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Have you been promoted at work for your great ideas? While we all have good ideas, sadly, most of them never see the light of day. People keep their ideas to themselves for many reasons. Perhaps they don’t like speaking up in meetings or feel overburdened by work and don’t want to invite more work. Maybe they’ve brought up ideas at work before, and others didn’t seem interested or even discouraged them. After all, most people don’t recognize the potential of an idea at first. But of course, we all benefit from good ideas. In the workplace, they can lead to the creation of entirely new products and services, an easier way to do something, time saved, or countless other benefits. Tune in to this episode of the Express to Impress podcast to find out how to present ideas successfully. You’ll advance your career in no time! Episode originally published January 22, 2021.
How to Present Ideas Successfully
2022年5月3日
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Hello everyone! Today I am helping you understand native speakers. This is for listening. In the last episode about the letter T, we saw that on the ends of some words, T changes to a "stop," a "stopped sound." (What, that, cat, etc.). Today, we are also talking about T. In many words, T or TT is pronounced as D. This happens when the T or TT is between two vowel sounds. Here is the sentence I use to demonstrate: I read an article today that was much better than the one I read yesterday. I felt that the author was more articulate, the grammar was truly clear, and the range of vocabulary was greater. Here are the words I used for examples today: better matter later water native bottle little barter quarter These words have syllables beginning with T that are stressed (e.g. -tiv- in creativity) creativity particulate articulate retell return Please comment below if you have questions. In the iTalki app, you can also subscribe to the podcast. Have a great week!
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2022年5月3日
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Today we are talking about pronunciation, specifically what happens to T's at the ends of many words. This is a response to a student's question. Please comment or message me with questions for me to cover in future episodes! Here are all the words and phrases I talk about today. All of them usually have a "stop" (a stopped sound) instead of a full T sound. I have added some others which are common to the end of the list. Almost all words that end in a vowel sound followed by a T drop the T and make it a stop: cat hot that flat part short and sweet What do you think about that? Did you get it right? Extras (in no particular order): about out but without put not rot butt nut despite kite right alright etc. There are many, many words light these. Comment some below! Have a great week everyone! See you again soon!
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2022年5月2日
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