episode
noun /ˈepɪsəʊd/
/ˈepɪsəʊd/
- The next episode has not yet been filmed.
- I watched a few episodes of seasons one and two.
- The soap opera is ending after 175 episodes.
- episode in something I only saw the first episode in the series
- in an episode It happened in the final episode of ‘Star Trek’.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- exciting
- thrilling
- classic
- …
- catch
- see
- watch
- …
- during an/the episode
- in an/the episode
- an event, a situation, or a period of time in somebody’s life, a novel, etc. that is important or interesting in some way synonym incident
- I'd like to try and forget the whole episode.
- One of the funniest episodes in the book occurs in Chapter 6.
- It was an episode in his life that he was not proud of.
Extra ExamplesTopics Literature and writingb1- He says he just wants to forget the whole unfortunate episode.
- I still remember that episode from my childhood.
- an extraordinary episode in American history
- during a brief episode of socialist rule
- It turned out to be one of the funniest episodes in the novel.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- dramatic
- exciting
- bizarre
- …
- remember
- forget
- experience
- …
- during an episode
- episode from
- episode in
- …
- the entire episode
- the whole episode
- a period of time during which somebody is affected by a particular illness or a particular stage of a longer illness
- an acute episode of pneumonia
- All the patients had episodes of unexplained fever.
- His former wife suffered with depressive episodes.
- She has only told you about the latest episode in a long history of mental illness.
Word Originlate 17th cent. (denoting a section between songs in Greek tragedy): from Greek epeisodion, neuter of epeisodios ‘coming in besides’, from epi ‘in addition’ + eisodos ‘entry’ (from eis ‘into’ + hodos ‘way’).