
Plan a weekend trip by camping, hiking near a campground, arranging tents and sleeping bags, and inviting friends for a barbecue and burgers.
Engage with everyday fashion dialogue as speakers discuss shirts, prices, and weekend market finds, while debating hats, jewelry, piercings, and a blue monster tattoo to practice speaking about fashion.
Explore post-graduation plans shaped by job offers and opportunities, including staying close to family or pursuing a master's degree if a job isn’t found.
Learn to discuss a car's maintenance and age, including repair shop visits, tune ups, and schedules, while weighing walking versus taking the train for a trip.
Choose a film at a theater with ten screens, weighing options from a foreign film about a transsexual volleyball team to an action movie, a love story, or a comedy.
Learn to say no to someone with polite clarity in social plans. Practice declining invitations when timing or commitments require it, while still offering alternatives.
Practice buying shoes through a practical conversation, comparing prices (80 dollars, 16 special price), discussing origin from Italy, and evaluating quality and durability to decide on a purchase.
Practice making a date through a practical dialogue about inviting someone to dinner, confirming Thursday availability, and choosing a restaurant with a reservation.
Learn practical phrases for making a phone call, confirming availability, and arranging Saturday plans with a friend, including 'I'll be there in about an hour'.
Navigate a travel agent interaction to book a trip to Sydney, selecting the Four Seasons Hotel, choosing a flight with a stopover in Singapore, and confirming passenger details and dates.
Learn to ask a passer-by for directions when lost, decide between walking to city center or taking a taxi to the Four Seasons, using landmarks like market and art museum.
Compare London and Bangkok in conversations about cities. Discuss shopping, helpful locals, and guidebooks for visits to museums like the Natural History Museum, the Science Museum, and Buckingham Palace.
Plan and ask for a date through a realistic conversation, confirming availability, choosing a movie, inviting a friend, and coordinating plans in everyday English.
Learning a language can be more effective when you learn it by listening conversations and implement (speaking) it in your routine life. It doesn't matter either you are listening to a native or non-native people. I was more confused when the school teachers taught us by following strict grammar rules and rote question-answers. My parents took me to private coaching for English and Finally I had actually started learning English. The tutor was amazing. He taught some very basic grammar rules and started making live conversations. Then I came to know that the real technique to learn any language is to listen conversations and practice it.
Just Remember these 7 Heaven :
1. Forget grammar!
That’s right. This may seem strange to you, but it is very important.
If you are preparing for an examination, then you should study grammar. However, if you want to become fluent in English conversation, then you should try to learn English without thinking about grammar too much.
The reason why I say this is that to become fluent, you need to be able to speak without pausing to think of the correct words and sentence construction.
If you are constantly trying to translate what you want to say from your own language into English, whilst thinking about all the grammar rules you’re supposed to be using, you’ll most likely become bogged down, hesitant and fail in your fluency goal.
2. Think in English.
The toughest thing in learning a new language isn’t a language, it is all about how you think in the language. If you think in your native language when you are trying to speak it is quite difficult to get fluency.
Here is the solution for the problem. Try out this anywhere, try to think in English whatever you want to speak also whenever you think in your mind always think in the English language. Utilize dictionary whenever you require. This will definitely help people to get fluency in the English language.
3. Speak to yourself
You can do this anywhere, whenever you want to practice English, get help from yourself itself. Speak out the language loudly what you think in your mind. Even though you don’t have a partner to correct your mistakes speak the language loudly that make you more confident in speaking.
4. Don’t Be Afraid to Make Mistakes
Sometimes it can be difficult to put all those rules and words together into a simple sentence. Don’t let the fear of saying something wrong stop you from speaking at all. Even if you think you’re making a mistake, keep speaking anyway.
5. Make use of mirror
Every morning make sure you are spending at least 5 mins before getting back to your regular and speak out in the English language in front of the mirror. Select a topic, set the timer to speak whatever you want.
6. Concentrate on fluency, not grammar
When you speak, notice how many times you stop? The less you stop, the more confident you get. The sentence you practice might be not a perfect grammar that is okay don’t take it as a big issue. Practice makes you perfect at the end of the session.
7. Try out some tongue twisters
Tongue twisters are quite difficult to say repeatedly. E.g. How much wood would a woodchuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood? Try this many times it is not so easy.