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Effortless_English

Logo of telegram channel zeroeffort_english — Effortless_English E
Logo of telegram channel zeroeffort_english — Effortless_English
Channel address: @zeroeffort_english
Categories: Education
Language: English
Subscribers: 604
Description from channel

Study for fun and personal development. 10 minutes per day equals 60 hours per year, step up your level effortlessly.
Any inquiries: @kitsune_lisitsune.
My second channel: https://t.me/antistress_nya

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The latest Messages

2021-12-16 11:49:52 Learn a language with me for free! Duolingo is fun, and proven to work. Here’s my invite link: https://invite.duolingo.com/BDHTZTB5CWWKTMKK4QXM6UAIVA
168 views08:49
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2021-06-21 13:07:28
@lingvo_ebot - Бесплатный бот переводчик, с лёгкостью переведёт слова и текст также его озвучит

Запускайте бот и переводите слова и тексты:
@lingvo_ebot
542 views10:07
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2021-06-19 12:03:34 Hi guys, I am sorry for such a short notification, but I can't devote enough time to my channel anymore, my main job becomes more and more overwhelming and hectic. I will leave all the posts here untouched of course and you will always be able to revise them through the list of tags:
#grammar
#idiom
#wordlist
#definition
#meaning
#difference
#wordoftheday
#alternatives
#video

Cheers and thank you all for being with me! See you in the future maybe if life becomes less stressful. :)
544 viewsedited  09:03
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2021-06-18 18:00:26
As thick as thieves — #idiom #meaning

Meaning:
- (of two or more people) very close or friendly; sharing secrets
- very close and secretive
- intimate, closely allied

Origin:
This term uses thick in the sense of “intimate,” a usage that is obsolete except in this simile. The association of thieves with conspiratorial and secretive language was well established in England in the 18th century. Many of those on the fringes of society, for example poachers, homosexuals, street hawkers and thieves, used secret words and phrases to converse furtively amongst themselves.

Examples:
1) All among the trees, the birds are thick as thieves and noisy as conventioneers.
2) I'm sure she tells Ruth everything we say - they're as thick as thieves, those two.
469 views15:00
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2021-06-18 12:00:19
Negativity-2 — #wordlist

1) Detrimental — tending to cause harm. Syn.: harmful, inimical, pernicious
2) Deplorable — deserving strong condemnation/shockingly bad in quality. Syn.: lamentable, grievous, disgraceful
3) Feeble — lacking physical strength, especially as a result of age or illness. Syn.: frail, puny, subdued
4) Insipid — lacking vigor, flavor or interest. Syn.: bland, vapid, dull
5) Lousy — very poor or bad; disgusting. Or literally infested with lice. Syn.: atrocious, appalling, pediculous
377 views09:00
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2021-06-17 18:00:06
Another round of #alternatives

1) Snivel — cry and sniff in a feeble or fretful way. Syn.: sniffle, whimper
2) Hurtle — move or cause to move at a great speed, typically in a wildly uncontrolled manner. Syn.: speed, race, rush
3) Impervious — not allowing fluid to pass through. Syn.: impenetrable, waterproof, impregnable
4) Pallor — an unhealthy pale appearance.
5) Smoulder — burn slowly with smoke but no flame. Syn.: glow, glimmer.
6) Sonder — the realization that each random passerby is living a life as vivid and complex as your own—populated with their own ambitions, friends, routines, worries and inherited craziness—an epic story that continues invisibly around you like an anthill sprawling deep underground, with elaborate passageways to thousands of other lives that you’ll never know existed, in which you might appear only once, as an extra sipping coffee in the background, as a blur of traffic passing on the highway, as a lighted window at dusk.
387 views15:00
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2021-06-17 12:00:13 ​​Apostrophes — #grammar

Apostrophes can be tricky. Sometimes they form possessives. Sometimes they form contractions. Can they ever make something plural?

Contractions and omissions

A contraction is a shortened form of a word (or group of words) that omits certain letters or sounds. In a contraction, an apostrophe represents missing letters. The most common contractions are made up of verbs, auxiliaries, or modals attached to other words: He would=He’d. I have=I’ve. They are=They’re. You cannot=You can’t.

Some writers use less common contractions when they want to represent a particular style of speech. They might write somethin’ to represent the way people often don’t pronounce the final g of “something” in speech. Occasionally, you might see e’er (instead of ever) in poetry. And, of course, in the American South, you will probably encounter y’all (you all). Decade names are often contracted as well: the ’60s (the 1960s).

Contractions are usually considered to be relatively casual. If you’re writing something very formal, you may want to avoid using them except in cases like o’clock, where the full phrase (of the clock) truly is rare.

To be continued...
353 views09:00
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