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😅 Ever Struggled with Present Perfect vs. Simple Past? Same Here! I remember when I first started teaching English—I kept noticing how tricky it is to choose between "I have done" and "I did." Even advanced learners sometimes ask: What’s the actual difference? It usually comes down to whether the action is connected to now (present perfect) or clearly in the past and finished (simple past). Example 1: I’ve just eaten lunch. (Still relevant—I’m full now!)
 ✔ Example 2: I ate lunch at noon. (That moment is finished and not related to now.) 
✔ I’m curious—
👉 Do you find this difference easy or confusing?
👉 In your native language, is there a similar difference? Let’s share thoughts and help each other out. Maybe we can collect some helpful examples together!
Jun 3, 2025 5:35 PM
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Hey everyone, I’m building a tool called Fluently, and I’d love your feedback to see if I’m actually on the right track. The idea is simple: Help English learners speak and write in a way that sounds natural and confident — without feeling robotic or overly formal. Unlike apps like Grammarly that focus mainly on grammar rules or correctness, Fluently aims to: Help you sound natural, not just correct Let you choose the tone (casual, neutral, professional) Support regional variations (e.g., U.S. vs. U.K. vs. Australian English) Give fast, focused feedback you can actually learn from — not just “add a comma” style notes Keep the whole experience simple and non-overwhelming This isn’t meant to be another bloated learning platform. It’s just a clean, helpful tool for ESL learners who want to sound more fluent and confident — especially in writing and conversations that matter (emails, interviews, chats, etc.). Right now I’m just putting out feelers to see: Would this actually help you or people you know? What do you wish tools like Grammarly or ChatGPT did better for ESL learners? Super open to honest feedback — positive or critical. You can drop thoughts here or DM me. Thanks so much in advance
Jun 3, 2025 8:12 PM
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