Let's ___ the checkout flow before building any screens.
To wireframe a flow means to create low-fidelity layouts showing structure and steps before visual design. It is the standard UX collocation: "wireframe the onboarding flow". "Sketch over", "draft up", and "outline off" are not the precise term. Wireframe works as noun and verb and pairs with flow, screen, and layout, focusing on structure over polish.
2 / 5
We will ___ the design so stakeholders can click through it.
To prototype means to build an interactive, clickable model of a design so people can experience the flow before development. It is the standard collocation: "prototype the booking journey". "Model over", "mock up over", and "demo off" are not idiomatic. Prototype pairs with design, flow, and interaction, and sits between wireframe and final build.
3 / 5
We should ___ to see where real users struggle.
To run usability tests means to observe real users attempting tasks to find friction. It is the standard research collocation: "run usability tests on the prototype". "Do user checks over", "make test runs", and "hold trials off" are not idiomatic. Run pairs with usability tests, studies, and sessions, and is core to evidence-based design.
4 / 5
After testing we ___ from participants and note common issues.
To gather feedback means to collect users' or stakeholders' reactions and suggestions. It is the natural collocation: "gather feedback from the test sessions". "Grab opinions over", "collect views off", and "pick comments" are not idiomatic. Gather pairs with feedback, insights, and requirements, and informs the next design cycle.
5 / 5
Based on what we learn, we ___ on the design.
To iterate means to refine a design through repeated cycles of feedback and improvement. It is the core UX collocation: "iterate on the flow after testing". "Redo over", "loop round", and "cycle off" are not the term. Iterate pairs with design, prototype, and feature, and captures the incremental nature of good product work.