B2 noun #800 mais comum 2 min de leitura

relevant

Something is relevant if it is important and connected to what you are talking about.

Explanation at your level:

When you talk about something, you want to use words that fit. If you talk about school, talk about books. These are relevant things. It means 'important for now'.

If you have a question, make sure it is relevant to the lesson. This means your question is about the topic. It helps everyone learn better.

In a meeting, you should provide relevant details. Don't talk about things that don't matter. Being relevant shows you are listening and prepared.

The speaker made several highly relevant points during the debate. By focusing on relevant data, you can make your argument much stronger and more persuasive.

The concept of relevance is central to effective communication. In academic writing, you must filter out extraneous information to ensure that every sentence is strictly relevant to your thesis statement.

The relevance of historical texts to modern political discourse is a subject of intense scholarly debate. To remain culturally relevant, institutions must constantly adapt their methodologies to the shifting paradigms of the current era.

Palavra em 30 segundos

  • Means connected to the topic.
  • Used in professional settings.
  • Always use with 'to'.
  • Opposite is irrelevant.

When you hear the word relevant, think of a puzzle piece that actually fits into the picture you are building. It describes information, ideas, or objects that have a direct connection to the topic you are currently exploring.

In a classroom or a professional meeting, being relevant means you are staying on track. If someone asks about the budget and you start talking about your cat, your comment is definitely not relevant! Keeping things relevant helps people understand your point quickly without getting distracted by extra noise.

The word relevant has a fascinating history that travels all the way back to the Middle French word relever, which means 'to raise up'. It eventually evolved from the Medieval Latin relevare.

Originally, it meant something that 'raised up' or 'relieved' a burden, but over centuries, the meaning shifted toward 'being significant' or 'having weight' in a discussion. It is a great example of how language changes from physical actions to abstract concepts of importance.

You will hear relevant used most often in academic and business settings. It is a high-register word, meaning it sounds professional and precise.

Common collocations include highly relevant, relevant information, and relevant experience. When you use it, you are telling the listener that what you are saying carries real weight and is worth their attention.

While 'relevant' itself isn't usually the core of an idiom, it appears in phrases like 'stay relevant', which means to keep up with current trends. Another is 'make it relevant', often used by teachers to explain why a student should care about a specific topic.

We also use 'relevant to the point' to emphasize that someone is being concise and helpful.

Relevant is an adjective, so it does not have a plural form. It is pronounced with the stress on the first syllable: REL-uh-vuhnt.

A common mistake is to add an extra syllable, making it sound like 're-lev-a-ant'. Remember, it rhymes with 'elephant' if you say it quickly! It is often followed by the preposition 'to', as in 'relevant to the situation'.

Fun Fact

It comes from the same root as 'relieve'!

Pronunciation Guide

UK /ˈrel.ə.vənt/

Clear stress on the first syllable.

US /ˈrel.ə.vənt/

Similar to UK, crisp vowels.

Common Errors

  • adding an extra syllable
  • stressing the second syllable
  • swallowing the 'v' sound

Rhymes With

elephant relevant irrelevant

Difficulty Rating

Leitura 2/5

Easy

Writing 2/5

Easy

Speaking 2/5

Easy

Audição 2/5

Easy

What to Learn Next

Prerequisites

topic important

Learn Next

pertinent consequential

Avançado

germane

Grammar to Know

Adjective Prepositional Phrases

Relevant to...

Examples by Level

1

This book is relevant to my class.

relevant = important for

adjective usage

1

Your answer is relevant to the question.

2

We need relevant information for this project.

3

Is this news relevant to us?

4

The map is relevant for our trip.

5

Keep your comments relevant.

6

He gave relevant examples.

7

The data is relevant.

8

Find relevant facts.

1

Her experience is highly relevant to the job.

2

The teacher made the lesson relevant to our lives.

3

Please provide relevant documents only.

4

That is not relevant to our discussion.

5

We found some relevant studies online.

6

The evidence is relevant to the case.

7

Are these rules relevant here?

8

Stay relevant by reading the news.

1

The findings are relevant to current research.

2

She has relevant skills for this position.

3

The article provides relevant context.

4

Is his opinion relevant to this matter?

5

The committee discussed relevant issues.

6

The evidence is legally relevant.

7

We need to keep our skills relevant.

8

The data is relevant to the outcome.

1

The candidate demonstrated relevant expertise.

2

The policy is no longer relevant in this climate.

3

His argument was not relevant to the core issue.

4

We must ensure the data is relevant and accurate.

5

The historical context is relevant to understanding the play.

6

The information is relevant to the investigation.

7

She made a relevant point about the budget.

8

The study has relevant implications for the future.

1

The relevance of his work to modern philosophy is undeniable.

2

The curriculum should be made more relevant to the digital age.

3

The judge ruled the evidence was not relevant.

4

The discourse remained relevant throughout the conference.

5

She provided a relevant critique of the system.

6

The theory is relevant to multiple disciplines.

7

His insights were highly relevant to our strategy.

8

The relevance of the findings cannot be overstated.

Antônimos

irrelevant unrelated extraneous

Colocações comuns

highly relevant
relevant information
relevant experience
relevant documents
relevant to the issue
stay relevant
remain relevant
relevant factor
relevant context
relevant evidence
relevant point

Idioms & Expressions

"stay relevant"

to keep up with trends

Companies must innovate to stay relevant.

neutral

""

""

""

""

""

Easily Confused

relevant vs irrelevant

opposite meaning

ir- prefix means not

That is relevant vs That is irrelevant.

Sentence Patterns

A2

Subject + is + relevant + to + Object

The data is relevant to the study.

Família de palavras

Nouns

relevance the state of being relevant

Adjectives

relevant closely connected

Relacionado

irrelevant opposite

How to Use It

frequency

8

Formality Scale

Academic Professional Neutral Casual

Erros comuns

relevant to the topic relevant to the topic
Always use 'to' after relevant.
using 'relevant' as a verb
confusing with 'relevantly'
using 'irrelevant' incorrectly
mispronouncing as 're-lev-a-rant'

Tips

💡

Use 'to'

Always follow with 'to'.

💡

Rhyme with Elephant

Say it like 'elephant' to get the rhythm right.

💡

Context Check

Ask yourself: Does this fit the topic?

Memorize It

Mnemonic

REL-evant: RELate to the event.

Visual Association

A puzzle piece clicking into place.

Word Web

connection importance topic focus

Desafio

Write three sentences about your day using the word relevant.

Origem da palavra

Latin

Original meaning: to raise up

Contexto cultural

None.

Used heavily in corporate and academic environments.

Used in almost every academic paper ever written.

Practice in Real Life

Real-World Contexts

Work

  • relevant experience
  • relevant skills
  • relevant data

Conversation Starters

"What is a relevant skill for your job?"

"Why is this topic relevant to us?"

Journal Prompts

Write about a time you heard someone say something irrelevant.

Perguntas frequentes

8 perguntas

No, it is an adjective.

Teste-se

fill blank A1

This book is ___ to my class.

Correto! Quase. Resposta certa: relevant

It fits the context of school.

multiple choice A2

Which means 'connected to the topic'?

Correto! Quase. Resposta certa: relevant

Relevant means connected.

true false B1

If something is irrelevant, it is important.

Correto! Quase. Resposta certa: Falso

Irrelevant means not important.

match pairs B1

Word

Significado

All matched!

Match synonyms and antonyms.

sentence order B2

Toque nas palavras abaixo para montar a frase
Correto! Quase. Resposta certa:

This topic is relevant to...

Pontuação: /5

Related Content

Mais palavras de Communication

synscribtion

C1

The process of transcribing or recording text in real-time or in direct synchronization with an audio or video source. It often refers to collaborative, multi-user digital writing or live captioning where text is generated simultaneously with the spoken word.

wishes

B1

Expressions of a desire or hope for something to happen, or for someone to experience something good. It can also refer to the things that someone wants or has requested.

quote

A1

Repetir as palavras exatas que outra pessoa disse ou escreveu. Também pode significar dar um preço estimado para um trabalho.

confirm

B2

To provide evidence that verifies the truth or correctness of something previously uncertain or suspected. It also means to finalize an arrangement or a formal agreement to make it definite.

accentuate

C1

To make a particular feature of something more noticeable or prominent. It is frequently used to describe how one thing emphasizes the beauty, importance, or intensity of another.

perceive

C1

Perceber algo através dos sentidos ou entender uma situação.

ancedine

C1

Refers to something that is unlikely to provoke dissent or offense, often being intentionally bland, harmless, or inoffensive. In a secondary sense, it can describe something that has the power to relieve pain or distress.

misbrevtion

C1

Um estilo de comunicação tão excessivamente abreviado que se torna incompreensível. É quando a brevidade sacrifica o significado essencial.

offer

A1

Oferecer é propor algo a alguém, como ajuda ou um objeto, para que a pessoa possa escolher aceitar ou recusar.

overphonate

C1

To articulate speech sounds with excessive clarity, force, or duration, often resulting in an unnatural or exaggerated speaking style. This typically occurs when a speaker is trying too hard to be understood or is overly focused on phonetic accuracy.

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