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🌟100 MOST COMMON ENGLISH WORDS👉🏻 PART 7/10 💪🏻Boost Your Vocabulary #vocabularywords #learnenglish
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🚀Join me in Part 7 of the 👉🏻"100 Most Common English Words" video series.
Boost your English confidence and improve your English sentence structure by mastering frequently used prepositions, such as: "for," "with," "on," "at," "from," "by," "about," "as," "like," and "into."
They represent the next ten most common words and equip you with the tools necessary for building accurate sentences.
Learn how these prepositions function in different contexts to express relationships of time, place, direction, and more.
This episode breaks down essential vocabulary into easy-to-digest steps: 60 new examples, note-taking, and sentence building. 📒🖊️
Get ready to speak English with clarity and ease!🗣️🚀
Video edited by: Marta BAŞAR
UX Designer: Okan BAŞAR
#basicenglishwords
#vocabularybuilding
#prepositions
#learnenglishvocabulary
#speakenglish
Text effects used in a thumbnail:
TIMESTAMPS:
0:00 - Intro
0:17 - Why 100 Most Common English Words- LINK to PART 1
0:34 - Part 1 Explained
0:47 - Part 2 Explained
0:57 - Part 3 Explained
1:18 - My Channel
1:43 - 61st Word: FOR
1:52 - 62nd Word: WITH
2:02 - 63rd Word: ON
2:13 - 64th Word: AT
2:27 - 65th Word: FROM
2:38 - 66th Word: BY
2:48 - 67th Word: ABOUT
3:01 - 68th Word: AS
3:11 - 69th Word: LIKE
3:21 - 70th Word: INTO
3:40 - PART 2 LISTEN AND TAKE NOTES.
4:48 - PART 3: CREATE YOUR OWN SENTENCES
5:13 - Examples with FOR
5:22 - Examples with WITH
5:47 - Examples with ON
5:58 - Examples with AT
6:22 - Examples with FROM
6:31 - Examples with BY
6:44 - Examples with ABOUT
6:55 - Examples with AS
7:11 - Examples with LIKE
7:25 - Examples with INTO
7:54 - How Many Words and Examples We Have Learnt in parts 1-7
Disclaimer:
These resources provided a foundation for selecting the vocabulary presented in the videos. However, to reflect the nuances of language, I've made certain deliberate choices that may deviate from traditional frequency lists.
For instance, words like "to" and "that" appear more than once due to their diverse grammatical functions within sentences.
Moreover, you can find the non-words, such as the contracted form "n't". I've included it to reflect the realities of spoken English.
To enhance clarity and understanding, I categorised the words within each episode by parts of speech. Therefore, for instance, the words presented in the first episode may not strictly be the ten most frequent, but they all fall within the top 100.
Additionally, I've incorporated various forms of certain words, such as the negative and past forms of the modal verb "can," to facilitate comprehensive learning and practice.
The main objective of this series is to demonstrate the practical application of essential English vocabulary. The examples provided offer a prompt for you to construct sentences and put the words we learn into immediate practice. However, while the idea of the list I provided is to give a reference point, there are other numerous frequency lists that you can explore. Some of the lists you can use include: the Oxford English Corpus, the British National Corpus, Subtlex-US, the General Service List, the Brown Corpus, and the Corpus of Global Web-Based English. Keep in mind that the composition of such lists can change over time and differ based on the methodology employed.
Boost your English confidence and improve your English sentence structure by mastering frequently used prepositions, such as: "for," "with," "on," "at," "from," "by," "about," "as," "like," and "into."
They represent the next ten most common words and equip you with the tools necessary for building accurate sentences.
Learn how these prepositions function in different contexts to express relationships of time, place, direction, and more.
This episode breaks down essential vocabulary into easy-to-digest steps: 60 new examples, note-taking, and sentence building. 📒🖊️
Get ready to speak English with clarity and ease!🗣️🚀
Video edited by: Marta BAŞAR
UX Designer: Okan BAŞAR
#basicenglishwords
#vocabularybuilding
#prepositions
#learnenglishvocabulary
#speakenglish
Text effects used in a thumbnail:
TIMESTAMPS:
0:00 - Intro
0:17 - Why 100 Most Common English Words- LINK to PART 1
0:34 - Part 1 Explained
0:47 - Part 2 Explained
0:57 - Part 3 Explained
1:18 - My Channel
1:43 - 61st Word: FOR
1:52 - 62nd Word: WITH
2:02 - 63rd Word: ON
2:13 - 64th Word: AT
2:27 - 65th Word: FROM
2:38 - 66th Word: BY
2:48 - 67th Word: ABOUT
3:01 - 68th Word: AS
3:11 - 69th Word: LIKE
3:21 - 70th Word: INTO
3:40 - PART 2 LISTEN AND TAKE NOTES.
4:48 - PART 3: CREATE YOUR OWN SENTENCES
5:13 - Examples with FOR
5:22 - Examples with WITH
5:47 - Examples with ON
5:58 - Examples with AT
6:22 - Examples with FROM
6:31 - Examples with BY
6:44 - Examples with ABOUT
6:55 - Examples with AS
7:11 - Examples with LIKE
7:25 - Examples with INTO
7:54 - How Many Words and Examples We Have Learnt in parts 1-7
Disclaimer:
These resources provided a foundation for selecting the vocabulary presented in the videos. However, to reflect the nuances of language, I've made certain deliberate choices that may deviate from traditional frequency lists.
For instance, words like "to" and "that" appear more than once due to their diverse grammatical functions within sentences.
Moreover, you can find the non-words, such as the contracted form "n't". I've included it to reflect the realities of spoken English.
To enhance clarity and understanding, I categorised the words within each episode by parts of speech. Therefore, for instance, the words presented in the first episode may not strictly be the ten most frequent, but they all fall within the top 100.
Additionally, I've incorporated various forms of certain words, such as the negative and past forms of the modal verb "can," to facilitate comprehensive learning and practice.
The main objective of this series is to demonstrate the practical application of essential English vocabulary. The examples provided offer a prompt for you to construct sentences and put the words we learn into immediate practice. However, while the idea of the list I provided is to give a reference point, there are other numerous frequency lists that you can explore. Some of the lists you can use include: the Oxford English Corpus, the British National Corpus, Subtlex-US, the General Service List, the Brown Corpus, and the Corpus of Global Web-Based English. Keep in mind that the composition of such lists can change over time and differ based on the methodology employed.