Edit Game
Business partner Units 1-3 vocabulary
 Delete

Use commas to add multiple tags

 Private  Unlisted  Public



 Save

Delimiter between question and answer:

Tips:

  • No column headers.
  • Each line maps to a question.
  • If the delimiter is used in a question, the question should be surrounded by double quotes: "My, question","My, answer"
  • The first answer in the multiple choice question must be the correct answer.






 Save   17  Close
When business is going so well that everyone forgets the last time it wasn’t.
To boom
To help a friend (or a company) who made a money mess — usually with a big sigh and your wallet.
Bail someone out
A financial restart button — usually after some very bad shopping decisions.
Bankruptcy
Money the bank gives you so you can feel rich for one day and anxious for five years.
Loan
A giant loan for your dream house that takes 30 years, a steady job, and your soul to pay off.
Mortgage
When banks suddenly stop lending money, and everyone else suddenly stops smiling.
Credit crunch
When the economy decides to take a long, sad vacation — and takes your job with it.
Recession
The professional way of spying on other companies to make yours look just as cool.
Benchmarking
That friendly feeling when your colleague laughs at your joke — even the bad ones.
Rapport
The superpower of knowing when your coworker is angry before they throw their stapler at you.
Emotional intelligence
A person who agrees to learn from someone older and wiser... or at least someone with more coffee mugs and office plants.
Mentee
A special time when you stop working to learn how to work — usually involves a lot of coffee and pretending to take notes.
Training
A day full of smiling HR people, awkward icebreakers, and 237 PowerPoint slides about company values you’ll forget tomorrow
Induction programme
A magical place where you hear everyone’s phone calls, keyboard typing, and loud chewing — but somehow still feel lonely.
Open-plan office
A pyramid where the people at the top have big chairs, the people in the middle have meetings, and the people at the bottom do all the work.
Company hierarchy
The smallest amount of money the law says your boss can pay you — just enough to buy instant noodles and dream of vacation.
Minimum salary
A list of clothes your boss expects you to wear, which somehow always includes “smart” shoes and never pajamas.
Dress code