Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
π½π
English Conversation Training β‘οΈ Pronunciation Workout #!
#English_Language
βΈ@Google_English_Worl
English Conversation Training β‘οΈ Pronunciation Workout #!
#English_Language
βΈ@Google_English_Worl
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
π½π¦
Pronunciation Practice π
Difficult Vowel Sounds DIPHTHONGS...β¨
#English_Language
βΈ@Google_English_Worl
Pronunciation Practice π
Difficult Vowel Sounds DIPHTHONGS...β¨
#English_Language
βΈ@Google_English_Worl
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
β¨Common expressionπ¦π
How To Ask for Help in English | Common Expressions
#English_Language
βΈ@Google_English_Worl
How To Ask for Help in English | Common Expressions
#English_Language
βΈ@Google_English_Worl
Welcome to Ruby's
KC Luck
πβ¨
Welcome to Ruby'sπ¦π
βοΈ K.C. Luck
π Novel, LGBT literature
β± Originally published: 2018
β @English_World_Stories
Welcome to Ruby'sπ¦π
βοΈ K.C. Luck
π Novel, LGBT literature
β± Originally published: 2018
β @English_World_Stories
ππΈπΌπ½
Noisome = having an offensive smell π©π
Fulsome = excessively flattering or praising ππ
Winsome = charming π©β¨
Cumbersome = burdensome
#Vocabulary Of The Dayβ¨
#English_Language
βΈ@Google_English_Worl
Noisome = having an offensive smell π©π
Fulsome = excessively flattering or praising ππ
Winsome = charming π©β¨
Cumbersome = burdensome
#Vocabulary Of The Dayβ¨
#English_Language
βΈ@Google_English_Worl
π΅π’π‘π βοΈπ£
π₯EXCEPTIONABLE = offensive:
βοΈHe was criticized for his *exceptionable* comments.
π₯EXCEPTIONAL = outstanding:
βοΈMy essay is *exceptional*.
π‘In American English πΊπΈ, βlicenseβ is both a noun and a verb.
In British English π¬π§, βlicenceβ is a noun, and βlicenseβ is a verb.
#Vocabulary
#English_Language
βΈ@Google_English_Worl
π₯EXCEPTIONABLE = offensive:
βοΈHe was criticized for his *exceptionable* comments.
π₯EXCEPTIONAL = outstanding:
βοΈMy essay is *exceptional*.
π‘In American English πΊπΈ, βlicenseβ is both a noun and a verb.
In British English π¬π§, βlicenceβ is a noun, and βlicenseβ is a verb.
#Vocabulary
#English_Language
βΈ@Google_English_Worl
π1
π£ πΉUsed To πΆπΈ
Iβm βuse toβ hot weather. ββ
Iβm *used to* hot weather. β βοΈ
Get βuse toβ it. β β
Get *used to* it. β βοΈ
We *used to* be friends. β βοΈ
#Grammar
#English_Language
βΈ@Google_English_Worl
Iβm βuse toβ hot weather. ββ
Iβm *used to* hot weather. β βοΈ
Get βuse toβ it. β β
Get *used to* it. β βοΈ
We *used to* be friends. β βοΈ
#Grammar
#English_Language
βΈ@Google_English_Worl
Forwarded from πWonderful Placesπ
β¨πΈπΌπ¦πππ
Zhangye Danxia Geopark, China ....
πππ¦πβ¨β¨β¨
Geology lovers and avid Instagrammers alike will be drawn to the otherworldly hues of the "Rainbow Mountains." The colors were formed by the layering of sedimentary mineral deposits over millions of years, but it's hard to look at the flowing reds, yellows, and oranges and not feel like you're witnessing magic.
βͺ@Beautiful_Haven
Zhangye Danxia Geopark, China ....
πππ¦πβ¨β¨β¨
Geology lovers and avid Instagrammers alike will be drawn to the otherworldly hues of the "Rainbow Mountains." The colors were formed by the layering of sedimentary mineral deposits over millions of years, but it's hard to look at the flowing reds, yellows, and oranges and not feel like you're witnessing magic.
βͺ@Beautiful_Haven
βPhrasal Verbs of the Dayβ
π’keep back
βπΎMeaning
If you keep something back, you don't tell someone about it.
βͺοΈSynonym
withhold (formal)
βFor example
πΉkeep back sth The police suspected that he was keeping back some important information.
πΉkeep sth back I could tell that she was keeping something back from me.
βββββββββββ
English_Language
βΈ@Google_English_Worl
π’keep back
βπΎMeaning
If you keep something back, you don't tell someone about it.
βͺοΈSynonym
withhold (formal)
βFor example
πΉkeep back sth The police suspected that he was keeping back some important information.
πΉkeep sth back I could tell that she was keeping something back from me.
βββββββββββ
English_Language
βΈ@Google_English_Worl
β»οΈπ°Slang of the Dayβ»οΈπ°
π goof off | goof around πΊπΈ
βπΎMeaning
waste time, play around
βFor example
πΊWhenever the teacher leaves the classroom she tells her students to keep working, but as soon as she leaves they start goofing off.
πΊIt's the kids who goof around in college instead of taking their studies seriously who'll be in trouble when they try to join the workforce.
β«οΈVariety
This is typically used in American English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
βββββββββββββ
English_Language
βΈ@Google_English_Worl
π goof off | goof around πΊπΈ
βπΎMeaning
waste time, play around
βFor example
πΊWhenever the teacher leaves the classroom she tells her students to keep working, but as soon as she leaves they start goofing off.
πΊIt's the kids who goof around in college instead of taking their studies seriously who'll be in trouble when they try to join the workforce.
β«οΈVariety
This is typically used in American English but may be used in other varieties of English too.
βββββββββββββ
English_Language
βΈ@Google_English_Worl
βπ Idiom of the Dayβπ
πjog your memory
βπΎMeaning
If something jogs your memory, it helps you to remember something.
βοΈFor example
πΈThe song really jogged my memory and I could clearly picture the scene thirty years ago when my friends and I first heard it.
πΈThe police had a sketch of the suspect drawn and showed it to people in the area in the hope of jogging their memories.
βββββββββββββ
English_Language
βΈ@Google_English_Worl
πjog your memory
βπΎMeaning
If something jogs your memory, it helps you to remember something.
βοΈFor example
πΈThe song really jogged my memory and I could clearly picture the scene thirty years ago when my friends and I first heard it.
πΈThe police had a sketch of the suspect drawn and showed it to people in the area in the hope of jogging their memories.
βββββββββββββ
English_Language
βΈ@Google_English_Worl
Forwarded from πΌπEnglish Storyπͺππ
Beauty_and_Beast-Final.pdf
928.5 KB
βStory Of The Weekendββ¨
πππΈβ¨β¨β¨β¨β¨
πΉThe Beauty And The BeastπΉ
β @Google_English_World
πππΈβ¨β¨β¨β¨β¨
πΉThe Beauty And The BeastπΉ
β @Google_English_World
Forwarded from πWonderful Placesπ
π¦β¨
Great Ocean Road, Australia
π¦β¨πππΌπΈπ½
Head west from Melbourne on this coastal drive to see everything from the famous 12 Apostle rock formations, to koalas in Great Otway National Park as well as the charming seaside town of Lorne.
βͺ@Beautiful_Haven
Great Ocean Road, Australia
π¦β¨πππΌπΈπ½
Head west from Melbourne on this coastal drive to see everything from the famous 12 Apostle rock formations, to koalas in Great Otway National Park as well as the charming seaside town of Lorne.
βͺ@Beautiful_Haven
π¦π π’Grammarπ£ π¦
#Report speech
πSo when we report someoneβs words we can do it in two ways.
β We can use direct speech with quotation marks
π ( "I work in a bank" )
or we can use reported speechπ (He said he worked in a bank.)
β In reported speech the tenses, word-order and pronouns may be different from those in the original sentence.
ππWe can use all tensesππ
β Direct speech: βI travel a lot in my jobβ
β Reported speech: He said that he travelled a lot in his job.
β The present simple tenseπ
(I travel) usually changes to the past simple
β (he travelled) in reported speech.
β Direct speech: βBe quiet. The babyβs sleeping.β
β Reported speech: She told me to be quiet because the baby was sleeping.
πThe present continuous usually changes to the past continuous.
β I work in Italyβ
β Reported speech: He told me that he works in Italy.
It isnβt always necessary to change the tense. If something is still true now β he still works in Italy β we can use the present simple in the reported sentence.
β Past simple and past continuous tenses
β Direct speech: We lived in China for 5 years.
β Reported speech: She told me they had lived in China for 5 years.
β The past simple tense
(we lived) usually changes to the past perfect (they had lived) in reported speech.
β Direct speech: I was walking down the road when I saw the accident.
β Reported speech:
He told me heβd been walking down the road when heβd seen the accident.
πThe past continuous usually changes to the past perfect continuous.
πPerfect tenses
ππDirect speech:
βTheyβve always been very kind to me.
β Reported speech: She said theyβd always been very kind to her.
πThe present perfect tense (have always been) usually changes to the past perfect tense (had always been).
πDirect speech:
β They had already eaten when I arrived.
π Reported speech: He said theyβd already eaten when heβd arrived.
πThe past perfect tense does not change in reported speech.
β This is the complete form of this grammar..
βββββββββββββ
English_Language
βΈ@Google_English_Worl
#Report speech
πSo when we report someoneβs words we can do it in two ways.
β We can use direct speech with quotation marks
π ( "I work in a bank" )
or we can use reported speechπ (He said he worked in a bank.)
β In reported speech the tenses, word-order and pronouns may be different from those in the original sentence.
ππWe can use all tensesππ
β Direct speech: βI travel a lot in my jobβ
β Reported speech: He said that he travelled a lot in his job.
β The present simple tenseπ
(I travel) usually changes to the past simple
β (he travelled) in reported speech.
β Direct speech: βBe quiet. The babyβs sleeping.β
β Reported speech: She told me to be quiet because the baby was sleeping.
πThe present continuous usually changes to the past continuous.
β I work in Italyβ
β Reported speech: He told me that he works in Italy.
It isnβt always necessary to change the tense. If something is still true now β he still works in Italy β we can use the present simple in the reported sentence.
β Past simple and past continuous tenses
β Direct speech: We lived in China for 5 years.
β Reported speech: She told me they had lived in China for 5 years.
β The past simple tense
(we lived) usually changes to the past perfect (they had lived) in reported speech.
β Direct speech: I was walking down the road when I saw the accident.
β Reported speech:
He told me heβd been walking down the road when heβd seen the accident.
πThe past continuous usually changes to the past perfect continuous.
πPerfect tenses
ππDirect speech:
βTheyβve always been very kind to me.
β Reported speech: She said theyβd always been very kind to her.
πThe present perfect tense (have always been) usually changes to the past perfect tense (had always been).
πDirect speech:
β They had already eaten when I arrived.
π Reported speech: He said theyβd already eaten when heβd arrived.
πThe past perfect tense does not change in reported speech.
β This is the complete form of this grammar..
βββββββββββββ
English_Language
βΈ@Google_English_Worl
π¦β¨
πCareful of, with or about,
β not for.
β Don't say: Elke's very careful for her health.
β Say: Elke's very careful of/about her health.
β Or: You should be more careful with your money.
πBelieve in,
β not to.
β Don't say: We believe to God.
β Say: We believe in God.
πBoast of or about,
β Not for.
β Don't say: James boasted for his strength.
β Say: James boasted of (or about) his strength.
πAngry with,
βnot against.
β Don't say: The teacher was angry against him.
β Say: The teacher was angry with him.
πAim at,
β not on or against.
β Don't say: She aimed on (or against) the target.
β Say: She aimed at the target.
βββββββββββββ
English_Language
βΈ@Google_English_Worl
πCareful of, with or about,
β not for.
β Don't say: Elke's very careful for her health.
β Say: Elke's very careful of/about her health.
β Or: You should be more careful with your money.
πBelieve in,
β not to.
β Don't say: We believe to God.
β Say: We believe in God.
πBoast of or about,
β Not for.
β Don't say: James boasted for his strength.
β Say: James boasted of (or about) his strength.
πAngry with,
βnot against.
β Don't say: The teacher was angry against him.
β Say: The teacher was angry with him.
πAim at,
β not on or against.
β Don't say: She aimed on (or against) the target.
β Say: She aimed at the target.
βββββββββββββ
English_Language
βΈ@Google_English_Worl