Hey, how've you guys been? I'm Cicero from Brazil but I'd lived in America for a couple of years, and nowadays I work teaching online English classes for a Languages School in Boston, Massachussets, US. I can teach English to Portuguese speakers, and I also can teach Portuguese to English ones.
In my country, Brazil, we write the date format the same way as in British English, first the day, followed by the month and then the year. However, we do not write the month in capital letter unless when referring to a commemorative date.
Oh! my dear i want to tell you that your videos are more interesting and wonderful as you each day! I appreciate all the efforts that you make to teach us! This topic as you said, it is one of the most confused to many English learners! You have collected many things in a short but useful video lesson! All the best with your channel! Regards from Venezuela.
I'm from France and I speak American English. My favorite month is October 'cause this is the month of my birth. I really like your lessons, it helps me a lot to revise basics things. thank you!
Neat new lesson. July is my favourite. Because it's when my birthday, my brother's birthday and my parents' wedding anniversary falls. PS: You're accent never ceases to amaze me! Love you!
Thanks Lucy. I'm from Philippines and I really find it heard pronouncing January and Febuary all time. But after watching your video, I kept on repeating and practicing it.
Dear Lucy, /ɔːˈɡʌst/ pronunciation is for an adjective "august". For a noun August (month) the proper pronunciation is /ˈɔːɡəst/. And I'm a little bit surprised that you emphasize 1st syllable of September, October and November while on the screen I can see an accent mark before 2nd syllable which is(should be) emphasized. That's how I was taught.
I was just going to write the same. You're right about September, October November and December as well. The stress is not on the first syllable but the second.
@dianjii S She happens to be emphasising the first syllable on this particular video because the first syllable is the syllable that differs when reading all the months out together as a list. You wouldn't normally do that if you were just saying one of the months on its own, not as part of a list. Usually it would be sep-TEM-ber and oc-TOB-er. It's quite common to change the emphasis when reading out a list like this.
That isn't the usual way of pronouncing those months. It's because she's reading out a list where the ending of the word is mostly the same. It's the start of the word that tends to be different, so she's deliberately changed the emphasis to the first syllable because of the list situation. But by doing that, she's confused the issue slightly.
I am turkish. my teacher derste watched your video and I recognized you guys. good definition. You gave me information about the English language. I will remain your follower 😍💖❤💘 you so pretty!
As an American, I also like to say Two Thousand instead of Twenty when referring to dates but I never put an "and" or "n" in between Two Thousand and whatever follows it. It feels perfectly natural to me to say "Two Thousand Seventeen". In fact, it feels very unnatural for me to say otherwise. There are Americans who also say Twenty Seventeen but I never hear "and" or "n" between the two halves of the date. For dates prior to 2010, here people say "Twenty-O-One" and so on.....mixing the letter O for the number zero.
I was going to say something similar if it was not already explained in the comments. Saying "and" is entirely unnecessary in American English. It's okay, but it's entirely optional. As an addition to your comments, it's also common to hear people omit the "twenty" or "two thousand" and simply say "o-eight" but this only applies to the years 2001-2009. If asked when I graduated high school I might say I was part of the class of "o-four" instead of "two thousand four"
To British people, it feels like part of the general informality of American speech to miss out words like "and" and "of". Of course Americans probably don't view it as informality.
John, what about "the" between month and day? For example, I hear sometimes people saying April First, but also April "the" First. Some times I hear March Twenty-fifth, but also March "the" 26th. How does that work in American, please?
Thank you so much, it's easier than I thought. I was taught that we have to say "on" and then the date when telling the birth date, but I see that it's not necessary.
@sononeltuoarmadio zio ... nope, my friend. i'm scots-irish. but i love all nations and all peoples. one thing i like about the internet is communicating to people from all over the world.
@sononeltuoarmadio zio ... i don't live in scotland, i'm an american. but i did visit it about 40 years ago. i drove north from london along britain's east coast. you could see the turbulent north sea off the coastline. when i crossed into scotland there was nothing but miles and miles of the most lush, green grasslands i ever saw. it was raining and as the rain dispersed the most beautiful and inviting rainbow formed across the sky. it looked as if the rainbow was emptying into the north sea. then i headed to inverness (loch ness) and stayed in a hostel there for about 3 days then headed to glasgow airport, london, to catch my plane back to the states. i visited several countries in europe. i loved them all but scotland was one of my favorites!
@sononeltuoarmadio zio ... if you speak english as well as you write it you're doing real well. yes. the italia people were fabulous. i drove down the adratic coast to pescara then cut across to rome and headed north again to the italian and french Riveras. that coastal road leading into southern france, looking out onto the Mediterranean was just gorgeous. the Mediterranean is just about the most beautiful BLUE i've ever seen.
My favorite month of the year is December because I Was born on December 10th 1982. I am an English teacher here in México. I've been watching your videos and I have to say you are great and gorgeous as well.
My favourite months is probably May because there are the mother's day, Helena Bonham Carter's birthday etc. It is also the last month of school(at least in my country) and it is the month when I begin going to the sea(because in Italy the temperature is already hot in the southern Italy:). P.S: sorry if I made some mistake but I am 13 and I'm still learning English 😓
Merhaba Lucy, İngilizce eğitim videoların için teşekkür ederim. Türkiye'den selamlar Hello Lucy, Thank you for your english education videos. Greetings from Turkey
En mi país somos como los británicos, primero el día luego el mes y por último el años In my country we are like the British people, first the day then the month and the last one is year. Soy de México 🌚✨👌
Dear Lucy, first of all I want to congratulate you for your channel and your good job to teaching us English with great competence and charm. I want to ask you a question: I'd observed that you have a particular way to speak, how can I say... a kind of "lose tongue". Is this a personal characteristic of yours or this is a common trait of British English? I Hope you understand my question. Thank you again and excuse for my bad english. I've learned it by myself thanks to generosity of people like you.
I'm American. Thank you for not saying our way of showing dates is wrong. :) As an American who's been to over 15 different countries, I respect the way other countries do things and don't think they're wrong because it's different than what's done in America. It's nice to see a foreigner who practices that motto the other way around. Cheers! :)
Wow - I sooooo identify with this video. I am taching English in Mongolia but there are people from many different nations and their ways of saying dates and numbers drives me crazy. I'm so glad that you have clarified what I've been teaching. Thank you :)
REPRESENT YOUR COUNTRY and contribute subtitles: ruclips.net/user/timedtext_video?v=DRl6tpsxchw&ref=share Omg guys this video was soooo problematic and took so long to edit! I wanted to throw my laptop off a cliff!!!!! So happy that it's up now
No, because the ability to speak in your native accent is something acquired since birth and hard-wired into your brain. Once you have learned the sounds of your native language this knowledge cannot be lost by learning other languages and sound systems later on. Also if you live among people speaking with a certain accent it becomes very natural to mimic the way they sound and to speak the same way. So if you live in England among people speaking with a British accent you will have no reason to lose your native British accent.
Am I too late to watch the lesson? I found the video extremely useful. I always messed up with dates, months and years. Now, I've cleared my doubts and corrected my mistakes. I absolutely admire the fact that you provide wonderful subtitles. But, which was given as witch in the subtitles at 2:16. My favourite month is December. It's my birthday and it's the month of Christmas. By the way, I've been pronouncing February wrong until I watched this lesson.
What about 2000? since my birth date is 6th June 2000, there's no other way of saying it right? I've never heard someone calling it "20 double o" which sounds cool or just "2K"
Yes, they say nineteen hundred (1900) or seventeen hundred (1700) . And notice that they even use that format for saying other numbers, for example, US$ 1400 fourteen hundred dollars (or one thousand four hundred dollars)
well nineteen hundred ... hundred #'s have two 0's so anytime like that it would be the number and two more zeros. would only say that if you were saying a range of dates -- or if it was on the 1900 to be exact . and like eduardo said, you can use that with money too.
Hello Lucy! Thank you for the lesson about dates. You refreshed in my mind that we say them like: day/ month/ year. I always say like this. But years...I always ddevide them into two parts and say like this: 1923 - nineteen twenty-three. when I want to say 2001, I say like this: twenty oh one. I never say "two thousand and one" etc, because it's uncomfortable for me.
Hi, Lucy. Thanks for posting this. Very informative. Just in case nobody has pointed this out yet, may I suggest you amend the IPA transcription for February and August. According to all the pronouncing dictionaries I have consulted, /ˈfebruəri/ is by far the pronunciation regarded as correct by most British English speakers (61% according to the Longman Pronouncing Dictionary), while /ˈfebjuəri/ is the primary choice (64%) for American English speakers. Since your IPA transcriptions reflect British usage, it may be more appropriate to show /ˈfebruəri/, though I agree that /ˈfebjuəri/ is much easier for us foreigners to pronounce. As to August, the correct transcription is /ˈɔːgəst/ for the name of the month, while /ɔːˈgʌst/ is the adjective 'august'.
In my country Egypt, we say the dates in the slang dialect as day but in cardinal form, then the month then the year in form of (one thousand nine hundreds ninety five for example) and we don't use the or of .. but when we use the original Arabic language, we say the and of and pronounce the days in ordinal form
All I can say is that I'm glad I'm a native English speaker. It would appear that English is a very challenging language to learn anew. Tapadh leat airson an leasan an-diugh. Bidh mi an-còmhnaidh ag ionnsachadh rudeigin ùr.
Hey, how've you guys been? I'm Cicero from Brazil but I'd lived in America for a couple of years, and nowadays I work teaching online English classes for a Languages School in Boston, Massachussets, US. I can teach English to Portuguese speakers, and I also can teach Portuguese to English ones.
In my country, Brazil, we write the date format the same way as in British English, first the day, followed by the month and then the year. However, we do not write the month in capital letter unless when referring to a commemorative date.
Nice work. Could you please upload a video on how to deliver speech effectively and how to deal with stage fear
Oh! my dear i want to tell you that your videos are more interesting and wonderful as you each day! I appreciate all the efforts that you make to teach us! This topic as you said, it is one of the most confused to many English learners! You have collected many things in a short but useful video lesson! All the best with your channel! Regards from Venezuela.
Thanks Lucy! You are a great teacher. I've learned a lot!
December is my favorite, because streets becomes bright and fairy. This makes me think that the world is not completely broken.
I'm from France and I speak American English. My favorite month is October 'cause this is the month of my birth. I really like your lessons, it helps me a lot to revise basics things. thank you!
Hi Lucy you are marvelous
Thanks for your helping us
Fadol from Sudan but live in Qatar
Hello Lucy I'm from Turkey✋ I reaaally love you and your channel. 🎈Thank you for help me to improve my English and my pronunciation. Love 💕
I loved this class, the Brits speak the same dates here in Brazil, so it was easy for me.
Neat new lesson. July is my favourite. Because it's when my birthday, my brother's birthday and my parents' wedding anniversary falls.
PS: You're accent never ceases to amaze me! Love you!
Lovely class, Lucy!
Thanks and greetings from Argentina!🇦🇷
Lucy, your explanation is always brilliant! It's easy and simple to understand! Tks for these tips! Kisses from Brasil!
You are a very good English teacher!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
im british moving to California to my fiancé, this has been helpful! :)
Thanks Lucy. I'm from Philippines and I really find it heard pronouncing January and Febuary all time. But after watching your video, I kept on repeating and practicing it.
Dear Lucy, /ɔːˈɡʌst/ pronunciation is for an adjective "august".
For a noun August (month) the proper pronunciation is /ˈɔːɡəst/.
And I'm a little bit surprised that you emphasize 1st syllable of September, October and November while on the screen I can see an accent mark before 2nd syllable which is(should be) emphasized. That's how I was taught.
I was just going to write the same. You're right about September, October November and December as well. The stress is not on the first syllable but the second.
/ɑkˈtoʊbər/ :vr
@dianjii S She happens to be emphasising the first syllable on this particular video because the first syllable is the syllable that differs when reading all the months out together as a list. You wouldn't normally do that if you were just saying one of the months on its own, not as part of a list. Usually it would be sep-TEM-ber and oc-TOB-er. It's quite common to change the emphasis when reading out a list like this.
That isn't the usual way of pronouncing those months. It's because she's reading out a list where the ending of the word is mostly the same. It's the start of the word that tends to be different, so she's deliberately changed the emphasis to the first syllable because of the list situation. But by doing that, she's confused the issue slightly.
May God bless you Mrs Lucy because you are always helping us
that's the best comment I've read so far
Thanks for this lesson... teach me how to telling time too...
I am turkish. my teacher derste watched your video and I recognized you guys. good definition. You gave me information about the English language. I will remain your follower 😍💖❤💘 you so pretty!
Thanks, Lucy! Your lessons are so helpful!
Thank you so much Lucy, you've been really helpful !
I'm from Sri Lanka, i really love your videos and i appreciate you. thanks for your videos
I asked a girl for a date and she said '2017' :(
=)) what a 'date' ! she is so clever =))
lol so funny
M Hilmy Fauzi 2017 isnt a date. Its a year mate
lol u fuckin idiot
reading is still difficult for some people
You are just perfect! You are so gorgeous, your pronunciation is so beautiful and your teaching methods are impeccable! :)
Hi, Lucy! Please explain the difference between IN SCHOOL/AT SCHOOL and IN THE LESSON/AT THE LESSON. ON COURSE/AT COURSE, etc. Thank you very much!!!
FEB is my fav month cause bday month!!
Thank you so much, Lucy. You're the best teacher, I have ever seen. Keep the ball rolling. Please help with English Concord
My favourite month is May, because it's my birthday.
Mine too.
Boa tarde
Mine too
Quien te pregunto?
@@eliii_YT-jf7uj Lucy
Lucy, this video is usefull as usual. You're my best teacher.My favourite month is October, because the colours of the trees are magnificent.
As an American, I also like to say Two Thousand instead of Twenty when referring to dates but I never put an "and" or "n" in between Two Thousand and whatever follows it. It feels perfectly natural to me to say "Two Thousand Seventeen". In fact, it feels very unnatural for me to say otherwise. There are Americans who also say Twenty Seventeen but I never hear "and" or "n" between the two halves of the date. For dates prior to 2010, here people say "Twenty-O-One" and so on.....mixing the letter O for the number zero.
I was going to say something similar if it was not already explained in the comments. Saying "and" is entirely unnecessary in American English. It's okay, but it's entirely optional.
As an addition to your comments, it's also common to hear people omit the "twenty" or "two thousand" and simply say "o-eight" but this only applies to the years 2001-2009. If asked when I graduated high school I might say I was part of the class of "o-four" instead of "two thousand four"
To British people, it feels like part of the general informality of American speech to miss out words like "and" and "of". Of course Americans probably don't view it as informality.
John, what about "the" between month and day? For example, I hear sometimes people saying April First, but also April "the" First. Some times I hear March Twenty-fifth, but also March "the" 26th. How does that work in American, please?
Thank you so much, it's easier than I thought. I was taught that we have to say "on" and then the date when telling the birth date, but I see that it's not necessary.
my favourite month is SEPTEMBA (lmao,I'm from Italy)
viva italia! from the mojave desert in california, USA. the sad, stupid, suffering USA.
@sononeltuoarmadio zio ... nope, my friend. i'm scots-irish. but i love all nations and all peoples. one thing i like about the internet is communicating to people from all over the world.
@sononeltuoarmadio zio ... i don't live in scotland, i'm an american. but i did visit it about 40 years ago.
i drove north from london along britain's east coast. you could see the turbulent north sea off the coastline. when i crossed into scotland there was nothing but miles and miles of the most lush, green grasslands i ever saw. it was raining and as the rain dispersed the most beautiful and inviting rainbow formed across the sky. it looked as if the rainbow was emptying into the north sea.
then i headed to inverness (loch ness) and stayed in a hostel there for about 3 days then headed to glasgow airport, london, to catch my plane back to the states.
i visited several countries in europe. i loved them all but scotland was one of my favorites!
@sononeltuoarmadio zio ... if you speak english as well as you write it you're doing real well. yes. the italia people were fabulous. i drove down the adratic coast to pescara then cut across to rome and headed north again to the italian and french Riveras. that coastal road leading into southern france, looking out onto the Mediterranean was just gorgeous. the Mediterranean is just about the most beautiful BLUE i've ever seen.
Hi, I'm from Brazil. you are excellent teacher. thank you very much
My favorite month of the year is December because I Was born on December 10th 1982. I am an English teacher here in México. I've been watching your videos and I have to say you are great and gorgeous as well.
Plz Lucy, Post videos talking about the Differences between American and British (Grammar and Vocabulary )
October
1. Because my birthday is the 28th of October
2.Because I love Autumn x
Hello still alive ahah
I watched nearly all the videos, and exactly everything, which described, now clearly understand. :) Thank you Lucy. Good luck...
Hello Lucy! I really enjoyed this video, i totally fell in love with your new intro.
Violet Silverbridge May is a cool month!
"and other things" lol
Violet Silverbridge
My favourite months is probably May because there are the mother's day, Helena Bonham Carter's birthday etc. It is also the last month of school(at least in my country) and it is the month when I begin going to the sea(because in Italy the temperature is already hot in the southern Italy:).
P.S: sorry if I made some mistake but I am 13 and I'm still learning English 😓
nice day ..
my english teacher tell me to watch your channel, because now I'm learning British english now (before I was learning american english)
can I ask you to please list the make up products you use ....your make up is always on fleek
true
Today is 9th May 2024 and I learned something new about dates in english. Thank you, Miss. Lucy
"This is just a waste of space, like many things on this planet" 🤣
We use MM/DD/YYYY in the Philippines.
We also pronounce the day in cardinal form. For example: March 2, 2018 -> March Two Twenty Eighteen
please do some videos on grammar!
Merhaba Lucy,
İngilizce eğitim videoların için teşekkür ederim. Türkiye'den selamlar
Hello Lucy,
Thank you for your english education videos. Greetings from Turkey
Eu amei! E consegui entender o vídeo! 👏👏👏👏
+Acsielly Lucas ❤️❤️❤️❤️
❤❤
Eu também consegui entender tudo, alguma coisa que não consegui entender o contexto ajudou.
O problema é o sotaque britânico hahaha
Paulo Fernando Pois é! 👍
You're doing it better and better every day.
Prepositions are challenging but it gets easier :)
Here in Brazil we say dates like British. For example: Today is 07/03/2021. Thanks for your classes, Lucy.
En mi país somos como los británicos, primero el día luego el mes y por último el años
In my country we are like the British people, first the day then the month and the last one is year.
Soy de México 🌚✨👌
Dear Lucy, first of all I want to congratulate you for your channel and your good job to teaching us English with great competence and charm. I want to ask you a question: I'd observed that you have a particular way to speak, how can I say... a kind of "lose tongue". Is this a personal characteristic of yours or this is a common trait of British English? I Hope you understand my question. Thank you again and excuse for my bad english. I've learned it by myself thanks to generosity of people like you.
I'm American. Thank you for not saying our way of showing dates is wrong. :) As an American who's been to over 15 different countries, I respect the way other countries do things and don't think they're wrong because it's different than what's done in America. It's nice to see a foreigner who practices that motto the other way around. Cheers! :)
thank you, Lucy. It's so good for my English. I'm waiting for your next video
June is my favourite month.
Wow - I sooooo identify with this video. I am taching English in Mongolia but there are people from many different nations and their ways of saying dates and numbers drives me crazy. I'm so glad that you have clarified what I've been teaching. Thank you :)
March because it's my birth month XD
me too
MS Zame k
Beautiful Teacher & Beautiful Language
Thanks a lot!!!!!!!!
REPRESENT YOUR COUNTRY and contribute subtitles:
ruclips.net/user/timedtext_video?v=DRl6tpsxchw&ref=share
Omg guys this video was soooo problematic and took so long to edit! I wanted to throw my laptop off a cliff!!!!! So happy that it's up now
It's very accurate, good job Lucy... we enjoy it!
Buy a real computer to you don't waste your time in edit. The end was not good.
English with Lucy thanks for your efforts
ciao bella ❤☺
I've done the Spanish ones, once again :)
Hey lucy. Your my best teacher in you tube, really your lessons are usuful thnkz I'm from somalia
Hello, greetings from Argentina :D
ggg
I love December. The year i was born
And “back to December” of TaylorSwift)
My favourite month is June 'Cause it's my B'day & It has nice season too..
我很想说一口流利的英语,所以学习ing.
杨克 He said, I wanted to speak English fluently, so now was studying.You are welcome,.
Thanks 😊
You're an amazing teacher🌸
Does knowing to speak spanish fluently, not affect your accent?
Gandhar Gurav maybe, you can get confused with some words 🤔
No, because the ability to speak in your native accent is something acquired since birth and hard-wired into your brain. Once you have learned the sounds of your native language this knowledge cannot be lost by learning other languages and sound systems later on. Also if you live among people speaking with a certain accent it becomes very natural to mimic the way they sound and to speak the same way. So if you live in England among people speaking with a British accent you will have no reason to lose your native British accent.
alright, thanks!
+ib9rt how about the other way? Will I eventually "acquire" a native British accent if I live on long terms in England?
Thank you very much!!! Greetings from Tarija - Bolivia.
It is not essential in american English to use the "and" in 2001 it is fairly common to hear "two thousand one."
It's far more common to not use the 'and' ; like 95-99% of cases
Thanks for teaching Lucy your prononcation is brilliant in English
"We say the day, the month and the year" You shoul've said "like normal people" xD
Why, Americans... why?
I thought the same
Because we can ;)
Solo quieren llamar la atención. jaja
The Chinese use year/month/day system. Maybe some other asian countries use this system too, can't say for sure.
I guess that's because they write from right to left.
Am I too late to watch the lesson? I found the video extremely useful. I always messed up with dates, months and years. Now, I've cleared my doubts and corrected my mistakes. I absolutely admire the fact that you provide wonderful subtitles. But, which was given as witch in the subtitles at 2:16.
My favourite month is December. It's my birthday and it's the month of Christmas. By the way, I've been pronouncing February wrong until I watched this lesson.
What about 2000? since my birth date is 6th June 2000, there's no other way of saying it right? I've never heard someone calling it "20 double o" which sounds cool or just "2K"
+M Hilmy Fauzi we normally say 'the year 2000'
M Hilmy Fauzi 2K would be cool 😂
Try “twenty hundred.”
At the time, it was always called "The millennium"
M Hilmy Fauzi m
I like the way you pronounced. Thank you for the video.
what about saying the years like "nineteen hundred" for 1900? I've never understood that..
Diogo Veloso nineteen hundred is the way I would say it
Yes, they say nineteen hundred (1900) or seventeen hundred (1700) . And notice that they even use that format for saying other numbers, for example, US$ 1400 fourteen hundred dollars (or one thousand four hundred dollars)
well nineteen hundred ... hundred #'s have two 0's so anytime like that it would be the number and two more zeros.
would only say that if you were saying a range of dates -- or if it was on the 1900 to be exact . and like eduardo said, you can use that with money too.
Happy Birthday Lucy ! You are the best!!
Wow, I'm early!
Excellent presentation. I am fond of you.
Lucy your teaching is so good i am improve my english thnx so much lucy mam🌹🌹🙏🙏
aunque no hablo mucho ingles me encanta el ingles británico. saludos a ti Lucy desde Colombia en suramericana
I love your pronunciation and the way you say date, is more similar to my native language and somehow in general make more sence
Hello Lucy! Thank you for the lesson about dates. You refreshed in my mind that we say them like:
day/ month/ year. I always say like this. But years...I always ddevide them into two parts and say like this:
1923 - nineteen twenty-three.
when I want to say 2001, I say like this: twenty oh one. I never say "two thousand and one" etc, because it's uncomfortable for me.
Hi, Lucy. Thanks for posting this. Very informative. Just in case nobody has pointed this out yet, may I suggest you amend the IPA transcription for February and August.
According to all the pronouncing dictionaries I have consulted, /ˈfebruəri/ is by far the pronunciation regarded as correct by most British English speakers (61% according to the Longman Pronouncing Dictionary), while /ˈfebjuəri/ is the primary choice (64%) for American English speakers. Since your IPA transcriptions reflect British usage, it may be more appropriate to show /ˈfebruəri/, though I agree that /ˈfebjuəri/ is much easier for us foreigners to pronounce.
As to August, the correct transcription is /ˈɔːgəst/ for the name of the month, while /ɔːˈgʌst/ is the adjective 'august'.
I prefer your style of teaching. Thanks ^^
Thank you so much Lucy for this very useful video on dates!
In my country Egypt, we say the dates in the slang dialect as day but in cardinal form, then the month then the year in form of (one thousand nine hundreds ninety five for example) and we don't use the or of ..
but when we use the original Arabic language, we say the and of and pronounce the days in ordinal form
Thank very much for your time to explain it.
We, Indonesians, also say day/month/year, for example: 12 Juni 1994. But we have many ways to read the year. Cheers!
All I can say is that I'm glad I'm a native English speaker. It would appear that English is a very challenging language to learn anew. Tapadh leat airson an leasan an-diugh. Bidh mi an-còmhnaidh ag ionnsachadh rudeigin ùr.
Thanks a lot. I am always with you for getting new English Learning Video.
Hello everybody !!! I'm Roman from Russia, a new subscriber of this wonderfull channel :) . wish you joy
My favorite month in January and November because in January it's my birthday and in November it's full of festivals. It's so exciting... 💜❤
You are some thing else! U have good voice with correctly gramma
I love this stuff. In my part of the US (California) we don´t say "twenty oh four" we would say "two thousand four". The "and" is optional.
you are captivating.
I love to hear you.
Hi Lucy! Thank for everything 💜🦋
Wow didn't expect to have Arabic subs! Thanks for the great effort.
My favourite mount in May and I love your English skills
mouth
Hi Ms. Lucy! Please make a "have/ haven't, did/ didn't" video pleasee?