Telegram Web Link
Phrasal Verb Of The Day‼️

📒vote off

📖Meaning
If somebody is voted off something, they have to leave because not enough people voted to keep them on.

🤓For example ⤵️

💬be voted off sth I was really shocked when Kylie was voted off American Idol. I thought she was the best singer there.

💬vote sb off sth The company shareholders voted three people off the Board of Directors.
━━━━━━━━━━━
#Phrasal_Verb_of_the_Day

English_Language


@Google_English_Worl
🔰‼️Saying‼️🔰

📔There is truth in wine

🤔Possible meaning
When people are drunk, what they say is often true. People often speak the truth when they lose their self-control.


▫️Origin
This proverb has Greek and Roman roots, and is often expressed in its Latin form: In vino, veritas.

truth (noun): what is factual; what is in accordance with reality
wine (noun): an alcoholic drink typically made from fermented grape juice
━━━━━━━━━━━━━
#Saying_of_the_Day

English_Language


@Google_English_Worl
🔻💭🟣Idiom🟡💭🔺

📚Never say die!

✍🏾Meaning
You can say "Never say die!" if you want to tell someone to keep trying while there's still a chance of success.

❗️For example

🔸We were two goals down with only a few minutes to go, but our captain wouldn't give up. He was shouting, "Come on, guys! Never say die!"

🔸After falling off his surfboard for the hundredth time, Craig climbed back on and said with a laugh, "Never say die!"
━━━━━━━━━━━━━
#Idiom_of_the_Day

English_Language


@Google_English_Worl
♦️💬Slang🗯📣

💠vino

✍🏾Meaning
wine


For example

🔺Let's get a bottle of vino on the way to the party.

🔺Jack doesn't feel too good this morning. Last night he got stuck into the vino again.

▫️💭Origin
"Vino" is the Italian and Spanish word for "wine"

━━━━━━━━━━━━━
#Slang_of_the_Day

English_Language


@Google_English_Worl
Forwarded from 🦋 Beautiful Mind
Hi lovely members 💥💫 hru? I hope you are all doing well ..sorry for not posting much in here .I am so tied up with ma work and studying ..I hope you understand ..🎉💐🙌
Anonymous Poll
39%
Accept my apologies
36%
Love you💥💫💜
6%
and Don't leave me 💜💫
19%
stay here always with me 💥
💙🦋J. C. Catford🦋🍂

Catford was born in Edinburgh, Scotland. After his secondary and university studies, he studied phonetics. He taught English abroad (in Greece, in Palestine and in Egypt), including during World War II.

He met his wife, Lotte, while he was living in Jerusalem. Lotte was from Vienna and spoke German. However, she had moved to Palestine and while she was young she learned other languages, such as Hebrew, English and Arabic. This was one source of Catford's knowledge about languages and their phonetics.

Catford founded the School of Applied Linguistics at the University of Edinburgh, as well as another department in the same university that undertook the mapping of different English dialects throughout Scotland. Catford could identify where people were from exclusively through their speech.

His expertise – which included formal phonetics, the aerodynamic and physiological production of speech, phonetic peculiarities in speech, and an astounding ability to reproduce words, and even speeches, backwards – led him to be invited to the University of Michigan. There, he headed the English Language Institute and the Laboratory of Communicative Sciences (current the Laboratory of Phonetics). He taught most of the Linguistics subjects in the same university.

He retired in 1985, but did not become inactive. On the contrary: he was invited to some of the most prestigious universities around the globe, including those in Istanbul, Jerusalem and California. He published numerous articles, participated in many conferences and continued to lecture and give presentations, especially at the University of Michigan. Many of his original works are kept there. He advised many university students who wanted to follow a career in Linguistics.

Catford had two children from his marriage with Lotte: Lorna and Julian. He died, of old age, in October 2009 in Shoreline, Washington, USA.
English_Language


@Google_English_Worl
💠For diseases, 🌐

“endemic” = in a small area;

“epidemic” = widespread;

“pandemic” = universal. Earth globe asia-australia

✔️They get worse in alphabetical order.

#Vocabulary

English_Language


@Google_English_Worl
🟣I’m “use to” hot weather. →

🟡I’m *used to* hot weather. → ✔️

🔵Get “use to” it. →

🟤Get *used to* it. → ✔️

🔷We *used to* be friends. → ✔️

#Vocabulary

English_Language


@Google_English_Worl
Word Root: PAN (all)

🔷Examples:

- pandemic
- pandemonium
- Pangea / Pangaea
- panacea
- pantheism

English_Language


@Google_English_Worl
English_Language


@Google_English_Worl
💠 vocabulary💠

💥EXCEPTIONABLE =

offensive:

🔰He was criticized for his *exceptionable* comments.


💥EXCEPTIONAL =

outstanding:


🔰My essay is *exceptional*.

English_Language


@Google_English_World
💠 vocabulary💠

In American English 🇺🇸, “license” is both a noun and a verb.

In British English 🇬🇧, “licence” is a noun, and “license” is a verb.

English_Language


@Google_English_World
🦋Christiane Nord🦋🍂


Christiane Nord (born 13 September 1943) is a German translation scholar.

She studied translation at Heidelberg University (B.A. Honours, 1967);[1] in 1983 she obtained her PhD in Romance Studies,[1] with habilitation in applied translation studies and translation pedagogy. From 1967 she has been involved in translator training at the universities of Heidelberg, Vienna, Hildesheim, Innsbruck and Magdeburg (1996–2005).

Until his death in 2020, she was married to theologian Klaus Berger. They worked together to translate sections of the Bible
Forwarded from 💞Wonderful Places💓
🦋Torres del Paine National Park, Chile🌸🍂🌼🦋

If you're looking to get off the grid, head to Chile's Patagonia region for some of the most beautiful mountain views you'll ever see....

🦋🍂🍂🍂🌸🌼

@Beautiful_Haven
774: 💠 WORDS TO USE INSTEAD OF "VERY"
----------------------------------------------------------------
● very noise = deafening

● very often = frequently

● very old = ancient

● very old- fashioned = archaic

● very open = transparent

● very painful = excruciating

● very pale = ashen

● very perfect = flawless

● very poor = destitute

● very powerful = compelling

● very pretty = beautiful

● very quick = rapid

● very quiet = hushed

● very rainy = pouring

● very rich = wealthy

● very sad = sorrowful

● very scared = petrified

● very scary = chilling

● very serious = grave

● very sharp = keen

● very shiny = gleaming

● very short = brief

● very shy = timid

● very simple = basic

•━════━•ஜ💎ஜ•━════━•
💠 Ways To Say “BEAUTIFUL” in American English 🇺🇸

🌸appealing
🌸pretty
🌸lovely
🌸elegant
🌸cute
🌸gorgeous
🌸dazzling
🌸exquisite
🌸stunning
🌸attractive

•┈┈┈•❈••✦🌹🌹✦••❈•┈┈┈•
┈┈┈•❈••✦🌹🌹✦••❈•┈┈┈•

🍂 Saying Of The Day🍂

📔Don't put all your eggs in one basket 🇺🇸

🤔Possible meaning
If all your eggs are in one basket and you drop the basket, you lose everything. Don't put all your money in one bank. Don't put all your faith in one person
━━━━━━━━━━━━━

━════━•ஜ💎ஜ•━════━•

English_Language


@Google_English_World
━════━•ஜ💎ஜ•━════━•

🦋Idiom Of The Day🦋🍂

📚down to earth

✍🏾Meaning
If someone is down to earth, they are practical and sensible.

❗️For example

🔸Steven is an artist and a real dreamer, but luckily his wife Sarah is down to earth, so she takes care of their day-to-day lives.

🔸We need someone who can come up with practical, down-to-earth ideas that we can work with in the real world.
━━━━━━━━━━━━━

┈┈┈•❈••✦🌹🌹✦••❈•┈┈┈•

English_Language


@Google_English_World
2025/07/05 15:43:12
Back to Top
HTML Embed Code: