B2 — Vocabulary

| Word | B1 definition | B2 extension | B2 collocation | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Substance (solid matter) | Issue or problem (a personal matter) | It doesn't matter; as a matter of fact | | Raise | Lift up (raise your hand) | Increase salary (get a raise); bring up a topic (raise a question) | Raise awareness; raise concerns | | Strike | Hit | Stop working (go on strike); occur to (it strikes me that) | Strike a balance; strike a deal | End of draft.

Most B2 learners have a large receptive vocabulary (they understand a word in reading) but a much smaller productive vocabulary (they cannot retrieve it in speech or writing). Bridging this gap requires specific retrieval practice. b2 vocabulary

The journey from a basic user (A1–B1) to an independent user (B2–C1) is famously difficult. While grammar often plateaus by the B1 stage, vocabulary continues to expand exponentially. Research suggests that a B1 learner knows approximately 2,000–2,500 word families, while a B2 learner requires between 4,000 and 5,000 word families to understand authentic texts and spoken discourse (Nation, 2006; Milton, 2009). This doubling of lexical knowledge is not merely quantitative; it represents a profound qualitative shift in how language is processed and produced. This paper posits that is the decisive threshold for functional fluency. | Word | B1 definition | B2 extension

B2 vocabulary is not simply "more B1 vocabulary." It is a distinct lexical register characterized by abstraction, collocation, and frequency-driven nuance. For learners to cross the intermediate plateau, explicit instruction must move from isolated word lists to contextualized, collocational, and strategic vocabulary development. Teachers should recognize that a student with perfect B1 grammar but B2 vocabulary is more communicatively competent than the reverse. The priority, therefore, is clear: vocabulary depth and breadth at the 4,000–5,000 word level is the true gateway to independence. The journey from a basic user (A1–B1) to