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Groom your English and personality

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Today's phrasal verbs are:

😷 Hack up
👯‍♀️ Hack around
😫 Hack off


#Phrasal_verbs #npvc89
@engmasters @IELTSwMasters
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🔤 Study activity - Eloquence (writing) 🔤

🆒 Choose the best words to communicate your tone and meaning;
📓 Master new words and expand your vocabulary;
🎤 Find the right word when speaking in professional settings.

❗️Here is given 3️⃣ rounds, for each round you have to recall words you know or heard of corresponding to the bold word in a sentence and given reproach.

🔆 Recall as many words as you can without looking up anywhere, and send your answers to our bot: @EngMW_bot Admins will check the words and correct if they don't conform. Good luck :)

⭕️ Round 1. Be more extreme

"The symphony delivered a(n) 'long' performance".
e.g. lengthened.

⭕️ Round 2. Be more critical

"You did a(n) 'poor' job on the report".
e.g. low.

⭕️ Round 3. Be more negative

"After missing the last shot, the losing team's players felt 'bad'."
e.g. awful.
_________________________________________
#studyactivity #30ME #realteam @EngMasters @IELTSwMasters
English With Masters pinned «🔘📌Agree with/about/that/on/to 🔗1. Agree with ■We agree with a person, an opinion or a policy. To agree with something is to think that it is the right thing to do. To agree with somebody is to think that they are doing or saying the right thing. 📝 Examples…»
Forwarded from English With Masters (EWM bot)
🌴 SLANG 🌴

✔️Cowboy Up

📚Meaning- Get tough.A slang phrase referenced to urge someone to get tougher or stronger; often used in reply to someone who is whining and sounding like a baby.

🦋

🌸
Mohsen: "It's too cold to go out and practice.
Zohre: Cowboy up, you big baby!"
#slang
#realteam
@EngMasters
🔴🎶PRONUNCIATION🎶🔴

*An elephant took a bath in a river and was walking on the road. When it neared a bridge, it saw a pig fully soaked in mud coming from the opposite direction. The elephant quietly moved to one side, allowed the dirty pig to pass and then continued its onward journey.*
*The unclean pig later spoke to its friends in arrogance, “See how big I am; even the elephant was afraid of me and moved to one side to let me pass”.*
*On hearing this, some elephants questioned their friend, the reason for its action. Was it out of fear?*
*The elephant smiled and replied, “I could have easily crushed the pig under my leg, but I was clean and the pig was very dirty. By crushing it, my leg will become dirty and I wanted to avoid it. Hence, I moved aside.”*

*_This story reveals :_*
_*Realized souls will avoid contact with negativity not out of fear, but out of desire to keep away from impurity though they are strong enough to destroy the impurity._*
_*You need not react to every opinion, every comment, or every situation._*
_*Kick the drama and keep going ahead_*
*Choose your battles wisely... Not everything deserves Ur time and attention*

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🔴"Check the #timetable to see the classes we present."
#pronunciation
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💬 Denoscription: Kimball O'Hara is an Irish orphan in India who becomes the disciple of a Tibetan monk while learning espionage from the British secret service. Kipling's classic boy’s own spy story.
Kim.pdf
805 KB
📖 Title: Kim
✍🏻 By: Rudyard Kipling

#novel #pdf #book
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@IELTSwMasters
English With Masters pinned «🌴 SLANG 🌴 ✔️Cowboy Up 📚Meaning- Get tough.A slang phrase referenced to urge someone to get tougher or stronger; often used in reply to someone who is whining and sounding like a baby. 🦋 🌸 Mohsen: "It's too cold to go out and practice.…»
The Dream Team
Randall Davis
🇺🇸Listening practice🇺🇸
🎧 #American_accent 🎧

#listening #L134
@EngMasters
@IELTSwMasters
🌈 Names with and without the (Part-2)

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📚 English grammar in use
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#grammar #g78
@EngMasters @quizMasters
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​​♨️ Today's idioms ♨️
🦋 #lesson12part3
Part1 Part2


to help out:
🌸to help ,to lend a hand.

🔅Amber offered to help out in the kitchen by chopping nuts.


for heaven's sake:
🌸A way of showing surprise ,outrage, or impatience.

🔅hurry up for heaven's sake ! You 're going to be late for school.


like pulling teeth:
🌸very difficult.

🔅It's like pulling teeth getting Max to talk about his girlfriend.


Never mind :
🌸 don't worry ,forget it.

🔅Never mind what your friend says, you need to do what you think is right.


#idiom #i96 #SELA
@EngMasters #RealTeam
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Track12
liber.ir
​​🔰 Vocabulary class
🌀 Expressing your emotions Part 2 Part 1

4️⃣ pour something ↔️ out phrasal verb
📖 if you pour out your thoughts, feelings etc, you tell someone all about them, especially because you feel very unhappy
🏷 She poured out all her troubles to him.
🏷 I had no idea Kay was so unhappy until she poured out her soul to me last night.
📌 pour out your heart/soul (=tell someone all your feelings, including your most secret ones)

5️⃣ innermost /ˈɪnəməʊst $ -nərmoʊst/ adjective [only before noun]
📖 your innermost feelings, desires etc are your most personal and secret ones
🏷 She works with emotionally disturbed people, teaching them to express their innermost feelings through poetry.
🏷 He's not the kind of person to reveal his innermost secrets, even to his closest friends.

6️⃣ guarded /ˈɡɑːdɪd $ ˈɡɑːr-/ adjective
📖 not giving very much information or showing your feelings about something
📌 SYN cautious
🏷 The minister was quite guarded in his comments.
🏷 He gave the proposal a guarded welcome.

#vocabulary #v230
@EngMasters @IELTSwMasters
🔘All📌

🔗1. All refers to three or more items. It is used mostly before plural and uncountable nouns.
All children need love.
◇I love all music.
All the invitees turned up.

■When all is followed by a plural noun, the verb is normally plural. After an uncountable noun, we use a singular verb.
All cheese contains fat.
All the lights were out.

All + noun is not normally used as the subject of a negative verb. We more often use the structure not all + noun + affirmative verb.
Not all birds can sing. (NOT All birds cannot sing.)

🔗2. All and All of

■Before a noun with no determiner (possessives, articles and demonstratives) we use all.
All children need love.
All cheese contains fat.
All lights were out.

■Before a noun with a determiner (the, my, this etc.), all and all of are both possible.
All the lights were out.
All of the lights were out.
◇I have invited all my friends to my birthday party.
◇I have invited all of my friends to my birthday party.

■Before a personal pronoun (us, them etc.) we useall of + object form.
All of us love music. (NOT All us love music)
◇I have invited all of them. (NOT I have invited all them.)

🔗3. All with nouns and pronouns

■All can modify nouns and pronouns. We normally place it before the noun/pronoun.
◇I have invited all (of) my friends.
All of us love music.
◇I love all of you.
All of us are going to the movies.

■We can put all after pronouns used as objects.
◇I love you all. (= I love all of you.)
◇Give my love to them all. (= Give my love to all of them.)
◇I have made you all something to eat. (= I have made all of you something to eat.)

○Note that all cannot be put after pronouns used as subject complements.
◇Is that all of them? (NOT Is that them all?)

🔗4. All with verbs

■When all refers to the subject of a clause, it can go with the verb.
When the verb consists of just one word, and that word is not a form of be (is, am, are, was, were), all is placed before the verb.
◇They all came. (All + other verb)
◇We all love music. (All + other verb)

■When the verb is a form of beall is placed after it.
◇You are all welcome. (be + all)
◇We were all invited. (be + all)

■When there are two auxiliary verbs, all goes after the first.
◇They have all gone home. (Auxiliary verb + all + other verb)
◇They have all been told. (Auxiliary verb + all + auxiliary verb + other verb)

○Note that these meanings can also be expressed by using all (of) + noun/pronoun.
♧All of them came.
♧All of us love music.
♧All of you are welcome.
♧All of us have been invited.
♧All of them have gone home.
______________________________
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​​🔰 Vocabulary class
🌀 Expressing your emotions Part 3 Part 2 Part 1

7️⃣ give something away phrasal verb
📖 to tell someone secret information
🏷 I don’t want to give away exactly how the system works.
🏷 I don’t want to give the game away (=give information that should be secret) by saying too much.

8️⃣ suppress /səˈpres/ verb [transitive]
📖 to stop yourself from showing your feelings
🏷 Harry could scarcely suppress a smile.
🏷 He looked at me, waiting with suppressed anger.
♥️ suppressible adjective
♦️ suppression /səˈpreʃən/ noun uncountable

9️⃣ pent-up /ˌpent ˈʌp◂/ adjective
📖 pent-up feelings or energy have not been expressed or used for a long time
🏷 Years of pent-up anger and frustration came out as she cried.
🏷 The collapse of the Berlin Wall released a pent-up demand for consumer goods

#vocabulary #v231
@EngMasters @IELTSwMasters
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