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Hello native English speakers. Thank you very much in advance. Three big questions defeat me very much though relating to many sentences, which are: 1a. Wherever known, such facts have been reported. 1b. Wherever they are known, such facts have been reported. 1c. Wherever such facts are known, they have been reported. Which is grammatically correct? Do they have the same meaning? 2a. Where having nothing, nothing can you lose. 2b. Where you have nothing, you can lose nothing. 2c. Where having nothing, nothing can be lost. Question: Which is grammatically correct? Do they have the same meaning? 3. You must not use my pen unless writing a letter. 4. If in need, don't hesitate to ask me for money. 5. Though agreeing with you up to a point, I can not agree to your plans as a whole. 6. Even though given every attention, the crops wouldn't grow well. 7. It is one of the finest poems produced in recent years, if not the finest. 8. Our remaining horse was utterly useless as wanting an eye. Question (from 3 to 8): Which is grammatically correct?
2025年5月11日 15:13
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The 3-Second Shift: From Tension to Trust in a job inteview. What if clarity had nothing to do with vocabulary? What if your English didn’t need fixing — your voice just needed space? In this episode, I share a story about one of my clients — a senior product lead at Tencent — who felt like she disappeared every time she had to speak in English. She wasn’t struggling with grammar. She was struggling with presence. We didn’t work on performance. We worked on something simpler — and far more powerful: A 3-second shift that helped her speak from calm, not tension. From self-trust, not fear. If you’re a global professional who sounds fluent but doesn’t feel fully you in English — this episode is for you. DM me “VOICE” if it resonates. I’ll send you a short voice note you can use today. Let’s bring your real voice back.
The 3-Second Shift: From Tension to Trust
2025年5月12日 06:52
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