B2 verb #1,800 most common 2 min read

injection

An injection is the act of pushing a liquid, like medicine, into the body using a needle.

Explanation at your level:

An injection is a medical shot. A doctor uses a needle to put medicine in your arm. It helps you get better when you are sick.

You get an injection at the clinic. It is a quick way to get medicine. People also use the word for money. A business needs an injection of cash to grow.

An injection is the act of forcing a liquid into a body. In medicine, it is a standard procedure. Figuratively, it means adding something new to a system, like an injection of enthusiasm into a team.

The term injection spans medical and economic registers. While it refers to hypodermic administration of drugs, it is frequently used in journalism to describe capital flow. Understanding the context is key to using it correctly.

Beyond its literal medical application, injection serves as a potent metaphor in organizational theory and economics. It implies an external force providing necessary resources to revitalize a stagnant entity. Its usage requires precision to distinguish between a clinical procedure and a strategic intervention.

Etymologically rooted in the Latin injectio, the word injection carries nuances of 'forceful introduction.' In literary or highly formal contexts, it can describe the sudden introduction of a theme or element into a narrative structure. Mastery involves recognizing when the word shifts from a physical, invasive act to a constructive, metaphorical enhancement.

Word in 30 Seconds

  • Injection means putting a liquid into a body.
  • It also means adding resources to a system.
  • It is a countable noun.
  • Commonly used in both medical and business contexts.

Hey there! Let's talk about the word injection. At its core, it is all about putting something into something else. Think of a doctor giving you a shot—that is the most common way we use the word.

But wait, there is more! We also use it in business or daily life to talk about adding a boost. If a company is running out of money, they might get a cash injection to keep things moving. It is like giving a system a shot of energy!

The word injection comes from the Latin word injectio, which literally means 'a throwing into.' It combines in- (into) and jacere (to throw).

Back in the day, this was a very physical term. Over time, as our language evolved, we started using it for things that aren't physical, like money or ideas. It is fascinating how a word about 'throwing' evolved into a medical and economic term!

You will hear injection used in two main ways: medical and figurative. In a hospital, you 'give' or 'receive' an injection. In business, you 'provide' an injection of capital.

Common collocations include lethal injection (a very serious, formal term) and financial injection (common in news reports). Keep it professional when using it in a business context!

While 'injection' is a noun, it fits into many phrases. 1. Shot in the arm: A metaphorical injection of energy. 2. Lethal injection: A specific, grim legal term. 3. Capital injection: Money added to a business. 4. Booster injection: A follow-up dose of medicine. 5. Direct injection: Often used in car engines to describe fuel delivery.

Injection is a countable noun. You can have one injection or many injections. It is pronounced /ɪnˈdʒɛk.ʃən/ in both US and UK English.

The stress is on the second syllable: in-JEC-tion. Rhyming words include rejection, detection, and projection. It is a very rhythmic word!

Fun Fact

It shares a root with 'eject', which means 'to throw out'.

Pronunciation Guide

UK /ɪnˈdʒɛk.ʃən/

Crisp 'in' followed by 'jek' and 'shun'.

US /ɪnˈdʒɛk.ʃən/

Similar to UK, clear 'j' sound.

Common Errors

  • Forgetting the 'shun' sound
  • Misplacing the stress
  • Swallowing the 'c'

Rhymes With

rejection projection detection dejection confection

Difficulty Rating

Reading 2/5

Easy to understand once the two meanings are clear.

Writing 2/5

Simple to use in sentences.

Speaking 2/5

Clear pronunciation.

Listening 2/5

Very common in media.

What to Learn Next

Prerequisites

needle medicine money add

Learn Next

vaccination capital systemic intervention

Advanced

subcutaneous intravenous liquidity

Grammar to Know

Noun usage

The injection was successful.

Subject-Verb Agreement

He receives an injection.

Articles with Nouns

An injection.

Examples by Level

1

The doctor gives an injection.

Doctor / gives / shot

Subject-verb agreement

2

I need an injection.

3

The injection is fast.

4

He got an injection.

5

She had an injection.

6

Is the injection safe?

7

The injection helps me.

8

No more injections today.

1

The nurse prepared the injection.

2

I felt the injection.

3

The company needs a cash injection.

4

He received a flu injection.

5

This injection prevents illness.

6

The project needs an injection of energy.

7

She hates getting an injection.

8

The doctor ordered an injection.

1

The government provided an injection of funds.

2

He needs a booster injection.

3

The injection was painless.

4

The team needs an injection of new talent.

5

They discussed the injection process.

6

The patient refused the injection.

7

An injection of adrenaline saved him.

8

The economy saw a large injection of capital.

1

The startup received a vital injection of venture capital.

2

The vaccine is administered via injection.

3

The manager provided an injection of motivation.

4

Lethal injection is a controversial topic.

5

The fuel injection system is broken.

6

We need an injection of fresh ideas.

7

The clinic specializes in allergy injections.

8

The sudden injection of liquidity stabilized the market.

1

The sudden injection of foreign aid transformed the local economy.

2

The play suffered from an injection of unnecessary melodrama.

3

The engine's fuel injection timing was perfectly calibrated.

4

Her speech provided a necessary injection of optimism.

5

The patient required a subcutaneous injection.

6

The proposal includes an injection of new technology.

7

The company's injection of resources was timely.

8

The narrative lacks an injection of conflict.

1

The injection of capital into the failing firm was a desperate gamble.

2

His prose is characterized by an injection of dry wit.

3

The medical protocol mandates a sterile injection.

4

The systemic injection of bias remains a concern.

5

The injection of new blood into the board revitalized the company.

6

The artist sought an injection of inspiration.

7

The injection of synthetic hormones is strictly regulated.

8

The policy requires an injection of political will.

Synonyms

Antonyms

Common Collocations

cash injection
flu injection
give an injection
receive an injection
fuel injection
lethal injection
booster injection
provide an injection
subcutaneous injection
direct injection

Idioms & Expressions

"a shot in the arm"

Something that gives new energy or hope.

The new manager was a shot in the arm for the team.

casual

"in the vein of"

Similar to (not strictly an injection idiom, but related).

It was in the vein of his previous work.

neutral

"give a boost"

To improve or increase.

The bonus gave a boost to morale.

neutral

"pump money into"

To invest heavily.

They pumped money into the project.

casual

"take a jab at"

To criticize someone.

He took a jab at his opponent.

casual

"needle in a haystack"

Something hard to find.

Finding the file was like finding a needle in a haystack.

neutral

Easily Confused

injection vs Ejection

Similar sound

Ejection is removal; injection is addition.

The pilot used the ejection seat.

injection vs Infection

Similar spelling

Infection is a disease; injection is the act of giving medicine.

He has an ear infection.

injection vs Projection

Similar rhyme

Projection is a forecast or image.

The sales projection is high.

injection vs Injection vs Inject

Same root

Noun vs Verb.

I will inject (v) you with an injection (n).

Sentence Patterns

A2

Subject + give + object + injection

The nurse gave him an injection.

B1

Subject + receive + injection + of + noun

The firm received an injection of cash.

B2

There + be + an + injection + of + noun

There was an injection of new talent.

B1

Subject + require + an + injection

The patient requires an injection.

C1

Subject + provide + an + injection + to + object

The bank provided an injection to the company.

Word Family

Nouns

injector A device that injects.

Verbs

inject To force a liquid into something.

Adjectives

injectable Capable of being injected.

Related

syringe The tool used for an injection

How to Use It

frequency

7/10

Formality Scale

Formal Neutral Casual Slang

Common Mistakes

Using 'inject' as a noun. injection
Inject is the verb; injection is the noun.
Saying 'give an injection to someone' incorrectly. The doctor gave the patient an injection.
Word order matters.
Confusing 'injection' with 'ejection'. Injection is adding; ejection is removing.
They sound similar but mean opposites.
Using 'injection' for any liquid. Use 'pour' or 'add'.
Injection implies force/pressure.
Misspelling as 'injetion'. injection
Don't forget the 'c'.

Tips

💡

The 'In' Trick

Remember 'In' means inside. Injection = putting inside.

💡

Business Speak

Use 'injection of capital' to sound professional.

🌍

Medical Context

Be aware of needle phobia.

💡

Noun vs Verb

Don't say 'I will injection you.' Say 'I will inject you.'

💡

Stress the Middle

Make the 'JEC' part the loudest.

💡

Spelling

Always include the 'c' before 'tion'.

💡

Latin Roots

It comes from the same word as 'eject'.

💡

Sentence Building

Write two sentences: one medical, one business.

💡

Collocations

Learn 'cash injection' as a chunk.

💡

Rhyme Time

Rhyme it with 'rejection' to remember the sound.

Memorize It

Mnemonic

In-JEC-tion: Just Imagine the liquid Entering the body.

Visual Association

A syringe pushing liquid into a muscle.

Word Web

medicine money force syringe boost

Challenge

Use the word 'injection' in a sentence about your day.

Word Origin

Latin

Original meaning: A throwing into

Cultural Context

Some people have a phobia of needles (trypanophobia), so be gentle when discussing it.

Commonly associated with healthcare and economic news.

Many medical dramas like ER or Grey's Anatomy use this word constantly.

Practice in Real Life

Real-World Contexts

Doctor's Office

  • I need an injection
  • Is the injection painful?
  • When is my next injection?

Business Meeting

  • We need a cash injection
  • The project requires an injection of funds
  • Financial injection is necessary

Car Maintenance

  • Fuel injection system
  • Check the injection timing
  • Clean the injectors

Team Building

  • An injection of energy
  • An injection of new ideas
  • Need an injection of talent

Conversation Starters

"Have you ever had to get an injection?"

"How does a cash injection change a business?"

"Do you prefer pills or injections when you are sick?"

"What is the best way to give a team an injection of energy?"

"Why do you think people are afraid of injections?"

Journal Prompts

Describe a time you felt you needed an 'injection' of motivation.

Write about the importance of medical injections in history.

If you were a business owner, how would you use a cash injection?

Reflect on why we use the word 'injection' for things other than medicine.

Frequently Asked Questions

8 questions

Not necessarily, it depends on the needle and the medication.

Yes, fuel injection is a common term in cars.

No, inject is the verb. Injection is the noun.

In-JEC-shun.

Yes, injections.

It is neutral and widely used.

Yes, that is a great metaphor.

Extraction or removal.

Test Yourself

fill blank A1

The doctor gave me an ___.

Correct! Not quite. Correct answer: injection

Medical context requires injection.

multiple choice A2

What does a cash injection mean?

Correct! Not quite. Correct answer: Adding money

It means adding funds.

true false B1

An injection is always about medicine.

Correct! Not quite. Correct answer: False

It can be about money or energy too.

match pairs B1

Word

Meaning

All matched!

Matching contexts.

sentence order B2

Tap words below to build the sentence
Correct! Not quite. Correct answer:

Subject-verb-object order.

Score: /5

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C1

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B2

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acute

B2

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addictary

C1

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addicted

B1

Being physically or mentally dependent on a particular substance, activity, or behavior, and unable to stop it without suffering adverse effects. It typically involves a compulsive need that overrides other interests or responsibilities.

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B2

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B2

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C1

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