Roses, SmartRosy Story262

The Atlantic Island Four Seasons Gardens, Gardening, and Four Elements Libraries
The Summar, Fire, Light, Sunshine, and Energy Library
The Spiring, Water, Greens, and Flowers Library
The Fall, Air, and Breathing Library
The Winter, Lands, and Foods Library

John: In our science fiction story, on the Atlantic Island, Four Seasons Gardeners
English Global Language Information Library
We now arrive at the Library of Information, the information center, in the information age, with librarians as information managers and information organizers, plus Comyco Robot where information material like vast collection of resources. These include physical books, eBooks, audio, videos, websites, AI data, and related products and services, which are tailored precisely to that age group year by year, from ages 1 to 200 a visionary hub dedicated to the study of human longevity. This extraordinary library brings together the finest resources of the Information Age to support and celebrate English as a global language.
The library is housed within a brilliant, 100-story, Golden-Glass High-Rise designed with cutting-edge digital solar windows. These windows generate clean energy and also display dynamic visual content on screens. They present engaging visual content, such as daily tributes to the best students, teachers, books, writers, and so on, uplifting messages, and inspirational imagery. Common images and messages include: with a large, around 20-meter beautiful, golden, and shiny statue of William Shakespeare with his book ( First Folio) in his right hand with these writing on cover clearly readable says in 4 lines( To be free to listen, To be free to speak, To be free to read, to be free to write) and under those four lines this writing ( As You Like It ) plus status in front of bulding on top of stairs.
with a large, around 20-meter beautiful, golden, and shiny statue of William Shakespeare with his book ( First Folio) in his right hand with these writing on cover clearly readable says in 4 lines( To be free to listen, To be free to speak, To be free to read, to be free to write) and under those four lines this writing ( As You Like It ) plus status in front of bulding on top of stairs.Shakespear As You Like It!.”
On top of a brilliant, 100-story, Golden-Glass High-Rise is a large Shakespear Global Theater, and on top of the globe is a statue of Shakespear
A.I. Artificial Intelligence Robot representing A Large Language Model (LLM) name Ailmm aily, ailmma100p

Situated on a prime 100-by-100-square-meter plot, the structure comprises 100 above-ground floors and 23 subterranean levels. The underground levels are dedicated to high-capacity parking and storage, meeting rooms, and a convention hall. The uppermost subterranean level is a thoughtful, metaphorical space symbolizing the 26 English language alphabet letters and 100 plus most used global signs and symbols from just the point daot . or virgols to mathematical symbols like = +-%* to …
Above ground, every floor of the library is organized into a vast collection of resources. These include physical books, eBooks, audio, videos, websites, AI data, and related products and services, which are tailored precisely to each floor or story to 1000 words of the English as global language.


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100+ 100,00 Words
1+ 10,000, 20,000 or, 30,000 or 40,000 to final goal 100,000 words plus, and onward. The 100th floor is dedicated to celebrating, supporting, and honoring individuals who have reached their 100th birthday and the remarkable journeys they have made. The 122nd floor is dedicated to the legacy of Jeanne Calment of France, the longest-living person ever verified, who lived to $122$ years and $164$ days (1875-1997).
The 123rd floor is the ultimate challenge space. It compiles all current recommendations for living 123 years to establish a new world record. It is designed to inspire hope, dreams, and prayers, featuring numerous ready recognition documents, substantial rewards, and a staggering $123 million cash prize for the successful challenger.

From the 123rd to the 200th floor, each floor is dedicated to year-by-year living goals spanning 200, perhaps at the 22nd, 23rd, or 24th centuries, or around years 3000 or 4000. These floors are filled with all suggestions, recommendations, ideas, formulas, recipes, prescriptions, products, services, inventions, discoveries, plans, and prayers to answer this question: How to live to that specific age? But for now, the world awaits the challengers who seek to set a new record by living to 123 years and becoming humanity’s next longevity hero.

John continued: We are about to begin our unparalleled longevity journey, ascending from the first floor to the 200th floor of this remarkable Centenarian Library. Here at the Atlantic Island Four Seasons Gardeners Centenarian Library, you’ll discover the world’s most comprehensive collection of age-specific resources. Each floor is carefully curated to match a specific age, from 1 to 200, offering a rich array of materials, including physical books, eBooks, audio recordings, videos, websites, AI-driven data, and a wide variety of related products and services.

In addition to its vast media library, the building hosts exhibitions, interactive shows, and innovation markets where visitors can explore new ideas, encounter groundbreaking technologies, and discover the latest in health, wellness, and longevity.

You’ll also have the opportunity to meet and learn from leading professionals and experts in the fields of fitness, aging science, holistic health, and personal wellness. Each floor presents suggestions, insights, formulas, recipes, prescriptions, inventions, discoveries, services, and spiritual reflections, all designed to help you answer one life-defining question:
“How do you want to live, and how can you thrive at your desired age?”

Use your smartphone to scan, take photos, record videos, send messages, place orders, take notes, and access information to live a happy, healthy, prosperous life for over 100 years.
We’re proud to be your guide on this journey to support you, inspire you, and help you find exactly what you’re looking for here at the Atlantic Island Four Seasons Gardeners Centenarian Library, one of the featured destinations of the 2030 World Fair.

For more information, please visit: 100-plus-years-living-benefits-advantages-and-reasons
https://best100plus.org/100-plus-years-living-benefits-advantages-and-reasons/

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How many words do you need to speak a language? From BBC : https://www.bbc.com/news/world-44569277

To work out how many words you need to know to be able to speak a second language we decided to look into how many words we know in our first language, in our case English.

We considered dusting off the dictionary and going from A1 to Zyzzyva, however, there are an estimated 171,146 words currently in use in the English language, according to the Oxford English Dictionary, not to mention 47,156 obsolete words. Typically native speakers know 15,000 to 20,000 word families – or lemmas – in their first language. Word family/lemma is a root word and all its inflections, for example: run, running, ran; blue, bluer, bluest, blueish, etc.

So does someone who can hold a decent conversation in a second language know 15,000 to 20,000 words? Is this a realistic goal for our listener to aim for? Unlikely. Prof Webb found that people who have been studying languages in a traditional setting – say French in Britain or English in Japan – often struggle to learn more than 2,000 to 3,000 words, even after years of study.

In fact, a study in Taiwan showed that after nine years of learning a foreign language half of the students failed to learn the most frequently-used 1,000 words. So which words should we learn? Prof Webb says the most effective way to be able to speak a language quickly is to pick the 800 to 1,000 lemmas which appear most frequently in a language and learn those. If you learn only 800 of the most frequently-used lemmas in English, you’ll be able to understand 75% of the language as it is spoken in normal life.

Eight hundred lemmas will help you speak a language in a day-to-day setting, but to understand dialogue in film or TV you’ll need to know the 3,000 most common lemmas. And if you want to get your head around the written word – so novels, newspapers, excellently-written BBC articles – you need to learn 8,000 to 9,000 lemmas. Read more : https://www.bbc.com/news/world-44569277

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How Many Words Does the Average Person Know? From Word Counter https://wordcounter.io/

  • Most adult native test-takers have a vocabulary range of about 20,000-35,000 words
  • At age one, a child will recognize about 50 words
  • At age three, a child will recognize about 1,000 words
  • At age five, a child will recognize about 10,000 words
  • According to Kim, Shakespeare’s combined written works totaled 25,000 unique words compared to the Wall Street Journal which used less than 20,000 unique words in its newspapers for a decade. (Note: Several other sources cite around over 30,000 words for all of Shakespeare’s collected writings).According to Kottke.org’s statistical estimate, Shakespeare probably had about 35,000 words in his passive vocabulary. With both vocabularies combined, he would have known a total of about 65,000 words!
  • According to lexicographer and dictionary expert Susie Dent, “the average active vocabulary of an adult English speaker is around 20,000 words, while his passive vocabulary is around 40,000 words.”
  • the first 25 words are used in 33% of every day writing
  • the first 100 words are used in 50% of adult and student writing
  • the first 1,000 words are used in 89% of every day writing
  • Word Counter is an easy to use online tool for counting words, characters, sentences, paragraphs and pages in real time, along with spelling and grammar checking. 
  • Read more: /wordcounter.io/blog/how-many-words-does-the-average-person-know/
  • Active vocabulary: You can remember it quickly. And you can use it without hesitation in your thoughts, when you talk, and when you write as well.
  • Passive vocabulary: you recognize and understand the word (more or less) when you happen to hear it or see it. However, you can’t easily remember the word and aren’t comfortable using it in conversation.
  • How Many Words Do I Need to Know to Be Fluent in a Foreign Language?
  • In general, we can describe levels of fluency in a foreign language with these rough word counts:
  • Functional beginner: 250-500 words. After just a week or so of learning, you’ll already have most of the tools to start having basic, everyday conversations. In most of the world’s languages, 500 words will be more than enough to get you through any tourist situations and everyday introductions.
  • Conversational: 1,000-3,000 words. With around 1,000 words in most languages, you’ll be able to ask people how they’re doing, tell them about your day and navigate everyday life situations like shopping and public transit.
  • Advanced: 4,000-10,000 words. As you grow past the 3,000 word mark or so in most languages, you’re moving beyond the words that make up everyday conversation and into specialized vocabulary for talking about your professional field, news and current events, opinions and more complex, abstract verbal feats. At this point, you should be able to reach C2 level in the Common European Framework for Reference (CEFR) in most languages.
  • Fluent: 10,000+ words. At around 10,000 words in many languages, you’ve reached a near-native level of vocabulary, with the requisite words for talking about nearly any topic in detail. Furthermore, you recognize enough words in every utterance that you usually understand the unfamiliar ones from context.
  • Native: 10,000-30,000+ words. Total word counts vary widely between world languages, making it difficult to say how many words native speakers know in general. As we discussed above, estimates of how many words are known by the average native English speaker vary from 10,000 to 65,000+

Tips for strengthening passive vocabulary:

  • Watching children’s shows: TV shows for small children speak in a slow, articulate manner with a simple vocabulary and lots of context clues. This week’s episode about colors might not be as exciting as “Game of Thrones,” but it’ll help you expose your brain to the new vocabulary in context, just like children do.
  • Reading children’s books in translation: “Green Eggs and Ham” only used fifty words in the whole book. Hunt down some Dr. Seuss or other familiar children’s classics and learn new words easily by reading these, as the vocabulary is simple and you’ll already be familiar with the context.
  • Watching Disney or other animated films: Watching a movie you’ve already seen a hundred times (but doing it in your target language) works on the same principle as reading familiar children’s stories. The vocabulary is simple, and you already know the story so well that you’ll understand much of what you hear without ever needing to open a dictionary.
  • Learning vocabulary with real-life video with FluentU: FluentU’s online language learning platform uses videos like TV and movie clips to let you expose yourself to real-life language use and suck up some more new words into your passive vocabulary.With FluentU, you learn real languages—the same way that natives speak them. FluentU has a wide variety of videos like movie trailers, funny commercials and web series, as you can see here: Read more : https://www.fluentu.com/blog/how-many-words-do-i-need-to-know/
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  • Cambridge students Word limits and requirements of your Degree Committee
    Thesis word limits are set by Degree Committees. If candidates need to increase their word limits they will need to apply for permission. Read more: University of Cambridge Students Word needs

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Wiktionary:Frequency lists from 100 words to 100/000 words in English and 100 other languages

Counting words and lemmas: The following frequency lists count distinct orthographic words, including inflected and some capitalised forms. For example, the verb “to be” is represented by “is”, “are”, “were”, and so on.

TV and movie scripts

Most common words in TV and movie scripts: Here are frequency lists comparable to the Gutenberg ones, but based on 29,213,800 words from TV and movie scripts and transcripts.

Here’s a fuller explanation of how the list was generated and its limitations: Wiktionary:Frequency lists/TV/2006/explanation.

Here are the top hundred words (from TV scripts) in alphabetical order:a · about · all · and · are · as · at · back · be · because · been · but · can · can’t · come · could · did · didn’t · do · don’t · for · from · get · go · going · good · got · had · have · he · her · here · he’s · hey · him · his · how · I · if · I’ll · I’m · in · is · it · it’s · just · know · like · look · me · mean · my · no · not · now · of · oh · OK · okay · on · one · or · out · really · right · say · see · she · so · some · something · tell · that · that’s · the · then · there · they · think · this · time · to · up · want · was · we · well · were · what · when · who · why · will · with · would · yeah · yes · you · your · you’re

1000 English Words with Examples, Sentences and English Speaking Practice. Learn 86% of EnglishLearn English Quickly
Learn 1000 English words and you will understand 85.5% of the English language. I will walk you through each word and give you examples and sentences so you can follow along and improve your conversation, pronunciation, speaking, comprehension and much more

Here they are in frequency order:1-1000 · 1001-2000 · 2001-3000 · 3001-4000 · 4001-5000 · 5001-6000 · 6001-7000 · 7001-8000 · 8001-9000 · 9001-10000Top 1,000 words cover 85.5% of all words (24,981,922/29,213,800).Top 10,000 words cover 97.2% of all words (28,398,152/29,213,800).

From the 10,000th to the 40,000th :10001-12000 · 12001-14000 · 14001-16000 · 16001-18000 · 18001-20000 · 20001-22000 · 22001-24000 · 24001-26000 · 26001-28000 · 28001-30000 · 30001-32000 · 32001-34000 · 34001-36000 · 36001-38000 · 38001-4000040001

These wikified terms can be copied to other language wiktionaries; this is what they are intended for. If you do, please add an interwiki link onto the page here.

Frequency lists as of 2006-04-16:

Frequency lists as of 2005-10-10:

1001-2000 · 2001-3000 · 3001-4000 · 4001-5000 · 5001-6000 · 6001-7000 · 7001-8000 · 8001-9000 · 9001-10000

Frequency lists as of 2005-08-16:

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Tech Evolution: Then, Now & Future (1900-2100) Worldostats
Evolution of Communication: From Cave Signals to AI (100,000 BC–2100) Worldostats
Evolution of Computers (1623–2100): Full Timeline Worldostats
Future Events We Will Miss Worldostats
World’s Largest Economies | GDP Epic Battle (1560–2025) Global Stats
Largest Armies in History (1825-2025) | 200 Years of War Evolution Global Stats
World’s Richest Billionaires (1995–2025) | 30 Years of Epic Battle Global Stats

World’s Largest Companies by Market Cap (1998–2025) | 27-Year Epic Battle Global Stats
Top Countries by Population (1625–2025) | 400 Years of Global Domination Global Stats

Emphasizing Words of Language: From Human Mastery to Artificial Intelligence

Language is the ultimate tool for connection and creation. Whether through the natural growth of a human mind or the complex training of an AI, the volume of words we command defines our ability to “be free to listen, speak, read, and write.”
Special emphasis is placed on the relationship between vocabulary size, numerical milestones, and educational or intellectual grade levels, as illustrated below:

  • 1+ — 1, 10, 100, 400, 1,000 words
  • 2+ — 2,000, 2,026, 2,030 words
  • 3+ — 4,000 words
  • 4+ — 10,000 words
  • 5+ — 20,000 words (typically known by 6th-grade students)
  • 6+ — 40,000 words (typically known by 12th-grade students)
  • 7+ — 60,000 words (average for a bachelor’s degree holder)
  • 8+ — 80,000 words (estimated vocabulary of a PhD or doctor)
  • 10+ — 100,000+ words (the level of a language master, literary genius, prolific writer, or top linguistic expert)

The Human Vocabulary Journey

Below is a breakdown of vocabulary milestones, mapping word counts to educational levels and expertise levels.

LevelEstimated VocabularyMastery Milestone
11 to 1,000 WordsEarly Childhood & Foundational Basics
22,000 to 2,030 WordsPrimary Development (Milestones for 2026/2030)
34,000 WordsEmerging Literacy
410,000 WordsFunctional Fluency
520,000 Words6th Grade Proficiency
640,000 Words12th Grade (High School Graduate)
760,000 WordsBachelor’s Degree Level
880,000 WordsAdvanced Expertise (Doctorate/PhD)
10+100,000+ WordsLinguistic Masters, Geniuses, and Elite Writers

Artificial Intelligence (AI), Large Language Models (LLMs), and Vocabulary Volume

Humans learn through experience and study, while Large Language Models (LLMs) process language using massive datasets and specialized tokenization techniques.
LLMs are trained on an enormous amount of text, ranging from hundreds of billions to over a trillion words, gathered from the internet, books, academic databases, and various other text-rich sources. This vast exposure allows the models to learn:

  • Grammar and syntax
  • Factual knowledge
  • Patterns of reasoning
  • Contextual understanding

Fixed Vocabulary Size in LLMs

Despite being trained on such massive data, LLMs operate using a fixed vocabulary — a discrete set of units known as tokens. During processing, any input text is tokenized (broken down) into these units.

  • In multilingual models, the vocabulary size is generally larger, often around 250,000 tokens, to support multiple languages efficiently.
  • In monolingual models (trained on a single language), the vocabulary size typically ranges from 30,000 to 60,000 tokens.

Why This Matters
Understanding the “Best 1 to100,000+ Words” inspires and motivates everyone to appreciate each word, advancing their learning and memorization for peak human achievement while utilizing AI as a powerful partner in the creative process.

Understanding the “Best 100,000+ Words” allows everyone to appreciate the peak of human achievement while utilizing AI as a powerful partner in the creative process.

At www.best100plus.com, we celebrate this bridge between human bril

[ Please note: All numbers and grade levels presented are estimates and represent informed approximations for the story, not definitive or guaranteed outcomes.]