The 100 Most Useful English Collocations You Must Know

English collocations and word partnerships
Collocations are word pairs that naturally go together in English — mastering them is key to sounding native.
Why Native Speakers Say “Make a Decision” Not “Do a Decision”

Have you ever wondered why it is “make a decision” but “do your homework”? Why do we “take” a photo but “have” a conversation? These are collocations – natural word combinations that native speakers use instinctively but that feel completely arbitrary to learners.

Mastering collocations is one of the fastest ways to sound more natural in English. Here are 100 of the most common ones organized by type.

Make vs Do

This is one of the most important distinctions in English. Use make when you create, produce, or construct something. Use do when you perform, carry out, or accomplish an action.

  • make a decision / make an effort / make a mistake / make a phone call / make a plan / make a promise / make progress / make friends / make money
  • do homework / do the housework / do the laundry / do the shopping / do research / do business / do exercise / do the dishes / do nothing

Take vs Have

Use take for brief actions, captures, or single instances. Use have for experiences, states, and longer actions.

  • take a photo / take a shower / take a break / take a seat / take a step / take medicine / take notes / take control / take advantage
  • have a conversation / have a relationship / have an idea / have a problem / have lunch / have a feeling / have fun / have doubt

Break vs Make vs Do

  • break a promise / break the law / break a record / break news / break silence / break habit
  • make waves / make assumptions / make arrangements / make arrangements / make an exception

Get vs Take vs Make

  • get a chance / get permission / get attention / get angry / get dressed / get started / get lost / get married / get divorced
  • take a risk / take responsibility / take action / take care / take place
  • make a contribution / make adjustments / make contact / make inquiries

Adjective + Noun Collocations

  • strong tea / heavy rain / deep sleep / severe pain / minor injury
  • fast food / junk food / fresh air / public opinion / higher education
  • close friends / big issue / common sense / grave concern / serious damage

Verb + Preposition Combinations

  • believe in / belong to / depend on / differ from / hope for
  • listen to / look after / look forward to / look into
  • point out / rely on / result in / suffer from

Word Partnership Patterns

Deadly vs Lethal vs Fatal

All three mean “causing death,” but collocate differently:

  • deadly weapon / deadly disease / deadly sin / deadly serious
  • lethal dose / lethal weapon / lethal injection
  • fatal accident / fatal error / fatal injury (but not “fatal disease”)

Pure vs Clean vs Clear

  • pure water / pure gold / pure coincidence / pure joy
  • clean energy / clean record / clean sweep / come clean
  • clear evidence / clear sky / clear explanation / clear your mind

Why Collocations Matter

Using the wrong collocation is one of the most noticeable signs of non-native speech. Even if your grammar is perfect, saying “do a decision” instead of “make a decision” immediately marks you as a learner.

Conversely, using correct collocations instantly makes your English sound more natural and fluent. Native speakers rarely think about collocations – they are stored as chunks in the brain, not assembled word by word.

How to Learn Collocations

  1. Read extensively – your brain naturally picks up collocations from context.
  2. Keep a collocation notebook – write phrases, not single words.
  3. Use corpus tools like COCA or Lingoscope to check which words naturally collocate.
  4. Practice in speaking – force yourself to use the correct collocation, even if it feels uncomfortable.
  5. Learn chunks, not words – “take a photo” is one chunk to learn, not four separate words.

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