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Have you ever heard someone say that grammar isn't that important when learning English? Maybe you've seen a YouTuber or TikToker swear that you don't need to study grammar at all. Just "pick it up naturally", they say. Just "get your message across".
Well, let's talk about that…
First things first, you're reading this email, which tells me something important about you.
You actually care about learning English properly. It isn't enough for you to simply be understood. You want to feel good about how you speak and write.
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So I'm not going to spend this email convincing you that grammar matters. You already know it does. Instead, I want to share something that might feel like a little weight lifting off your shoulders: |
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If grammar still feels harder than it should, after all the studying you've done, it probably isn't your fault. |
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For years, a lot of learners have been told to push grammar to the bottom of the pile.
- "Focus on vocabulary."
- "Just speak more."
- "Don't worry about the rules; people will understand you."
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And while there's a tiny grain of truth in there, following that advice too closely leaves you in a frustrating place: you can communicate and get by, but there's this feeling that your English still isn't quite where you want it to be. |
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You pause before you speak. There's still some doubt over which conditional you should use or which tense is right. And deep down, you know you're capable of more. |
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That feeling isn't a sign that you're bad at English. It's a sign that nobody ever gave you the clear, structured foundation you deserved. And the wonderful news is that this is completely fixable, often faster than you'd expect. |
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After years of teaching, I can confidently say that grammar isn't a boring set of rules to memorise.
It's the thing that finally sets you free.
It's what lets you stop thinking and just speak. It's the difference between hoping you got it right and knowing you did.
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Over the next few days, I'm going to show you exactly what I mean, and I think you're going to get a little bit excited about grammar. (Yes, excited! Stick with me. |
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