English for Tomorrow
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Learn English Your Way!
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telegram.me/englishfortomorrow/2

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Outta πŸ‘‰ out of
we'd better get outta here!
get outta my way!


Imma πŸ‘‰ I am going to
Imma talk to him.

Hafta πŸ‘‰ have to, must
I hafta go now. I'll talk to you later.

oughta πŸ‘‰ ought to
It's too late. I oughta back home right now.

shoulda πŸ‘‰ should have
You shoulda done it.

Dunno πŸ‘‰ don't know/doesn't know
I dunno what to say.

Gotcha πŸ‘‰ I've got you -> I understand
Please don't do that again. Answer: Gotcha
#pronunciation @englishfortomorrow
πŸ”Š to be up for grabs

✳️ to become available to others

βœ… A: I don't want my baseball glove. It's up for grabs. B: I'll take it.

βœ… A: Are all of the seats taken? B: No, some are still up for grabs, but you had better act quickly.

βœ… A: Do you think she is married? B: No she is still up for grabs!
βœ… Did you know that Senator Stone is retiring and that her Senate seat is up for grabs.
#idiom #intermediate @englishfortomorrow
Dear all,
We are striving to provide everyone here a with a dose of joyful learning. If you have enjoyed learning with us, invite your friends via the link below. We have things up our sleeves to answer everyone's tastes.

🚩English for Tomorrow @englishfortomorrow https://telegram.me/englishfortomorrow
Regular and Irregular Verbs

Verbs are subdivided into two groups, regular verbs and irregular verbs, on the basis of how their past tense and past participles are formed. See below for tips on how to distinguish between them.
Regular Verbs

Most verbs are regular verbs. Regular verbs are those whose past tense and past participles are formed by adding a -d or an -ed to the end of the verb.

"To roll" is a good example of a regular verb:
roll, rolled, rolled

Sometimes the last consonant must be doubled before adding the -ed ending. For example:
plan, planned, planned
Irregular Verbs

There is no formula to predict how an irregular verb will form its past-tense and past-participle forms. There are over 250 irregular verbs in English. Although they do not follow a formula, there are some fairly common irregular forms. Some of these forms are:
break, broke, broken
cut, cut, cut
run, ran, run
#grammar #elemenraty #englishfortomorrow
πŸ“… As we are approaching the Election πŸ—³ Day, so is the U.S. We figured you may want to familiarise yourself a tad more with the vocabulary. πŸ‘‡
You now sure know what this box is called. Now tell us what the man is doing.
HINT: He is c - - - ing his vote.
#vocabulary #collocation
πŸ“•A full lesson on the passive voice. You'll definitely learn it from A-Z this time!
#lesson #pdf #grammar
@englishfortomorrow
πŸ‘‡πŸ‘‡πŸ‘‡
🎧 Listen to this song, read the lyrics, and do the activity to learn (or even teach if you are a teacher!) how the verb 'wish' is used to talk about wishes in the present:
#song #activity #grammar #intermediate
πŸ‘‡πŸ‘‡πŸ‘‡
#joke #fun
#upper_intermediate

At the job interview:

Interviewer: Oh, and it says on your resume that you're a quick mathematician. Quick! What's 19Γ—14? πŸ€”
Man: 48. πŸ€“
Interviewer: What?!! That is not even close!! 😳
Man: But it was quick!! 😜

@englishfortomorrow
πŸ’Ž@EnglishforTomorrow is the place where everyoneπŸ‘₯ finds things to learn πŸŽ“; things that suit their taste βš½οΈπŸŽ­πŸŽ¨πŸŽΌπŸ“±πŸ“ΈπŸŽž; from the true beginners to the advanced. Share πŸ—£ this exciting experience by inviting your friends to join:
Https://telegram.me/englishfortomorrow ‼️Also we would be more than delighted if our fellow teachers could help us keep this channel lively by posting their informative posts. If it is of any interest to you, correspondence may be addressed to me at iman.taebi@gmail.com