Normal English Vs Native English: 25 COMMON ENGLISH PHRASES to sound like a NATIVE SPEAKER

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In this video, you will learn 25 real phrases for everyday conversations to sound like a native speaker. These 25 common English phrases will help you speak English exactly like native English speakers. Do you want to sound like you can really speak English and understand it in a conversational way like a true native? Well, memorizing these 25 common phrases will surely help you take your English to the next level!

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Absolutely brilliant!
That's sensational!
Keep it up!

rizwanhaider
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1. out of mind > out of your mind
2. Text (specific way of communication)> Contact (general way of communication)
3. you get free. > you're free.
4. chop-chop (careful use, pidgin English, based on a Chinese lexeme for 'quick')
5. I'm so into you. > I have a huge crush on you.
6. a rocket science > rocket science
7. bit > a bit

THAOPHAM-jpou
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Friend: Tomorrow is my maths test
Me: OK then... break a leg 🙂

WeCanNWeWill
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1.I'm going to get married/tie a knot tomorrow. > I'm getting married/tying a knot tomorrow.
2. pissed off (slang, careful use)
Many slangy expressions are used by members of particular social and professional groups and nearly all slang is used between people who know one another well or share the same social background. So it is usually a mistake for outsiders (including foreigners) to try deliberately to use it, for this can give the impression that they are membership of a group they do not belong to. There is also a danger that it may be out of date - when it gets into books, it is often already dead. It is best to wait until one is really becoming accepted as part of a community; one will then start using his or her slang naturally and correctly along with the rest of his or her language.
As regards idioms, students will learn the most common idiomatic expressions along with the rest of their English. If they try consciously to fill their social exchange and texts with idioms, the effect will probably be very strange.
Note books of idioms often contain slangy, rare or old-fashioned expressions students should avoid unless they understand exactly how and when they are used. This is particularly true of colorful idioms, like 'raining cats and dogs', 'hit the nail on the head', 'eat like a horse' or 'as old as the hills'.

THAOPHAM-jpou
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When I was a student at school (in England) they avoided teaching your so called "native" English. It was considered trivial and confined to working classes. If you wanted to merge you had to speak proper English - the one belonging to upper classes. Now It seems things are just going the other way round... And I don't like It that much.

linaribaldi