aim
When used as a verb, "aim" is often followed by the preposition "at" (e.g., aim at a target) or the infinitive form of a verb (e.g., aim to win). As a noun, "aim" is generally countable when referring to goals (e.g., "my aims") but can be uncountable when referring to the skill of targeting (e.g., "his aim was off").
💬Casual Conversation
🎬Tuesday afternoon, Chloe is procrastinating on a term paper in the library.
Chloe Smith
I'm totally spiraling. What's even the aim of this essay?
Maya
To actually pass for once. Stop stalling and just grind it out.
💡
Chloe uses 'aim' to question the purpose of her assignment while 'spiraling' (slang for losing emotional control/panic). Maya responds with a reality check, using 'grind it out' (phrasal verb meaning to work hard through a tedious task).