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Showing posts with the label Grammar

IELTS Speaking Part 1 Hobbies & Routines: Ultimate Band 9 Guide

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  The Ultimate Masterclass to IELTS Speaking Part 1 (Hobbies & Routines) and High-Scoring General Writing Tasks Published by Abreez Academic Team • Last Updated: June 30, 2026 Figure 1: Strategic synthesis of complex syntax and dynamic lexical fields forms the bedrock of a Band 8+ IELTS output. Introduction: Deconstructing the Myth of "Simplicity" in IELTS Base Modules Many candidates approach the IELTS exam with a fragmented mentality, treating the Speaking module as an isolated conversational exercise and the General Writing Task as a distinct linguistic hurdle. This strategic disconnect is most apparent in how test-takers handle elementary prompts like Hobbies & Routines in Speaking Part 1, or how they draft contextual correspondence in General Writing Task 1. They falsely assume that simple topic...

Welcome to Smart English – Learn English Step by Step

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  Smart English - Learn English with Urdu Support 🎓 Welcome to Smart English Learn English step by step with Urdu support Spoken English • Grammar • Daily Practice 📘 Start Here – Beginner Lessons Lesson 1 Stop Confusing In / On / At Lesson 2 Uses of Has and Have Lesson 3 Uses of Can and Could Lesson 4 Definition of Can and Could Lesson 5 Master British English Greetings Lesson 6 Delhi Spoken English Day 1 ⭐ Special Series SEO / Learning Tools Smartest tools to boost your learning & blogging 🎥 Learn with Video Lessons Watch Sm...
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  ✍️ The Essential Eight: Parts of Speech You Must Know width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/5C-PzSKzvEU" title="YouTube video player" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share" allowfullscreen loading="lazy"> The building blocks of clear communication—master these, and transform your writing. Want to write clearly, speak persuasively, and understand the nuances of the English language? It all comes down to the eight fundamental parts of speech . These are the building blocks that govern how words function together in a sentence. Mastering them is the first step toward becoming a truly confident communicator. *Note: The traditional eight parts of speech are Noun, Pronoun, Verb, Adjective, Adverb, Prepositio...

Stop Confusing Nouns & Adjectives! Ultimate Smart English Breakdown

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  Stop Confusing Nouns & Adjectives! (Ultimate Smart English Guide) Stop Confusing Nouns & Adjectives! (Quick Visual Guide) If you feel like your English vocabulary is massive but your sentences still come out messy or confusing, you’re not alone, fam. This is one of the most common struggles English learners face—even advanced ones. And the wild part? It’s usually NOT your vocabulary... it’s the *role* you’re making those words play. In this premium Smart English guide, we’re breaking down the three pillars of sentence-building that almost every learner mixes up: Nouns, Verbs, and Adjectives. Master these, and your grammar, writing, speaking, AND confidence get an instant glow-up. 🎥 Watch the Quick Lesson First Why You Keep Mixing Up These Basic Parts of Speech No one ever told you this straight-up, but here’s the truth: Knowing English words ≠ knowing how to use them. You can memorize thousands of ...

Master Emotion Adjectives in English: Happy/Sad, Excited/Bored & More!

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  Module 1: Adjectives of Emotion & Their Opposites | Smart English 😄 Module 1: Adjectives of Emotion & Their Opposites Learn to express your feelings in English like a pro! Welcome to the first module of our Smart English series! Today, we're diving into adjectives of emotion and their opposites. Emotions are universal, but describing them in English can be tricky. By the end of this lesson, you'll be able to express exactly how you're feeling in any situation! 🎯 Learning Goal By the end of this lesson, you will be able to: Understand and use common emotion adjectives Identify and use their opposites in sentences Describe feelings in real-life situations confidently 🧠 Warm-Up: Feelings in Real Life How are you feel...

Elementary English: Has & Have Explained

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  Elementary English: Has & Have Explained Elementary English Course Mastering "Has" and "Have" Beginner Level Understanding "Has" and "Have" "Has" and "have" are important verbs in English. They help us talk about possession, relationships, and characteristics. When to Use "Have" Use "have" with the pronouns I, you, we, and they, and with plural nouns. Examples: I have a new book. You have a nice car. We have a big family. They have t...

Master English Spelling & Pronunciation: A Comprehensive Guide"

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  Course 7: Spelling & Pronunciation Tips Course 7: Spelling & Pronunciation Tips Master the art of English spelling and pronunciation with these practical strategies and insights Module 1: Why is English So Tricky? English spelling and pronunciation can feel like deciphering a secret code. Understanding the history helps explain why. The Great Vowel Shift (1400-1700) This was a major change in how long vowels were pronounced. The spelling had largely standardized before this shift, so our writing system preserves the old pronunciations, while our speech uses the new ones. Etymology (Word Origins) English borrows words from many languages, often keeping the original spelling: ...

"Grammar Review: Master the Basics of English"

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Smart English – Week 2, Day 9: Grammar Review ✅ Week 2 – Day 9: Grammar Review Smart English — September Lessons Welcome to Day 9 — your comprehensive Grammar Review . Today we’ll consolidate the essential rules that power clear English: tenses, subject–verb agreement, modals, articles, prepositions, connectors, active vs. passive, conditionals, reported speech, punctuation, and common mistakes . Use this as a checkpoint before our next units. Each section includes quick examples and mini exercises so you can test yourself immediately. 1) Tenses at a Glance Present Simple (facts, habits): She works late. Present Continuous (now/temporary): She is working late today. Present Perfect (past→now result): She has finished the report. Past Simple (finished time): She worked last night. Past Continuous (background action): She was wor...