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english vocabulary collocations language-learning 9 min read

Understanding English Collocations: The Secret to Natural-Sounding Speech

Vaishnavi
By Vaishnavi
Understanding English Collocations: The Secret to Natural-Sounding Speech

Why is “strong coffee” correct but “powerful coffee” wrong? Why do we “make a decision” but “take a break”? Both sentences are grammatically perfect, but one sounds like a native speaker and the other doesn’t.

That’s collocation.

Collocations are pairs or groups of words that naturally go together in English. They’re not grammatical rules — they’re patterns of usage that native speakers absorb unconsciously. For learners, they’re often the difference between “I understand you” and “You speak like a native.”

  • Collocations are word pairs that native speakers use naturally (heavy rain, strong coffee, make a decision)
  • They can’t be translated logically — you just have to learn them as chunks
  • The fastest progress hack: Learn collocations, not isolated words. Learning “make a decision” is better than learning “decision” alone
  • Where they matter most: B1 and above. Beginners focus on single words. B1+ learners need collocations to sound natural

What Are Collocations?

A collocation is a combination of words that occurs together more often than chance would predict. Some combinations are fixed (“make a decision”), while others are flexible but still follow patterns.

Why Collocations Matter

Without CollocationsWith Collocations
”I did a mistake.""I made a mistake."
"I have strong pain.""I have severe pain."
"The rain is very big.""The rain is heavy."
"She told me a joke.""She told me a joke.” ✅ (This one is actually correct!)

The first column is grammatically correct but sounds wrong. That’s the collocation trap.


Types of Collocations

There are seven common patterns. Here they are with examples:

1. Adjective + Noun

CollocationExampleNotes
heavy rainWe had heavy rain all day.Not “strong rain” or “big rain”
strong coffeeI need a cup of strong coffee.Not “powerful coffee”
bright futureShe has a bright future ahead.Not “light future”
bitter coldThe bitter cold made it unbearable.Intense cold
glowing reviewThe movie got a glowing review.Very positive
golden opportunityDon’t miss this golden opportunity.Excellent chance
key factorCost is a key factor in the decision.Most important
major problemPollution is a major problem in cities.Big, significant

2. Verb + Noun

CollocationExampleNotes
make a decisionI need to make a decision soon.Not “do a decision”
take a breakLet’s take a break for lunch.Not “make a break”
make a mistakeEveryone makes mistakes.Not “do a mistake”
take a testI’m taking a test tomorrow.Not “make a test”
make an appointmentI made an appointment with the dentist.Not “do an appointment”
tell a lieDon’t tell lies.Not “say a lie”
tell the truthAlways tell the truth.Not “speak the truth”
catch a coldI caught a cold last week.Not “get a cold” (actually both work)
pay attentionPay attention to the road.Not “give attention”
give adviceMy teacher gave me good advice.Not “tell advice”

3. Adverb + Adjective

CollocationExampleNotes
highly recommendedThis restaurant is highly recommended.Not “strongly recommended”
deeply concernedWe are deeply concerned about the situation.Very concerned
bitterly disappointedShe was bitterly disappointed with the result.Extremely disappointed
fully awareI am fully aware of the risks.Completely aware
closely relatedThese two issues are closely related.Very connected
utterly ridiculousThat idea is utterly ridiculous.Completely ridiculous

4. Verb + Preposition (Dependent Prepositions)

Verb + PrepositionExampleNotes
depend onThe result depends on your effort.Not “depend of”
belong toThis book belongs to me.Not “belong with”
apply forI applied for the job.Not “apply to” (for positions)
apologize forI apologize for the delay.Not “apologize about”
pay forWho paid for the meal?Not “pay the meal” (you pay for it)
wait forI’m waiting for the bus.Not “wait the bus”
search forPolice searched for the missing child.Not “search the child”
suffer fromShe suffers from migraines.Not “suffer with”

5. Verb + Adverb

CollocationExampleNotes
run quicklyShe ran quickly to catch the train.
speak fluentlyHe speaks English fluently.Common in English tests
listen carefullyListen carefully to the instructions.
work hardShe works hard every day.Not “work hardly” (different meaning)
understand fullyI fully understand your concern.

6. Noun + Verb

CollocationExample
dog barksThe dog barks when someone knocks.
alarm goes offMy alarm went off at 6 AM.
engine startsThe engine started on the first try.
storm approachesA storm is approaching from the west.
opportunity arisesI’ll take it if the opportunity arises.

7. Noun + Noun

CollocationExampleNotes
coffee cupPass me that coffee cup.A cup for coffee
traffic jamI was stuck in a traffic jam.
weather forecastThe weather forecast says it’ll rain.
business meetingI have a business meeting at 3 PM.
job interviewMy job interview is tomorrow.

The Most Common Collocation Mistakes by Native Language

Collocation errors happen when you translate directly from your native language. Here are patterns different language speakers commonly have:

Native LanguageCommon MistakeCorrect English
Hindi / Urdu”I did a mistake""I made a mistake”
Spanish”I take a decision""I make a decision”
French”I have 25 years""I am 25 years old”
German”I learn a language""I study a language” or “I learn a language” ✅ (both work here!)
Chinese”Open the light""Turn on the light”
Japanese”I borrow a photo""I take a photo”

How to Learn Collocations Effectively

1. Learn Words in Chunks

Don’t learn “decision.” Learn “make a decision.” Don’t learn “rain.” Learn “heavy rain.” Don’t learn “mistake.” Learn “make a mistake” and “learn from your mistakes.”

2. Keep a Collocation Journal

Instead of this:

WordMeaning
DecisionA choice
RainWater from sky

Keep a collocation-focused journal:

CollocationExample SentenceWhat It Means
Make a decisionI need to make a decision by Friday.Choose
Heavy rainWe had heavy rain all afternoon.A lot of rain
Take a testI’m taking a test next week.Do an exam

3. Notice and Record

When you read or listen to English, train yourself to notice collocations. Underline them. Write them down. The act of noticing doubles your retention.

Try this exercise right now: Read any sentence. Can you spot the collocations?

“I made a difficult decision after careful consideration. It was a golden opportunity that I couldn’t ignore, despite the heavy risks involved.”

Collocations in this sentence: made a decision, difficult decision, careful consideration, golden opportunity, heavy risks.

4. Use a Collocation Dictionary

The Oxford Collocations Dictionary and the Macmillan Collocations Dictionary are excellent resources. Online, Ozdic.com and JustTheWord.com let you search collocations for any word.


Practice Exercises

Exercise 1: Match the Collocation

Match the verb on the left with the noun on the right:

VerbNoun
1. Makea. a test
2. Takeb. a lie
3. Tellc. attention
4. Catchd. a decision
5. Paye. a cold

Answers: 1-d, 2-a, 3-b, 4-e, 5-c

Exercise 2: Choose the Correct Word

  1. This is a ________ opportunity. (golden / gold)
  2. I need to ________ a choice. (make / do)
  3. The coffee is too ________. (strong / powerful)
  4. She was ________ disappointed. (strongly / bitterly)
  5. We had to ________ a difficult conversation. (do / have)

Answers: golden, make, strong, bitterly, have

Exercise 3: Fix the Mistakes

Rewrite these sentences with the correct collocation:

  1. “I did a mistake on the test.”
  2. “The rain was very big yesterday.”
  3. “She told me an advice.”
  4. “The result depends of your effort.”
  5. “I need to take a decision before Friday.”

Answers: made a mistake, heavy rain, gave me advice, depends on, make a decision