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English Learning Practice English course Daily English Learning engVid English Learn English - EnglishClass101.com English with Lucy English with Steve Ford Learning English with Cambridge VOA Learning English Learning English with Oxford
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English Learning Practice
English Learning Practice
Empowering learners to master English through structured lessons, practical exercises, and expert guidance.
Ideal for students, professionals, and educators seeking clear, confident communication.
27/09/2025
Irregular verbs in English - All forms
27/09/2025
Simple / Normal → Stylish / Advanced
Lucky → Jammy / Fortunate
Secret → Under wraps / Hush-hush
Get married → Tie the knot / Walk down the aisle
Hello → What’s up? / Hey there
Meet → Catch up / Bump into
Yes → Absolutely / Of course
No → Nope / Not at all
Maybe → Perhaps / Could be
I don’t know → Beats me / No clue
How are you? → How’s it going? / What’s new?
Good luck → Break a leg / All the best
Wasting time → Faffing around / Killing time
Really? → Seriously? / You don’t say!
I’m very happy → Over the moon / On cloud nine
I’m tired → Worn out / Beat
It’s easy → Piece of cake / A walk in the park
I’m busy → Snowed under / Tied up
Be quiet → Zip it / Keep it down
That’s amazing → That’s awesome / That’s brilliant
Goodbye → Catch you later! / Take care
Please → Kindly / If you don’t mind
Thank you → Much obliged / Many thanks
You’re welcome → No problem / Anytime
Excuse me → Pardon me / Sorry to interrupt
I’m sorry → My bad / I apologize
25/09/2025
Parallelism with Verbs | Grammar
Keep verbs consistent—infinitives, gerunds, or simple forms. Example: They came, saw, and helped.
25/09/2025
Job Interview most asked questions with answers for freshers
English Learning Practice EraEcho
Daily English Learning English course engVid
Learn English - EnglishClass101.com English with Lucy English
25/09/2025
Phrasal Verbs with Examples ✨
1. end up — finally do/arrive at a result
We ended up staying home.
2. turn out — have a result
The plan turned out great.
3. come up with — think of/invent
She came up with a clever fix.
4. figure out — understand/solve
I can’t figure this out.
5. show up — arrive
He didn’t show up on time.
6. hang out — spend time socially
Let’s hang out this weekend.
7. run into — meet by chance
I ran into Maya at the store.
8. pick up (learn) — learn casually
You pick up slang quickly.
9. sort out — organize/resolve
We’ll sort out the details tomorrow.
Daily Use Vocabulary
24/09/2025
20 Must-Know Proverbs About Money & Hard Work
Money and work proverbs carry timeless lessons about effort, savings, and success. They remind us that hard work pays off, opportunities must be seized quickly, and wise planning is key. These 20 proverbs are essential for anyone who wants to build discipline, grow wealth, and achieve success in life.
24/09/2025
“Time in Motion: Present, Past & Future Perfect Continuous”
Present Perfect Continuous → Describes an action that started in the past and is still continuing (or just stopped) in the present.
Example: She has been studying for three hours.
Past Perfect Continuous → Describes an action that was happening for a duration in the past before another past event.
Example: She had been studying for three hours before the exam started.
Future Perfect Continuous → Describes an action that will continue for a duration until a specific point in the future.
Example: She will have been studying for three hours by the time you arrive.
Together, these tenses express progress + time span across past, present, and future.
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23/09/2025
Linking Verbs: Am, Is, Are, Was, Were 🧐📝
23/09/2025
Verbs with their forms (V1, V2, V3, V4)
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21/09/2025
Gerunds vs Infinitives: Clear Rules with Examples | English
A gerund (V+ing) acts like a noun, while an infinitive (to + V¹) shows purpose or follows certain verbs.
Use Gerunds after verbs like enjoy, avoid, suggest (She enjoys reading).
Use Infinitives after verbs like want, decide, plan (He wants to learn).
After prepositions, always use a gerund (She is good at singing).
Mastering these will stop the confusion between “V+ing” and “to + V¹.”
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