Vocabulary is typically seen as individual words (often presented in lists) whereas lexis is a somewhat wider concept and consists of collocations, chunks and formulaic expressions.
As I understand it, it seems that we store language in our memories in chunks (groups of words) rather than single words, and this is how we build up the sentences we make. I'm sure you already say things like for example or excuse me without thinking too much about the individual words. And hopefully you do the same with at least some dependent prepositions - phrases like it depends on, I apologise for should come fairly automatically. The 'lexical approach' to language learning just takes this a bit further.
Experiment - Look back at my first paragraph and see if you can see any 'lexical chunks', groups of words that seem to go naturally together. I can make out at least six. When you've found a few, click
here to
show my ideas.
Last year I started using the New English File Advanced coursebook with students. After every reading text it has a section called Lexis in context. 'Don't worry', I told my students, 'Lexis is just a trendy new word for vocabulary.' (For some reason I'm not too keen on trendy new terms - I still prefer the term Phrasal verb to Multipart verb!). But it turns out that I was oversimplifying things a bit.
You could also possibly add verb + things a bit
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