It's quite an advanced phrase, but we start producing it naturally at an early stage in learning. So, good for beginners to use, and good for more advanced students to understand what they are using! 😊
@linguisticsteacher5294Күн бұрын
Hi my teacher please make a video on punctuation mark with detail
@Leanier-sl9xuКүн бұрын
Thanks teacher your effort
@wendyphiri4192Күн бұрын
Thank you for another insightful and informative lesson. ❤
@mohamedawel5879Күн бұрын
Handy post
@samadmahmoudi6301Күн бұрын
Really Great!
@hk2622Күн бұрын
❤ Hello from here, thank you
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-AnisaКүн бұрын
You were quick to watch it!
@hk2622Күн бұрын
😂 I wrote my comment while I was listening.... I couldn't wait but I promise you to listen again and again to achieve the target.
@mousa7732Күн бұрын
Great ! You're an excellent teacher. Wonderful explanation.
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-AnisaКүн бұрын
Thank you! 😃
@sirios3502 күн бұрын
You should delete the yellow title 'PREPOSTIONAL PRASES" at the end of your video where you give the answers to the test
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa2 күн бұрын
I'd love to be able to edit a few mistakes on this. My computer was out of commission and rather than delaying the post, I thought I could finish editing and upload it from my phone. Big mistake! As far as I know, you can't edit a video after you've published it. Please let me know how if I'm mistaken 🙏
@stillwatersrundeep24383 күн бұрын
Hi, I hope you are doing well. May I ask you when pronouncing "clock, conquer" we pull our back of the tongue back when saying first k, do you do the same on the second k sound? Thank you very much. Have a great day.
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-AnisaКүн бұрын
Hi! It's great that you are paying so much attention to the position of your tongue when speaking. That it the key to mastering intelligible pronunciation. If you just make a single /k/ sound, the back of the tongue raises up to touch the top of the back of the mouth Chris kicked Ken. If you make an /l/ sound, the front of the tongue raises up to touch the top of the front part of the mouth. Laura loves Len. The tongue has to quickly rise up at back to make /k/ then glide from the back position to the front position to produce the /l/ 'clock' Clare cleaned clogs.
@shahwalikhan25544 күн бұрын
My native language is Pashto nowadays I am trying to understand English.
@krzysztofwasilewski22664 күн бұрын
Thanks a lot for the very good explanation of grammar structures, thus giving us opportunity to improve the usage of English as the second language. By the way, there are different schools of teaching English grammar with the different terminology and depth of analysing phrases and clauses. 🙂🌻
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa4 күн бұрын
You're welcome! When I did my first degree in linguistics (many many years ago), I studied at a Canadian university and we drew more syntactic grammar trees than I care to remember. A decade later, I was at a conference chatting to some fellow teacher trainers in the UK. I remember how confused they were when I mentioned grammar trees. I had always assumed they were a common starting point for anyone studying linguistics, but no! Like you say, there are lots of different approaches.
@WarRobotsA5 күн бұрын
Greetings from Argentina 😍🥰
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa4 күн бұрын
Mmm home of delicious food and wine! I had an Argentinian roommate for a few weeks. Then my Mexican friends laughed at me because I picked up the "shh" pronunciation 😆
@takeoboy5 күн бұрын
First time watching your video - three in one : like, subscribe and comment 😊
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa5 күн бұрын
Thank you! I really appreciate it. Feel free to ask any questions you have. I'm trying to create a supportive community where people can learn for free and help each other improve.
@kwolfs1535 күн бұрын
Simple explain is well With comparison also easier than normal teaching
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa5 күн бұрын
I definitely love comparisons when I am trying to learn new things myself. It makes it easier for me. Adjective: A simple explanation is good. Adverb: I like a well explained grammar point. I like teachers who explain things well.
@ramu93756 күн бұрын
In a sentence like, "He has been doing this work for a year", he - subject, 'has been doing - verb phrase, this work - noun phrase, for a year - prepositional phrase. Am I right? Or, is it that the entire part "...has been doing this work for a year" is considered verb phrase? I think perhaps you said so, or I understood so. Could it be clarified?
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa6 күн бұрын
You've got it! 👍 The noun phrase "this work" is inside the verb phrase "has been doing 'this work'"
@mohamedawel58796 күн бұрын
Good explanation. I am now able to understand these phrases well. I can now differentiate them which is a noun phrase or verb, prepositional , adverb or adjective phrase.
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa5 күн бұрын
Fantastic! My goal's been achieved 😊 Now, I'll work on a more difficult video to introduce more 'impressive' sentence structures.
@danielthangzani93956 күн бұрын
Never had I seen such an amazing teacher in my life..Thank you!
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa5 күн бұрын
Wow, thank you! And I love your use of negative inversion to express that. 😊
@danielthangzani93955 күн бұрын
Thank you!! praying for you that you will be continually a channel of blessing for many people !!
@fasaria4217 күн бұрын
Please increase the sounds before it upload please... My speaker is in a high volume but the sounds still weak.
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa7 күн бұрын
Thanks for letting me know. It sounds ok on my computer at 20% volume but I will see if I can increase it next time. 🤞
@fasaria4216 күн бұрын
@@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisathank you!
@EvaogMaltheDK6 күн бұрын
@@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa Your sound is fine 👍
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa5 күн бұрын
Oh good! I was getting really confused about how to make it louder.
@Nithila1427 күн бұрын
It's a wonderful lesson. Thanks a lot.
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa5 күн бұрын
You are more than welcome. I'm glad you found it useful.
@joseutrera6267 күн бұрын
Megusta ❤
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa5 күн бұрын
Qué bueno. Y ahora en inglés! 🤣 (No sé cómo escribir el ! al revés)
@devashikajayamanna22557 күн бұрын
I missed 5,9,13 and 16. Thank you for this lesson ❤
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa7 күн бұрын
Binomials are tricky because if you haven't heard them used frequently, they will probably sound right both ways round. Thanks for taking the time to leave a comment. I love knowing what people are struggling with and what their strengths are.
@rakeshdubey15877 күн бұрын
you have provided great study materials, I need to watch this video 5 times to get into it. one request🙏 i have been working on tenses + voice conditionals Reported speech i have been reading about them since long time, referred different materials but i am unable to make them of mine. i wish i could use them in my conversation smartly . Please suggest me, what i should do ? any way out for that! any tricks and tips for effective practice with Regards
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa5 күн бұрын
Hi, I didn't notice this message, so I apologise for the delayed response. Your question is interesting because it covers a range of different levels. For instance, 'tenses' can mean the easy present simple at A1 level or the more difficult past perfect continuous at B2 level. The best 'tricks' are not really 'tricks' but common sense. There are different theories of language learning. I personally believe you have to be exposed to as much language as possible (songs, podcasts, TV series, articles, books, etc), but don’t worry about understanding 100%. That is obviously going to be impossible if you are not an advanced student. When you study the rules in order to produce a language (writing or speaking), make sure you have a firm foundation. So, go back to the beginning and review the basics. When you're reviewing the past simple, make sure to focus on irregular verbs and phrasal verbs. Then when you've done present simple and past simple, start with passive voice of just those tenses. Targeted practise on one grammar point at a time will be the most useful. Answer lots of questions using that one form before you progress to the next. Imagine you are studying the first conditional. Step 1) The structure: If + subject + present verb, subject + [will/may/might/can/should/have to/must] + base verb. Step 2) The use: for very likely or possible situations Step 3) Practise, Practise, Practise: If you see your neighbour tomorrow morning, what will you say to them? If it rains tonight, will you go out or stay at home? If Anisa’s dog is naughty, should she punish it? If your friend calls to invite you to a party, will you accept or decline it? If you want to book annual leave from work, who must you notify? Etc. The best advice is to keep watching my videos, of course!
@rakeshdubey15874 күн бұрын
🙏
@dan934317 күн бұрын
Hi, In the part 21:38, "my main responsibility was retaining clients." I think I can also use the infinitive in this sentence. My main responsibility to retain clients. Is it right?
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa7 күн бұрын
Definitely! Using the gerund focuses on the action of doing something rather than the concept of it. I like to swim (but I don't often have the opportunity) I like swimming (implying that I do this more often) To be, or not to be! (Very abstract concept) Cleaning the bathroom is not a fun chore. (Concrete action) Hope that makes sense ☺️
@dan934317 күн бұрын
@@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa Yes that makes sense. By the way, I think when you use this phrase "All you have to do is, you use only v1 form, but in this case it's also possible to usa a gerund or infinitive. 1) All you have to do is complete the mission. 2) All you have to do is completing the mission. 3) All you have to do is to complete the mission. Am I right?
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa7 күн бұрын
Ahh, this is a tricky answer because we're dealing with a cleft sentence structure. It is actually not V1, it is the bare infinitive. In short, 1 is the best option (All you have to do is complete the mission) and 3 is acceptable, but not usual (All you have to do is to complete the mission). 2 with a gerund is not possible here. However, you could just use the noun and say (All you have to do is the mission) If you change the subject to 'he' you will see the infinitive more clearly: All HE HAS to do is COMPLETE the mission. (not 'completes') The ‘all cleft’ is used for emphasis to indicate only this one thing. You might want to focus on a noun: ALL + [subject + verb] IS/WAS + noun - All I need is the answer to my question. - All I wanted was a slice of chocolate cheesecake, but the restaurant had sold out. Depending on the first verb, you might be able to focus on a verb. In this case it is in the BARE INFINITIVE. (Don’t conjugate the verb in the second part of the cleft) ALL + [subject + verb] IS/WAS + noun / verb - All I need to get is the answer to my question. - All I ate yesterday was junk food - All I need to understand is how to use cleft sentences. All Anisa needs to do is answer my question. (incorrect: All Anisa needs to do is answers my question.) All my teacher does is assign homework (incorrect: All my teacher does is assigns homework.) Sorry for the long answer, but it's a complex grammar point!
@dan934317 күн бұрын
Anisa thank you so much for informing me in detail. I prefer those teachers who always explain something in detail because explaining something in detail eliminates not only the confusion but also assists to understand the logic in a sentence. Today, I happened to have known your channel and I have become your new subscriber.😊@@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa7 күн бұрын
@@dan93431 I love that you used negative inversion, but be careful what is being inverted. You have two different verbs, 'eliminate' and 'assist'. "... because explaining something in detail not only eliminates...., but (it) also assists..." Yes, I annoy my friends by correcting them all the time, too! 😁
@user-oj7uc8sv4v7 күн бұрын
I want to buy course, how can i buy ur course
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa5 күн бұрын
Thank you for your interest in a course. I'm glad you like my style of teaching. I do teach private students, but you can learn well by following my free videos on KZbin and asking questions when you don't understand something. I believe good English tuition should be accessible to everyone.
@nadiyastasiv54097 күн бұрын
I love your gorgeous explanations, Anisa. Thank you a million.
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa5 күн бұрын
You're so welcome! 😊
@AidasRusa7 күн бұрын
I did well.
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa7 күн бұрын
Yay! I'm glad to hear it.
@hk26227 күн бұрын
Authentic and talented as usual, all thanks from bottom of heart.
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa7 күн бұрын
You're welcome! Some of the collocations you use tend to be noun+noun patterns, so you naturally create noun phrases. The next video in this series is going to level this up even more, to be extremely impressive in an IELTS essay. The key thing to remember is that not all the sentences should be equally long and complex. Giving the reader a break by throwing in some shorter, more simple sentences adds to the rhythm and flow of the text.
@hk26227 күн бұрын
I am all ears.
@JPdynabook7 күн бұрын
The noun "period" (or "full stop" in British English) has several definitions. One of them is "a point used to show the end of a sentence or an abbreviation."
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa7 күн бұрын
It's funny that I said "full stop" for years, but changed to "period" in my late teens. Normally North American English is more transparent in terms of meaning (traffic circle, sidewalk, waste paper basket, etc.), but in this case, I feel the Brits have coined an appropriate term. What do you normally say? Or, does it depend on whether you're talking about punctuation versus the end of an argument?
@AidasRusa8 күн бұрын
I think 99 percent of English native speakers don't know what a noun or verb phrase is or even have ever heard about it and still they can speak English fluently. I will see how this kind of knowledge is going to help me speak better English.😊
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa8 күн бұрын
I completely agree with you. Honestly, I feel that minor mistakes are quite natural. It's when those 'minor mistakes' end up affecting the meaning or causing confusion that they have to be addressed. Using a variety of sentence structures is more about creating your own style of writing and making it more interesting, and therefore more engaging for the reader.
@AidasRusa8 күн бұрын
@@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa Yes I have been studying English since 2003 ( I took English classes back in my native Lithuania in 2003 for one year ) mainly on my own. I am good at reading and can get by in writing, well I am not talking about professional articles or books writing I mean the writing which meets my needs. I am not bad at speaking trying to brush it up as much as I can and even living in English speaking country I don't have many opportunities to speak to somebody in English and I am still struggling sometimes to express my thoughts, finding proper words and having doubts about the pronunciation of some words. English I would say it's not easy even If one tries to learn it on a daily basis.
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa7 күн бұрын
Wow! I commend you for continuing your studies and not giving up. So many people believe the claims that you can 'become fluent in 30 days'. It's definitely possible to learn enough to survive on holiday for a few days, but I've never met anyone who achieved 'full fluency' in so short a time. Fun fact: my dog's mum came from Lithuania (both the human mum and the canine mum).
@ramu93756 күн бұрын
Yeah, these are, I think, studied as part of syntactical analysis.
@nandakumarkoc8 күн бұрын
No teacher can explain this concept better than teacher Anisa. She is the best!
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa8 күн бұрын
haha it sounds like I've paid you to write such a kind review! Thank you 😉
@p.madhanmadhan48818 күн бұрын
Madam, the word ' phrase ' is misspelt as phase
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa8 күн бұрын
Ahhh! 😖 I noticed that after I had posted it and wondered whether anyone would pick up on it! I always tell my students to review their work and I should practise what I preach!
@p.madhanmadhan48817 күн бұрын
What a wonderful reply from a gracious teacher whom I value greatly
@phumkiatwananuraksakul78158 күн бұрын
I am Thai,and teach English in Thailand just like your ways,so can we connect with each other to be a partner or I need to be your quest interviewing me on your channel. What do you think about it?
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa8 күн бұрын
I love connecting with other teachers. Feel free to send me an email ([email protected]) or connect on LinkedIn (www.linkedin.com/in/anisadaud/)
@phumkiatwananuraksakul78153 күн бұрын
Thanks for your generosity of giving me your contact email,and I will send you an email to talk more in details to see if we could be a partner to teach English on KZbin or TikTok together to boost your chanel for Thais in Thailand.
@bahatikitchen43398 күн бұрын
Thanks ❤❤❤
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa8 күн бұрын
You're very welcome!
@wendyphiri41928 күн бұрын
Wow! Another exceptional lesson. Thank you so much.❤
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa8 күн бұрын
You're one of my strongest and most consistent cheerleaders! Thanks ❤️
@pershangkordabadi83598 күн бұрын
Thanks a lot 😊
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa8 күн бұрын
You are most welcome 😊
@sharkdzung8 күн бұрын
You rock, Anisa. Thanks for your great effort! I love the way you level up vocabulary & grammar structures.
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa8 күн бұрын
Glad you liked it 😊 It's important to understand the basics really well if you want to level up to a truly advanced point.
@mtlbienesraicestorreonyfra31088 күн бұрын
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa8 күн бұрын
From a real estate point of view, I'm glad you like my focus on the foundation of sentences. (hahaha I'm so funny!) 🤣
@uddinmd70598 күн бұрын
Hi Anisa, I am from Bangladesh. I am really enjoying your lessons that help me level up my English. Please keep it up
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa8 күн бұрын
Thanks for the support. I'm glad you find them useful 😊
@petrtroschenkov36010 күн бұрын
I’m quite surprised to hear North American accent and British english at the same time. It’s a bit weird combo, at least to me. Thank you for your channel! And yeah…. I only got interested and subscribed , because it’s specifically an American English accent that you utilize.
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa10 күн бұрын
😆 I get that comment a lot! I'm from England and am currently living here, but I actually spent 10 years in Canada. That's where I attended high school, college, and university. I often tell my students that my accent is a mix of both and lies somewhere in the middle of the Atlantic!
@petrtroschenkov36010 күн бұрын
@@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa Thrifty nifty!
@Nithila14211 күн бұрын
Really very very useful lesson, its an incredible. I never watch anything like this before .. Thanks a lot Anisa ma'am
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa8 күн бұрын
I am so glad you found it useful. Not all techniques work for everyone, but this is what I've observed over many years. Find what works for you and be consistent about doing it. Good luck on your English journey!
@startcherif11 күн бұрын
Very nice vit
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa8 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@mohinhdochoinhapkhau12 күн бұрын
I can remember what likely to be a car of a prosperous customer walking into our store in the last week
@mohinhdochoinhapkhau12 күн бұрын
Thanks! for your video
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa8 күн бұрын
Hi, thanks for leaving your sentence. There is a lot going on in it. I would rephrase it to say 'I can remember what was likely the car of a prosperous customer who walked into our store last week.' But I'm not sure if the customer already owns the car or if you thought they might purchase it in the future.
@mohinhdochoinhapkhau5 күн бұрын
@@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa THanks for your answer. I mean the car that he owned and drove to our store.
@user-mmaammaa12 күн бұрын
Finally finished the first one 😆🎉 Praise myself!
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa12 күн бұрын
Have you recorded yourself trying to say it? 😂
@sharkdzung12 күн бұрын
10:55 - My answer: Delicious food/ dish Accurate pronunciation Well-mannered child Feasible plan/ mission Productive way/ approach Those are nouns that came to my mind when I heard the adjective. Thanks for your awesome lesson, Anisa :)
@wendyphiri419213 күн бұрын
Putting up lessons of this kind is also an act of kindness too. You’re sharing knowledge to thousands of people and transforming many lives.❤🙏🏽
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa13 күн бұрын
I appreciate your support. I think it's horrific how much some language schools charge students. Everyone should be able to access classes to level up their abilities.
@wendyphiri419213 күн бұрын
This is truly helpful. You’re changing our lives in many ways. ❤
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa13 күн бұрын
Throughout my career it's always been so rewarding to see people go on to do amazing things just because they were able to pass the first hurdle of English. ☺️
@mohinhdochoinhapkhau13 күн бұрын
what I received today is probably the best video with best illustration for a difficult grammar issue, reduced to mere issue by a energetic teacher.
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa12 күн бұрын
I'm very touched by your kind words. I honestly don't think I'm that deserving of such high praise, but the sentence structure you used to share it is fantastic. 🤩
@mohinhdochoinhapkhau14 күн бұрын
I believe what is probably benefit of gaming is not only do I play video games, which is popular right now, but it might also I learn English words from them, which are all useful phrases for daily life.
@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa13 күн бұрын
I completely agree that gaming can improve your English. Yes! Pair something you love with something you need. (I'm just going to add 'the' to your sentence because it is a specific benefit= probably the benefit of gaming is... / probably the benefits of gaming are...)
@mohinhdochoinhapkhau13 күн бұрын
@@TheOnlineEnglishTeacher-Anisa Thanks you!
@derrickdonn927314 күн бұрын
Hi teacher Alisa, I like the way you explain. You make things very clear