Advanced level

Entertainment in English: advanced vocabulary for precise media, culture, and hobby conversations

Master key vocabulary with interactive flashcards, audio, and trainer

52 words
~26 min to study
With audio

Why this topic matters

Advanced entertainment vocabulary helps you discuss films, music, games, performances, culture, and hobbies with much more nuance and precision. At this level, the goal is not only to say what you like, but to describe style, audience, movement, heritage, creativity, performance, and public response in a more natural way. This is the vocabulary that makes entertainment English feel expressive rather than basic.

What you will find in this list

This list contains 52 advanced words and expressions connected to festivals, music, performances, sports events, cultural topics, and creative hobbies. The vocabulary is broader and more specific than intermediate entertainment English, which helps you explain what you watched, attended, created, or experienced with greater detail.

How to study this list effectively

At the advanced level, vocabulary should be learned through real media and cultural contexts. Group the words by theme, then use them in short reviews, descriptions, or opinions about concerts, games, films, or creative work. After that, reinforce them with flashcards or spaced repetition in OneMoreWord. Advanced entertainment vocabulary becomes active when you can use it to explain a real experience.

Where this vocabulary is useful

These words are useful in conversations about films, concerts, sports events, museums, festivals, hobbies, and online media. A practical method is to describe a performance, event, or cultural experience in English using the new vocabulary. That is how advanced entertainment words become usable in real communication.

Why this topic matters

Advanced entertainment vocabulary helps you discuss films, music, games, performances, culture, and hobbies with much more nuance and precision. At this level, the goal is not only to say what you like, but to describe style, audience, movement, heritage, creativity, performance, and public response in a more natural way. This is the vocabulary that makes entertainment English feel expressive rather than basic.

What you will find in this list

This list contains 52 advanced words and expressions connected to festivals, music, performances, sports events, cultural topics, and creative hobbies. The vocabulary is broader and more specific than intermediate entertainment English, which helps you explain what you watched, attended, created, or experienced with greater detail.

How to study this list effectively

At the advanced level, vocabulary should be learned through real media and cultural contexts. Group the words by theme, then use them in short reviews, descriptions, or opinions about concerts, games, films, or creative work. After that, reinforce them with flashcards or spaced repetition in OneMoreWord. Advanced entertainment vocabulary becomes active when you can use it to explain a real experience.

Where this vocabulary is useful

These words are useful in conversations about films, concerts, sports events, museums, festivals, hobbies, and online media. A practical method is to describe a performance, event, or cultural experience in English using the new vocabulary. That is how advanced entertainment words become usable in real communication.

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Word list to learn

Click the icon to hear the pronunciation

musical
[ˈmjuːzɪkəl]
offense
[əˈfens]
penalty
[ˈpenltɪ]
pottery
[ˈpɒtərɪ]
reading
[ˈriːdɪŋ]
sponsor
[ˈspɒnsə]
stadium
[ˈsteɪdɪəm]
support
[səˈpɔːt]
trailer
[ˈtreɪlə]
trainer
[ˈtreɪnə]
uniform
[ˈjuːnɪfɔːm]
victory
[ˈvɪktərɪ]
audience
[ˈɔːdɪəns]
champion
[ˈʧæmpɪən]
creative
[krɪˈeɪtɪv]
cultural
[ˈkʌlʧərəl]
exercise
[ˈeksəsaɪz]
festival
[ˈfestɪv(ə)l]
heritage
[ˈherɪtɪʤ]
movement
[ˈmuːvmənt]
national
[ˈnæʃnəl]
opponent
[əˈpəʊnənt]
painting
[ˈpeɪntɪŋ]
practice
[ˈpræktɪs]
premiere
[ˈpremɪeə]
producer
[prəˈdjuːsə]
strategy
[ˈstrætɪʤɪ]
strength
[streŋθ]
training
[ˈtreɪnɪŋ]
adventure
[ədˈvenʧə]
celebrity
[sɪˈlebrɪtɪ]
criticism
[ˈkrɪtɪsɪzm]
crossword
[ˈkrɒswɜːd]
orchestra
[ˈɔːkɪstrə]
technique
[tekˈniːk]
tradition
[trəˈdɪʃn]
collection
[kəˈlekʃn]
discipline
[ˈdɪsɪplɪn]
expression
[ɪksˈpreʃn]
television
[ˈtelɪvɪʒən]
tournament
[ˈtʊənəmənt]
competition
[kɒmpɪˈtɪʃn]
documentary
[dɒkjʊˈmentərɪ]
imagination
[ɪmæʤɪˈneɪʃn]
inspiration
[ɪnspɪˈreɪʃn]
masterpiece
[ˈmɑːstəpiːs]
performance
[pəˈfɔːməns]
championship
[ˈʧæmpɪənʃɪp]
experimental
[ɪksperɪˈmentl]
professional
[prəˈfeʃnəl]
entertainment
[entəˈteɪnmənt]
international
[ɪntəˈnæʃnəl]

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Frequently Asked Questions

The list covers vocabulary for movies, music, games, concerts, genres, and formats.

Write short reviews of films and tracks, using the new words in context.

The difficulty depends on the page level: beginner is for starting out, intermediate expands your vocabulary, and advanced includes more precise and less common terms.

Do short reviews every 1-2 days during the first week, then return to the list 1-2 times a week.

Open the trainer on the page or use the OneMoreWord app, where you get spaced repetition and quick practice sessions.
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