Matching Pairs TED public speakingOnline version ----------------- by Evgenia Bakina 1 have something in common (with someone) , We’ve got such a lot in common. I don’t think they’ve got much in common with their neighbours. 2 overuse, I tend to overuse certain favourite expressions. 3 to share, Thanks for sharing. They meet to share secrets and relive old memories. 4 to divulge, They could not divulge any further information. 5 extraordinary, It’s an extraordinary story. 6 interconnected, tens of thousands of interconnected computer networks The two issues are not separate but interconnected. 7 cliché, My wedding day - and I know it's a cliché - was just the happiest day of my life. 8 brainwave, I couldn't see how I could get home from the station - then I had a brainwave. 9 frankly, Frankly, I couldn’t care less what he thinks. things connected to or with each other used for emphasizing that what you are about to say is your honest opinion, even though the person you are talking to might not like it to tell someone something very unusual and surprising to have the same interests or opinions as someone else a sudden very good idea, an electrical signal sent by your brain that can be recorded and measured to use something so much that it is no longer effective to give information about something, especially something that should be kept secret a phrase or idea that is boring because people use it a lot and it is no longer original