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START HERE: Daily Check-In. Say HI! Sunday, April 26th
EVERYONE—give a 👍 to this CHECK-IN and make sure you 👍 everyone’s comments! Who is here E X P A N D I N G their English knowledge today? Which lesson are you working on today? Did you/will you join a LIVE class today? Do you have a question? Put it below. Are you NEW? Go HERE NOW!! FEEDBACK for your first PIRF FRESH assignment? Go HERE NOW!! LIVE VIP Classes TODAY? Go HERE NOW!! LIVE Classes TODAY? Go HERE NOW!! What are the different LIVE classes? Go HERE NOW!! The ULTIMATE Guide!! WHAT can you learn from my lessons: Watch this video NOW!! How to get a 🔥 by your name? Go HERE! Ready for our newest PIRF VIP Speaking and DDM VIP Listening lessons? You can try one week of VIP for free! Go HERE NOW!!
START HERE: Daily Check-In. Say HI! Sunday, April 26th
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VIP PERSONAL Masters
Another amazing couple hours with amazing members. It was a detailed NO FLUFF AMA session. I love seeing "problems" get fixed. LIVE CALL recording in the classroom.
VIP PERSONAL Masters
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✍️ Dictation Sunday, Baby! 🎧 April 26th 💥
Is There Another Us? 🤔 Hey guys! 😃 ✋ Who’s up for some dictation? Join me this Sunday and let’s get our listening and pronunciation game on! 👂✨ ✍️ Dictation Sunday #17 w/ Coach Serge 🎧 🕛 Check the Calendar 📚 The Classroom Page PREMIUM MEMBERS ONLY ❗ Who is it for: LIVE CLASS for ALL MEMBERS ❗ What it is: Focused listening & pronunciation practice Best for: Sharpening listening skills, mastering pronunciation and attention to details Vibe: Energetic, friendly, fun! LEARNING TOGETHER, IMPROVING BIG TIME 🚀
✍️ Dictation Sunday, Baby! 🎧 April 26th 💥
Friends 111 Part 2 challenge 3
Are you a “try new things” kind of person or a “stick to what you know” kind of person?
MIND YOUR LANGUAGE 👨‍🏫 📚
Thank you coach @Shane Peterson to learn me British English from time to time 😂 The last episode : The Examination I noted two interesting expressions. English idiom: "To cut and run." means to make a quick or sudden escape from a difficult, dangerous, or losing situation. It usually implies leaving something behind to save yourself from further trouble. The Origin The phrase comes from 18th-century sailing. If a ship was in a great hurry to leave—perhaps because of an enemy attack or a sudden, dangerous storm—the crew wouldn't take the time to pull up the heavy anchor. Instead, they would cut the anchor rope and let the ship run with the wind. My own adventure : Around 40 years ago a big storm came in the middle of the night while we were in our tent. We had to "cut and run" to the 2CV car to stay dry. Expression . To Scrape Through = "just barely made it." To "scrape through" means to succeed at something by the narrowest possible margin. You didn't win easily or do a perfect job; you barely finished or passed. If you were any slower or made one more mistake, you would have failed. The Origin The expression comes from the physical act of passing through a space that is almost too small. - The Imagery: Imagine a large car driving through a very narrow stone gate. If the car passes but the sides "scrape" against the walls, the car scraped through. It made it to the other side, but it was a very close call! - In History: In the 1800s, students at universities used this to describe passing an exam with the lowest possible grade. They didn't "sail through" (pass easily); they "scraped through." - My own adventure : When I took my driving license, I remember I arrived late and forgot my identity card. But in the end, I "scraped through". I didn't believe it was possible! AND JUST FOR FUN I picked up a funny definition by Jamila Ranjha. Do you know @Serge Gray your new nickname, ready to use on Sundays ? Mister Dick Tation 😂
MIND YOUR LANGUAGE 👨‍🏫 📚
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Let's Master English
Adults mastering American English speaking & listening skills. No cute lessons. Serious. Over 100 LIVE 1-1 Sessions monthly! We do have free lessons✔️
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