Your explanation seems okay, although I better learn what an anti-codon is
My understanding so far is that: mRNA copies the required segment of DNA carrying the codons that represent AAs. tRNA transfers the specific AAs to the ribosome and rRNA helps by reading the mRNA instructions and directing assembly of the polypeptide chain.
the DNA acts as a template for mrna synthesis... and that mrna sequence of nucleotides is read in codons (3 nucleotides at a time) by the ribosome, which brings the correct trna molecule (which has an anticodon) which recognises the complementary codon, and that then is what the amino acid sequence is based on... because the trna has the amino acid attached to its structure and thus as the ribosome moves down the mrna it, more amino acids are added covalently to the growing polypeptide chain...
but yeah i guess u don't have to worry since its unit 4?
but yeah watch some videos... its better to visualise it