⚠️ Warning! 5 Biggest Mistakes You’re Making When Learning English

Are you making these 5 mistakes when you’re learning English? Is this why you are making slow progress and are not seeing results? Follow this advice for a more effective learning routine. 👓 Watch with subtitles 👓 🎁 [DAILY QUICK FIX - 30% DISCOUNT!] 🎁 Join the DAILY QUICK FIX course I talked about in this video. There, I personally give you daily lessons that will help you finally speak Advanced English: (Use code YOUTUBE to get 30% OFF your first month inside!) ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ⭐️ [WATCH NEXT] ... 🔥 My BEST Advice to Successfully (and Effectively) Learning English 🔥 My BEST British English Pronunciation Lessons 🔥 My BEST English Grammar Lessons * * * ► CHAPTERS: 00:00 5 Mistakes you’re making when learning English 00:18 Create an effective habit 01:04 Effective way to improve your listening skills 2:11 Always learn grammar in context 3:10 Learn some phonetics 5:09 How to keep English fun 5:53 Make changes and make quick progress * * * ► TRANSCRIPTION If you’re learning English and you want to see quick results and see real progress, these are the five biggest mistakes that you need to avoid. You will not improve your English if you keep making these mistakes. The biggest problem that people make is that they just do a little bit here and a little bit there. It’s too sporadic and it needs to be little and often. Daily if possible. Think about it. I mean, learning English is like an exercise for the brain. Are you going to get fit if you just run once a week? Not much. But if you do a little bit of running every day, you’re going to get much fitter. So create the habit of doing a little bit of English for ten or 15 minutes every day, whether that be listening, speaking, reading, writing, studying. Just connect with English for a little bit every day, and then when you need it, it will come more naturally to you. If your level of English listening comprehension needs improvement, what’s the point sitting and suffering through a 2 hour movie that you maybe understand 30% of? This is not going to help you improve. Instead, you should focus on specific pronunciation techniques that native speakers use that will actually help you to understand native speakers speaking quickly. It’s also much more beneficial to listen to a short video 3 times rather than a 2 hour video once. If you listen to a short video or a short audio 3 times, you can focus on the same speech 3 different times and you will start to understand more and more each time you listen to it. And this will help your listening skills and it’ll be much more fun than sitting and suffering during a movie that you don’t really know what is happening in. Okay, so you learn the word decide in English. Great. Maybe even it resembles the word in your language. Fantastic. You feel good about yourself. You’ve learned a new word in English, but when you come to use that word, you use it badly because you didn’t learn it in context and you don’t know how to use it grammatically correctly within a sentence. Listen, learning individual words in English is a really ineffective way of learning because you learn the word, you probably use it badly, and then you have to relearn the grammar of that word. Like with decide. Does it decide to do something? Decide doing something? Decide do something? Who knows? You have to learn the new verbs and vocabulary in context so that it will be easier to use it correctly in the future. IPA the International Phonetic Alphabet. If you’re not learning this already, do it now. It’s the key to knowing how every word in English is pronounced. And that means that when you learn a new word in English, you can easily look at the online dictionary, see the phonetic transcription, and know exactly how it’s pronounced. And you see spoken English is a group of sounds together, not a group of letters. If you want to write, then yeah, you need to learn the letters. But if you want to speak, you need to learn the sounds. That’s the problem that students have. But if you focus on the sounds, it will make it much clearer in your head the fact that all these words have the same vowel sound in the middle. Circus. Heard. Thursday. Perfect. Word. Journey. They all have that /ɜ/ sound in the middle. But look how they’re spelt, all differently. [... Due to character limit, the rest of this transcription is unavailable] * * * ► Thanks, as always, for your LIKES, COMMENTS and SHARES!! 🙏 🔴 SUBSCRIBE to if you want to learn advanced English grammar and pronunciation and master English conversation! Your British English Teacher, ~ Greg 😀 #EnglishWithGreg #LearnEnglish #SpeakEnglish #LearningEnglish #B2 #C1 #ESL
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