Daily Dare №20. 50 Squats
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Workout daily with masters and learn words and expressions connected with sport.
#dailydare #realteam
@EngMasters
@IELTSwMasters
😣😣'it beats me'😣😣
✅meaning:
🔅I don't know or I don't understand something.🔅
✅Examples:
🔆 It beats me how Stephanie ever got that promotion.
🔆 A: Can you believe that Dave and Andrea are still married!
He's always bossing her around.
B: It beats me why she stays with him.
🔆It beats me how Jen can afford a new sports car when she only works part-time.
➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖
#idiom #i60 #RealTeam
@EngMasters @IELTSwMasters
✅meaning:
🔅I don't know or I don't understand something.🔅
✅Examples:
🔆 It beats me how Stephanie ever got that promotion.
🔆 A: Can you believe that Dave and Andrea are still married!
He's always bossing her around.
B: It beats me why she stays with him.
🔆It beats me how Jen can afford a new sports car when she only works part-time.
➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖
#idiom #i60 #RealTeam
@EngMasters @IELTSwMasters
♈️ Vocabulary class
▶️ Today's words are:
💥💥 livid /ˈlɪvɪd/ adjective
Ⓜ️ 1. extremely angry:
✳️ The rude letter from his mother-in-law made him livid.
Ⓜ️ 2. (esp. of marks on the skin) of a purple or dark blue color, usually caused by an injury:
✳️ There was a livid bruise on her upper arm where she had fallen.
🌀🌀🌀🌀🌀🌀🌀🌀🌀🌀
💥💥 callous /ˈkæləs/ adjective
Ⓜ️ unkind, cruel, and without sympathy or feeling for other people:
✳️ It might sound callous, but I don't care if he's homeless. He's not living with me!
✨ callously adverb
✨ callousness noun [ U ]
🌀🌀🌀🌀🌀🌀🌀🌀🌀🌀
💥💥 hubris /ˈhjuːbrɪs/ noun [ U ]
Ⓜ️ a way of talking or behaving that is too proud:
✳️ He was punished for his hubris.
✨ hubristic adjective
#vocabulary #v177 @EngMasters @IELTSwMasters
▶️ Today's words are:
💥💥 livid /ˈlɪvɪd/ adjective
Ⓜ️ 1. extremely angry:
✳️ The rude letter from his mother-in-law made him livid.
Ⓜ️ 2. (esp. of marks on the skin) of a purple or dark blue color, usually caused by an injury:
✳️ There was a livid bruise on her upper arm where she had fallen.
🌀🌀🌀🌀🌀🌀🌀🌀🌀🌀
💥💥 callous /ˈkæləs/ adjective
Ⓜ️ unkind, cruel, and without sympathy or feeling for other people:
✳️ It might sound callous, but I don't care if he's homeless. He's not living with me!
✨ callously adverb
✨ callousness noun [ U ]
🌀🌀🌀🌀🌀🌀🌀🌀🌀🌀
💥💥 hubris /ˈhjuːbrɪs/ noun [ U ]
Ⓜ️ a way of talking or behaving that is too proud:
✳️ He was punished for his hubris.
✨ hubristic adjective
#vocabulary #v177 @EngMasters @IELTSwMasters
Forwarded from اتچ بات
⚜🎵🔴PRONUNCIATION🔴🎵⚜
⚠️Today's lesson on English with masters is about the difference between /uː/ sound and /ʊ/ sound⚠️
Let's speak up these examples :
🔵/uː/
With "oo": boot - choose - cool - fool - loose - moon - pool
With "u" and magic e : absolute (❗️Be careful with the shwa here)❗️- include - June - rule
With "u": brutal - conclusion - flu - truth
With "ew": blew - brew - chew - crew - drew -
With "ou": group - soup - through - you - youth
With "o": lose - move - tomb - who
🔵/ʊ/
With "oo": book - cook - foot - good - hook - look
- took - wood - wool
With "u": bull - bush - cushion - full- pudding - pull -put -
Normally only a few consonants follow /ʊ/.
/d/: could - good - hood - pudding - should - stood - wood -would
/g/: sugar
/l/: bull - bullet - full - pull - wolf - wolves - wool
/m/: woman
/ʃ/: bush - cushion - push
/t/: chutzpah - foot - put
/tʃ/: butch - butcher
#pronunciation
@IELTSwMasters
@EngMasters
⚠️Today's lesson on English with masters is about the difference between /uː/ sound and /ʊ/ sound⚠️
Let's speak up these examples :
🔵/uː/
With "oo": boot - choose - cool - fool - loose - moon - pool
With "u" and magic e : absolute (❗️Be careful with the shwa here)❗️- include - June - rule
With "u": brutal - conclusion - flu - truth
With "ew": blew - brew - chew - crew - drew -
With "ou": group - soup - through - you - youth
With "o": lose - move - tomb - who
🔵/ʊ/
With "oo": book - cook - foot - good - hook - look
- took - wood - wool
With "u": bull - bush - cushion - full- pudding - pull -put -
Normally only a few consonants follow /ʊ/.
/d/: could - good - hood - pudding - should - stood - wood -would
/g/: sugar
/l/: bull - bullet - full - pull - wolf - wolves - wool
/m/: woman
/ʃ/: bush - cushion - push
/t/: chutzpah - foot - put
/tʃ/: butch - butcher
#pronunciation
@IELTSwMasters
@EngMasters
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🍎🍏Based on the latest researches each hour of running ,increases 7hours of your life
So this is the best sport ever!🍎🍏
#health
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So this is the best sport ever!🍎🍏
#health
@EngMasters
@IELTSwMasters
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🔵 INTRODUCTION
Identifying or defining relative clauses
__________________
🔹 A clause is a group of words containing a verb.
We use relative clauses to describe or give extra information about a person, thing, place, event etc. we have already mentioned.
We often use them to avoid repeating information.
❌ I saw the woman the woman you told me about
✔I saw the woman that you told me about
We often use relative pronouns (e.g. who, whom, where, that, which, whose, when and why) to introduce relative clauses.
#grammar
#defining_relative_clauses
#n46
#realteam @engmasters
____________
To see the usage and more 👇👇
Identifying or defining relative clauses
__________________
🔹 A clause is a group of words containing a verb.
We use relative clauses to describe or give extra information about a person, thing, place, event etc. we have already mentioned.
We often use them to avoid repeating information.
❌ I saw the woman the woman you told me about
✔I saw the woman that you told me about
We often use relative pronouns (e.g. who, whom, where, that, which, whose, when and why) to introduce relative clauses.
#grammar
#defining_relative_clauses
#n46
#realteam @engmasters
____________
To see the usage and more 👇👇
🍎🍏Using mobile phones at night hurts your eyesight the most!Try to use it less during the night🍏🍎
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Spotlight
Ergative verbs. e.g. slam, splash, rattle, rustle, and beep can be used in a transitive and intransitive way, with the object in the transitive structure (e.g., the door) being the subject in the intransitive structure.
☝️ Marta slammed the door.
👉 The door slammed.
Tap👆 to read more
➡️ #grammar #englishlearning
➡️ @EngMasters @IELTSwMasters
Ergative verbs. e.g. slam, splash, rattle, rustle, and beep can be used in a transitive and intransitive way, with the object in the transitive structure (e.g., the door) being the subject in the intransitive structure.
Ergative pairs account for many of the most commonly used verbs in English, some of which are listed below, with examples:
✴️ burn
I've burned the toast.
The toast has burned.
✴️ break
The wind broke the branches.
The branches broke.
✴️ burst
She burst the balloon.
The balloon burst.
✴️ close
He closed his eyes.
His eyes closed.
✴️ cook
I'm cooking the rice.
The rice is cooking.
✴️ fade
The sun has faded the carpet.
The carpet has faded.
✴️ freeze
The low temperature has frozen the milk.
The milk has frozen.
✴️ melt
The heat has melted the ice.
The ice has melted.
✴️ run
Tim is running the bathwater.
The bathwater is running.
✴️ stretch
I stretched the elastic.
The elastic stretched.
✴️ tighten
He tightened the rope.
The rope tightened.
✴️ wave
Someone waved a flag.
A flag waved.
Tap
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Daily Dare №21. 30 Seconds Hop Heel Clicks
Workout daily with masters and learn words and expressions connected with sport.
#dailydare #realteam
@EngMasters
@IELTSwMasters
Workout daily with masters and learn words and expressions connected with sport.
#dailydare #realteam
@EngMasters
@IELTSwMasters