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Learn English Podcast

Recession Vocabulary Every English Learner Needs to Know | American English in Context

20 min•15 september 2025

📉"In this economy?" — You've probably heard this phrase, but do you know what it really means?

This episode of the Learn English Podcast breaks down the most important recession vocabulary words and phrases you will hear in American news, at work, and all over social media. From layoffs and severance packages to golden parachutes and vibesessions — each term is explained clearly in context so you can understand and use it naturally.

Designed for intermediate English learners (B1–B2), this episode covers real-world vocabulary around economics, work, and money — and explains how Americans actually talk about financial hardship. With recession fears growing in the United States and around the world, these are words you will be hearing a lot.

Learn American English naturally through real topics that matter — not grammar drills.

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📝 Vocabulary list:

1) Circumstances – the situation or conditions someone is in.

2) Downturn – a decline or drop in economic activity.

3) In this economy – a phrase people use to mean “with today’s difficult financial situation.”

4) Vibe – the feeling, mood, or atmosphere of a place or situation.

5) Vibecession – slang for when people feel like the economy is bad, even if it isn’t officially in recession.

6) Portmanteau – a new word made by joining two other words.

7) Let go – a polite way of saying someone lost their job (either fired or laid off).

8) Severance package – money a company gives to employees when they lose their job, to help them while they look for another.

9) Golden parachute – a large payment or benefits given to top executives when they leave a company, even if they did a bad job.

10) Living paycheck to paycheck – only having enough money to survive until the next paycheck, with no savings.

11) Make ends meet – to have just enough money to pay for basic needs.

12) Underemployment – when people have jobs but not enough hours or not jobs that match their skills.

13) Drying up – when something is decreasing or becoming less available.

14) Disposable income – extra money you can spend on fun or non-essential things after paying bills.

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