After that? We might introduce a premium version. But you? Your Next Step (Takes 10 Seconds) Don’t study grammar one more day. Train it.
Why This Isn’t Your Typical Grammar Course Most grammar courses teach you to recognize structures. You learn the present perfect. You can identify a third conditional. But when a native speaker uses connected speech ("I would’ve gone" → "I would’ve" ), your ears shut down. And when you try to reply, your mouth stumbles. After that
| Module | Speaking Focus | Listening Focus | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 1 | Past habits with "used to" | Recognizing "useta" in fast speech | | 2 | Future plans: "going to" vs. "will" | Hearing "gonna" vs. "‘ll" | | 3 | Present perfect for experience | Distinguishing "I’ve been" from "I went" | | 4 | Conditionals (0, 1st, 2nd) | Understanding "If I was you" in casual talk | | 5 | Reported speech in conversation | Noticing tense shifts in news clips | Your Next Step (Takes 10 Seconds) Don’t study
Listen better. Speak smoother. No cost. No pressure. 🚀 LAUNCHING: English Grammar Launch – a free online course to upgrade your speaking & listening. Real conversations. Shadowing drills. No credit card. Start today → [link] You learn the present perfect
Subtitle: Stop overthinking grammar rules. Start speaking with clarity and listening with confidence.
For years, you’ve been told that grammar is boring. You’ve memorized tables, completed endless fill-in-the-blanks, and still... you freeze in real conversations.
👉