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Showing posts from April, 2022

Telling time and date together in a sentence in English | Learn English Grammar

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Telling the time alone or the date alone could be easy; what if there are both? What would be the order of putting them? Today, we will look into that. Suppose the event is "the prime minister will address the nation." Let us put the sentence together with different time and date frames. 1. Year only: 2025 example: The prime minister will address the nation in 2025. (Tips: if it is only year, use the preposition "in.") 2. Year and months: 2025, December example: The prime minister will address the nation in December 2025. 3. Time only: 4:00 p.m. Example: The prime minister will address the nation at 4:00 p.m. 4. Time and session of the day: 4:00 p.m., evening Example: The prime minister will address the nation at 4:00 pm in the evening. 5. Day and session of the day: Monday, evening Example: The prime minister will address the nation on Monday evening. 6. Day, session of the day, time: Monday, evening, 4:00 pm Example: The prime minister will address the n

Learn cooking and kitchen vocabulary in English | Learn English in contexts

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cooking and kitchen vocabulary in English This American English lesson has incorporated both kitchen vocabulary and cooking vocabulary because while you prepare a meal both scenarios work out at the same time. In this spoken English lesson, you will learn 200 cooking-time dialogues, cooking instructions, cooking verbs, cooking vocabulary, kitchen vocabulary, and kitchen verbs. Although the lesson has plenty of content, the best part is that there are only so many verbs and phrases we say in English while we cook in the kitchen. Once you have mastered them, you are all set for talking about cooking in English. A trick to master cooking and kitchen verbs; the majority of them are in the form of phrasal verbs. If you have a knack for choosing the correct preposition with a verb, you can make many more commands with the same verbs with the same verb maneuvering them for separate contexts. For example, the verb "cut" can be used with prepositions like "off, out, in". For