8217;d like to,&#8221; and the chunk &#8220;for next Tuesday.&#8221; The whole sentence is essentially three Lego pieces clicked together.<\/p>\n\n<p>This is why learning 100 collocations is more useful than learning 500 isolated words. Every collocation you internalise is a ready-made block of speech you can deploy without thinking. You stop translating. You start producing.<\/p>\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\">The Research | \u5b78\u8853\u6839\u64da<\/h3>\n\n<p>Linguists Michael Lewis (the Lexical Approach) and Norbert Schmitt have spent decades demonstrating that 50\u201380% of natural English text is composed of recurring multi-word patterns. The British National Corpus and the Corpus of Contemporary American English both confirm that fluency is built on chunks, not isolated words. If your textbook teaches words but ignores patterns, it is teaching you only half the language.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Six Types of Collocation You Need to Master | \u516d\u7a2e\u5fc5\u5b78\u642d\u914d\u8a5e\u985e\u578b<\/h2>\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\">1. Verb + Noun | \u52d5\u8a5e + \u540d\u8a5e<\/h3>\n\n<p>The most common type. Examples: <em>take a risk, run a business, hold a meeting, draw a conclusion, place an order, lodge a complaint<\/em>. For a business English (\u5546\u696d\u82f1\u6587) learner, this is where 80% of your gains will come from. When you learn a new business noun, immediately ask: &#8220;Which verb pairs with this?&#8221;<\/p>\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\">2. Adjective + Noun | \u5f62\u5bb9\u8a5e + \u540d\u8a5e<\/h3>\n\n<p>\u4f8b\uff1a <em>strong coffee, heavy traffic, deep regret, fundamental difference, stiff competition, golden opportunity.<\/em> These are the colour of natural English. &#8220;Big rain&#8221; is grammatical but instantly marks you as a non-native speaker; &#8220;heavy rain&#8221; is the only correct choice.<\/p>\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\">3. Adverb + Adjective | \u526f\u8a5e + \u5f62\u5bb9\u8a5e<\/h3>\n\n<p>\u4f8b\uff1a <em>highly unlikely, deeply concerned, fully aware, painfully obvious, fundamentally different.<\/em> These dramatically improve written English and are crucial for IELTS and TOEIC writing sections.<\/p>\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\">4. Verb + Adverb | \u52d5\u8a5e + \u526f\u8a5e<\/h3>\n\n<p>\u4f8b\uff1a <em>strongly recommend, openly admit, sincerely apologise, completely forget, narrowly avoid.<\/em> Especially useful in formal email writing.<\/p>\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\">5. Noun + Noun | \u540d\u8a5e + \u540d\u8a5e<\/h3>\n\n<p>\u4f8b\uff1a <em>customer service, project manager, market share, time pressure, career development.<\/em> Compound nouns dominate corporate English and are heavily tested on the multiple-choice section of the TOEIC (\u591a\u76ca).<\/p>\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\">6. Verb + Preposition | \u52d5\u8a5e + \u4ecb\u7cfb\u8a5e<\/h3>\n\n<p>\u4f8b\uff1a <em>depend on, consist of, result in, suffer from, comply with.<\/em> Wrong prepositions are the single most common written-error category for Taiwan learners. Learning the verb + preposition as one chunk eliminates the problem permanently.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">A Practical 30-Day Collocation Plan | 30 \u5929\u5be6\u4f5c\u8a08\u756b<\/h2>\n\n<p>Theory is useless without execution. Here is a concrete weekly schedule that fits a working professional&#8217;s life. Total time commitment: about 25 minutes a day.<\/p>\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Step 1: Build Your Source Texts | \u627e\u5c0d\u4f60\u7684\u7d20\u6750<\/h3>\n\n<p>Pick three or four English sources directly relevant to your work. A finance professional should be reading the <em>Financial Times<\/em> \u307e\u305f\u306f <em>Bloomberg<\/em>. A software engineer should follow <em>The Pragmatic Engineer<\/em> \u307e\u305f\u306f <em>Stratechery<\/em>. A marketing professional should read <em>\u30cf\u30fc\u30d0\u30fc\u30c9\u30fb\u30d3\u30b8\u30cd\u30b9\u30fb\u30ec\u30d3\u30e5\u30fc<\/em> articles. The trick is relevance: collocations stick fastest when they appear in contexts you already care about.<\/p>\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Step 2: The Highlight-Hunt-Harvest Method | \u627e\u51fa\u4f60\u7684\u642d\u914d\u8a5e<\/h3>\n\n<p>Read for 15 minutes each morning. As you read, highlight not single words but <em>two- to four-word chunks<\/em> that you would not have produced yourself. Resist the urge to highlight unfamiliar single words \u2014 instead, highlight the partner word next to it.<\/p>\n\n<p>For example, if you read &#8220;the company faces stiff competition in Southeast Asia,&#8221; do not just highlight <em>stiff<\/em>. Highlight <em>face stiff competition<\/em> as a single chunk. That is the unit your brain needs to store.<\/p>\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Step 3: Verify Before You Memorise | \u5b78\u4e4b\u524d\u5148\u9a57\u8b49<\/h3>\n\n<p>Before adding a chunk to your study list, verify it is genuinely common. Use one of these free tools:<\/p>\n\n<ul class=\"wp-block-list\"><li><strong>Linguee<\/strong> \u2014 shows the chunk in context across millions of bilingual texts<\/li><li><strong>Just the Word<\/strong> (justthe word.co.uk) \u2014 graphs the most common partners for any word<\/li><li><strong>Google Books N-gram Viewer<\/strong> \u2014 confirms whether a phrase is used in published English<\/li><li><strong>Ozdic.com<\/strong> \u2014 a free online collocation dictionary, very fast<\/li><\/ul>\n\n<p>If the chunk does not show up frequently, it is not worth learning. You are looking for the natural patterns native speakers use over and over.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Step 4: Anki With a Twist | \u7528 Anki \u4f46\u8981\u6709\u8b8a\u5316<\/h3>\n\n<p>Spaced repetition is excellent for collocations, but only if your cards are designed correctly. Do not put the chunk on one side and the Chinese translation on the other. Instead, use cloze deletion (\u586b\u7a7a) cards.<\/p>\n\n<p>Front of card: <em>The proposal {{c1::raised}} concerns about budget overruns.<\/em><br>Back of card: <em>raised concerns \/ \u5f15\u767c\u7591\u616e<\/em><\/p>\n\n<p>The cloze format forces your brain to retrieve the partner word in context, which is exactly the skill you need when speaking and writing in real life. After 30 days of this, you will have 90\u2013120 high-frequency business chunks burned into long-term memory.<\/p>\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Step 5: Force Output Within 24 Hours | 24 \u5c0f\u6642\u5167\u4e3b\u52d5\u4f7f\u7528<\/h3>\n\n<p>This is the step most learners skip \u2014 and it is the most important. Within one day of adding a chunk to Anki, write a sentence using it in your actual work. Send a Slack message, write a paragraph in a project document, draft an email. The chunk has to leave your eyes and travel into your fingers, or it will never become active vocabulary.<\/p>\n\n<p>Many of our students at 18K find an English tutor (\u82f1\u6587\u5bb6\u6559) specifically to provide weekly speaking practice for chunks they have collected. Even a 30-minute conversation per week is enough to convert recognition vocabulary into production vocabulary.<\/p>\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image size-large\">\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image size-large\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"1080\" height=\"720\" src=\"https:\/\/18kenglish.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/build-english-vocabulary-collocations-method-6.jpg\" alt=\"Headphones on a laptop\" class=\"wp-image-3932\" srcset=\"https:\/\/18kenglish.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/build-english-vocabulary-collocations-method-6.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/18kenglish.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/build-english-vocabulary-collocations-method-6-300x200.jpg 300w, https:\/\/18kenglish.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/build-english-vocabulary-collocations-method-6-1024x683.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/18kenglish.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/build-english-vocabulary-collocations-method-6-768x512.jpg 768w, https:\/\/18kenglish.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/build-english-vocabulary-collocations-method-6-18x12.jpg 18w, https:\/\/18kenglish.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/build-english-vocabulary-collocations-method-6-600x400.jpg 600w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 1080px) 100vw, 1080px\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-element-caption\">Headphones on a laptop\n<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/figure>\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Watch and Learn | \u5f71\u7247\u6559\u5b78<\/h2>\n\n<p>The video below from a leading ESL channel walks through several of the highest-frequency English collocations and how to use them naturally:<\/p>\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-embed is-type-video is-provider-youtube wp-block-embed-youtube wp-embed-aspect-16-9 wp-has-aspect-ratio\"><div class=\"wp-block-embed__wrapper\">https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=GoNVTzqDUlk<\/div><\/figure>\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Common Mistakes Taiwan Learners Make | \u53f0\u7063\u5b78\u54e1\u5e38\u72af\u7684\u932f\u8aa4<\/h2>\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Mistake 1: Over-Reliance on the Chinese Equivalent<\/h3>\n\n<p>Translating directly from Chinese produces awkward English roughly 40% of the time, in our experience teaching working adults in Taipei. &#8220;Open the light&#8221; (\u958b\u71c8) becomes &#8220;turn on the light.&#8221; &#8220;Eat medicine&#8221; (\u5403\u85e5) becomes &#8220;take medicine.&#8221; Stop reaching for the Chinese phrase first. Reach for the English collocation directly.<\/p>\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Mistake 2: Memorising Without Context<\/h3>\n\n<p>A flashcard that says &#8220;meet a deadline&#8221; with no example sentence is almost useless. Always learn the chunk inside a real sentence drawn from your reading. Context is half of the meaning.<\/p>\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Mistake 3: Trying to Learn Too Many Patterns at Once<\/h3>\n\n<p>Five new collocations a day, deeply learned and used in your own writing, will outperform 30 a day passively reviewed. Quality of encoding beats quantity every single time.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Top 20 Business English Collocations to Start With | \u5546\u696d\u82f1\u6587\u5fc5\u5b78 20 \u7d44\u642d\u914d\u8a5e<\/h2>\n\n<p>If you only have time to start with a small set, these twenty chunks appear repeatedly in business contexts and will lift your office English noticeably within a month:<\/p>\n\n<ol class=\"wp-block-list\"><li>reach an agreement<\/li><li>raise concerns<\/li><li>address an issue<\/li><li>meet a deadline<\/li><li>take responsibility<\/li><li>seize an opportunity<\/li><li>face stiff competition<\/li><li>achieve a target<\/li><li>break new ground<\/li><li>build a strong relationship<\/li><li>cut costs significantly<\/li><li>follow up on a request<\/li><li>handle a complaint<\/li><li>highly recommend<\/li><li>narrowly avoid<\/li><li>place an order<\/li><li>set a precedent<\/li><li>strike a balance<\/li><li>strongly disagree<\/li><li>weigh the pros and cons<\/li><\/ol>\n\n<p>Print this list. Stick it next to your monitor. By the end of the month, force yourself to use every one of them at least once in real workplace communication.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Final Word | \u7d50\u8a9e<\/h2>\n\n<p>Building English vocabulary is not about adding more words to a list. It is about adding more <em>\u30d1\u30bf\u30fc\u30f3<\/em> to your speech. Collocations are the bridge between knowing English and using it like a native speaker. They cannot be skipped, and they cannot be replaced by grammar drills or single-word flashcards.<\/p>\n\n<p>Start small. Five chunks a day. Read your own industry. Highlight chunks, verify them, encode them with cloze cards, and force them into your output within 24 hours. Do this for ninety days, and the difference in how you sound \u2014 at work, in interviews, on calls \u2014 will be unmistakable. The plateau breaks. The English starts to flow.<\/p>\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Sources | \u53c3\u8003\u8cc7\u6599<\/h2>\n\n<ul class=\"wp-block-list\"><li><a href=\"https:\/\/www.cambridge.org\/elt\/blog\/2018\/06\/12\/teaching-collocations\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Cambridge English: Teaching Collocations<\/a><\/li><li><a href=\"https:\/\/www.norbertschmitt.co.uk\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Norbert Schmitt \u2014 Vocabulary Research<\/a><\/li><li><a href=\"https:\/\/www.english-corpora.org\/coca\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Corpus of Contemporary American English (COCA)<\/a><\/li><li><a href=\"https:\/\/www.linguee.com\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Linguee \u2014 Bilingual Concordance<\/a><\/li><li><a href=\"http:\/\/www.just-the-word.com\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Just The Word \u2014 Collocation Finder<\/a><\/li><li><a href=\"https:\/\/www.ozdic.com\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Ozdic \u2014 Online Collocation Dictionary<\/a><\/li><\/ul>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Learn how to build English vocabulary with collocations \u2014 the natural word pairings native speakers use. A practical method for Taiwan professionals to sound fluent at work in 2026.<\/p>","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":3932,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_kad_blocks_custom_css":"","_kad_blocks_head_custom_js":"","_kad_blocks_body_custom_js":"","_kad_blocks_footer_custom_js":"","_kadence_starter_templates_imported_post":false,"_kad_post_transparent":"","_kad_post_title":"","_kad_post_layout":"","_kad_post_sidebar_id":"","_kad_post_content_style":"","_kad_post_vertical_padding":"","_kad_post_feature":"","_kad_post_feature_position":"","_kad_post_header":false,"_kad_post_footer":false,"_kad_post_classname":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[23],"tags":[207,745,825,155,504,871,1100,1032,201,274,248,1101],"class_list":["post-3933","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-article-posts","tag-business-english","tag-collocations","tag-english-fluency","tag-english-vocabulary","tag-esl-taiwan","tag-vocabulary-learning","tag-word-pairs","tag-1032","tag-201","tag-274","tag-248","tag-1101"],"taxonomy_info":{"category":[{"value":23,"label":"Articles"}],"post_tag":[{"value":207,"label":"Business 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