Forex glossary and master reference
Use a plain-English glossary for the terms scammers often use to sound more advanced than they are.
Lesson outcomes
- Translate common forex, MetaTrader, bot, and copy-trading terms into plain language.
- Spot when jargon is being used to avoid evidence.
- Know which earlier lesson to revisit for each major concept.
Workshop lab
Complete the demo, notebook, platform, or code task before treating the lesson as finished.
Evidence pack
Keep screenshots, exports, logs, calculations, or code versions in a dated learning folder.
Pass standard
You should be able to explain the failure modes, show your work, and name the stop rule.
Free education, not signals. This lesson is part of EarnSouthAfrica's free forex course. It does not tell you what to buy or sell, it does not promise income, and it should be practised on a demo account before any real-money decision.
Jargon is useful when it makes communication precise. Jargon is dangerous when it makes beginners feel too embarrassed to ask basic questions.
This glossary is a defence tool. If a mentor, bot seller, or signal provider uses a term you cannot explain, pause the sales conversation and return to the relevant lesson.
What you should be able to do after this lesson
- Translate common forex, MetaTrader, bot, and copy-trading terms into plain language.
- Spot when jargon is being used to avoid evidence.
- Know which earlier lesson to revisit for each major concept.
Trading terms
- Pip: a standard price movement unit, but pip value depends on pair, lot size, and account currency.
- Lot: the trade volume unit that drives risk size.
- Spread: the cost gap between bid and ask.
- Slippage: the difference between requested and filled price.
- Margin: funds set aside to support leveraged exposure.
- Drawdown: the decline from an equity peak.
Platform and bot terms
- Expert Advisor: an MQL5 program that can analyse and trade according to coded rules.
- Magic number: an identifier EAs use to distinguish their own trades.
- Strategy Tester: MetaTrader's environment for historical testing and optimization.
- VPS: a server used to keep platforms running, but it does not make a bad strategy good.
- WebRequest: an MQL5 function for HTTP requests to allowed URLs.
Copy-trading terms
- Provider: the account or strategy being followed.
- Receiver: the follower account that may copy events.
- Allocation: how much of the follower account is exposed.
- Multiplier: a rule that scales copied trade size.
- Stale event: a provider event too old to copy safely.
- Equity curve: account value over time, including drawdowns.
Academy-grade study plan
Finishing the course means proving restraint. The best outcome is not confidence; it is a folder of evidence showing what you understand, what remains unproven, and what you refuse to risk or buy.
| Course element | What you must produce |
|---|---|
| Primary artifact | Graduation dossier |
| Lesson focus | Forex glossary and master reference |
| Working environment | Demo account, notebook, exported platform data, or local code sandbox. Never live funds for first practice. |
| Completion standard | You can explain the concept, reproduce the exercise, identify failure modes, and show evidence without relying on a seller's claims. |
Instructor workflow
Use this workflow as if an instructor were marking the lesson. The important question is not whether the topic sounds familiar. The question is whether your notes, screenshots, calculations, logs, or code prove that you can apply forex glossary and master reference under controlled conditions.
- Collect records, screenshots, calculations, tests, journals, and refusal decisions into one archive.
- Separate educational readiness from live-money readiness.
- Create admin routines for tax records, broker statements, withdrawals, and strategy versioning.
- Write a go/no-go decision that includes reasons to wait.
Worked case study: The mature decision is not to go live yet
A learner finishes the course excited, but their journal shows rule-breaking, incomplete testing, and unclear tax/admin records. The professional response is to continue demo work with specific remediation tasks rather than treating course completion as permission to deposit.
After reading the scenario, write the decision you would make before checking the suggested workflow above. Then compare your decision with the operating model. The gap between those two answers is the part of the lesson that deserves another demo repetition.
Professional template
Complete this template in your own notebook. A paid course would normally hide this kind of operating document behind worksheets; here it is part of the free lesson.
| Field | Standard |
|---|---|
| Skill area | Platform, risk, strategy, copy trading, automation, research, admin, and scam defence. |
| Evidence | Screenshot, calculation, journal, test report, code, source link, or saved terms file. |
| Gap | What is still unclear, inconsistent, untested, or emotionally unstable. |
| Decision | Not ready, demo extension, limited educational experiment, or seek qualified advice. |
Failure-mode lab
Paid courses often sell confidence. A serious course teaches you how the idea breaks. Before continuing, test the failure modes below on demo, paper, or code review. If you cannot describe the failure, you are not ready to trust the concept.
- Treating a completed course as proof that live trading is appropriate.
- Ignoring records until tax, withdrawal, or dispute questions appear.
- Depositing because demo progress feels boring.
- Forgetting that the safest decision can be to walk away.
Evidence pack and pass standard
Do not mark this lesson complete because you read it. Mark it complete only when you can show the evidence below. Keep the files in a dated folder so your learning history survives platform updates, memory gaps, and sales pressure.
- A one-page note explaining forex glossary and master reference without sales language or copied definitions.
- A screenshot, export, calculation, log, or code file that proves the practical work was completed on demo.
- A written stop rule that says when this topic must not be used with real money.
- A complete course archive with lesson notes, drills, screenshots, test reports, and decision logs.
- A final readiness memo that names three reasons you are still not ready for larger risk.
Assessment rubric
| Level | What it looks like |
|---|---|
| Not ready | You can repeat the vocabulary but cannot complete the demo task, calculate the risk, explain the failure mode, or show evidence. |
| Course pass | You can complete the practical task on demo, explain the decision rules, show evidence, and name the conditions where the idea must not be used. |
| Strong pass | You can teach the concept to someone else, find edge cases, document a rejected example, and improve the template without weakening risk controls. |
Advanced homework
- Build a 30-day remediation plan for your weakest course area.
- Write an account-protection checklist for deposits, withdrawals, records, and passwords.
- Teach one lesson to someone else and note which parts you struggled to explain.
Practical drill
Do this lesson as a controlled exercise, not as a reason to trade live. Open a demo account or notebook, write the lesson title, and record what you changed, clicked, calculated, or checked. If the lesson includes code, compile it only in a demo environment and keep the original version unchanged so you can compare edits safely.
- Write a one-paragraph explanation of forex glossary and master reference in your own words.
- Take one screenshot or note that proves you completed the platform, maths, research, or code task.
- Record one risk rule that would stop you from using this idea with real money.
- If anything feels unclear, repeat the lesson before moving to the next module.
How scammers misuse this topic
Scammers often take real concepts and wrap them in urgency. They may use platform jargon, bot screenshots, copied profit charts, or official-sounding language to make a paid offer feel safe. A real concept is not the same as a safe offer. Before paying anyone, ask whether you can verify the provider, reproduce the calculation, test the claim on demo, understand the risk, and walk away without pressure.
Checkpoint before continuing
- You can explain the glossary terms without copying definitions.
- You know which terms affect real risk.
- You pause whenever sales language replaces clear evidence.
Official references
These lessons are written as free education. When platform features or rules matter, verify against the official source before using real money.
Risk note: leveraged forex and contracts for difference can lose money quickly. EarnSouthAfrica is an educational publisher, not a broker, adviser, signal provider, or money manager.
Keep exploring
Read the latest guides, take the side-hustle quiz, or contact the editorial desk if you spot a correction.