What I want you to do is… What I would like you to do.. “I would like you to…” is much more polite. “I want you to..” is more to the point and straightforward; is more commanding 2. Articles It’s
Bobby Jones: Lesson 1
Grammar to learn: Present Perfect vs Past Simple Present perfect What’s the difference? Present Perfect and Past Simple Present perfect vs. simple past Present perfect or past simple? Articles Articles Using Articles English Articles – A, An, The the telephone
Tips for sounding like a native speaker. Reductions.
Common Reductions for American English Pronunciation: Part 1 Common Reductions For American English Pronunciation: Part 2 Common Reductions for American English Pronunciation: Part 3 10 Reductions for Natural English Pronunciation 3 tips for sounding like a native speaker
Daily articulation and speech exercises
Pronunciation Warm Up | Accent’s Way Articulator Exercises | Accent Training 15 Minute Morning Pronunciation Practice for English Learners Boost your PRONUNCIATION, GRAMMAR and VOCABULARY with this 10-min daily exercise Build your pronunciation confidence using our SPRINTS 10
Online courses
Learn Any Accent with confidence. Sarah Valentine Accent & Dialect Coach Accent Coaching For Actors Pick your accent below 21-Day Group Accent Courses – With Feedback
Learn American English Pronunciation | Improve Your Accent
Learn American English Pronunciation | Improve Your Accent
Pronunciation, Speaking videos
Listening – Speaking – Reading – WritingStep 1: Listening and reading Listen to 3 or 4 times to the conversations in the video. Step 2: Speaking Practice speaking what you have learned in the video by imitating the method (click
LRRC method
TO FLUENCY METHOD (LRRC) Listen – Repeat – Record – Compare (15 MINUTES PER DAY) It works like this: You listen to an English phrase You repeat the phrase You record yourself saying the phrase You compare the two versions and
Listening-Reading Method
Listening-Reading Method Listening-Reading system (L-R) Listening-Reading system L-R: “LISTENING-reading” system Russian – L1English – L2audiobooks plus the corresponding books in L1 and L2 Exercises The material can be used in a number of ways: listening (for getting used to the
/i/ and /ɪ/ vowel sounds
********************************************************* ********************************************************* ******************************************************** Minimal Pair Exercises (Target 7 & Target 4) chip cheap bin bean his he’s it eat lip leap pick peek itch each sin scene tin teen dip deep bid bead dip deep pill peel flit fleet slick