Recherche parmi diffĂ©rents professeurs en AnglaisâŠ
Arslan
Tuteur communautaireStop sounding too formal in everyday English đ
đ« Textbook English: âI am very sorry for being late.â
â
Real English: âSorry Iâm late!â / âMy bad, traffic was crazy!â
We rarely say the full sentence in daily life â natives shorten everything when speaking naturally.
đĄ Tip: Try replacing long, perfect grammar with short, emotional phrases. It sounds more real.
đŹ Example:
âI do not know.â â âI dunno.â
âI am going to go.â â âIâm gonna go.â
âI cannot believe it!â â âCanât believe it!â
đ Which one do you use most often â âgonnaâ, âwannaâ, or âgottaâ?
20 oct. 2025 08:44
Réponses · 3
Hi Arslan, I am a native English speaker in Australia. I understand what you are saying here, but I don't think it's a good idea to tell people learning English about "gonna, dunno, gotta". In my opinion that is very lazy English, commonly used in the USA but, for example, I would never walk into a job interview and say "My bad, traffic was crazy". And I definitely would never use any of those words in written English. "I'm going" is better than "I'm gonna go"; "I don't know" is just as fast as "I dunno"; and "I need to go" is just as fast as "I gotta go". Sorry, it's just my opinion, but I think these words might confuse people learning English. cheers, David :-)
il y a 9 heures
It depends on whom you are talking to. Itâs never wrong to be polite and your first sentence doesnât seem âveryâ formal to me.
il y a 7 minutes
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Arslan
Compétences linguistiques
Anglais, Russe, Turc, TurkmĂšne
Langue étudiée
Anglais
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