When do we use difficulty (singular) vs. difficulties (plural)?
I’m going to explain this and also teach you a number of collocations, typical combinations of words, to expand your vocabulary!
Learning collocations improves your English fluency because instead of trying to put a sentence together word by word, trying to think “which verb goes with this noun?” or “which adjective sounds more natural?” – instead, you’ll already know combinations of words that go together.
My e-book, 1000 collocations in 10 minutes a day, makes learning collocations quick and easy. It has 50 short lessons, 50 quizzes, and comes with audio as well.
Feeling + Feelings Collocations
Than vs. Then + 10 Common Expressions
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How to keep a conversation going (with examples!)
40 phrases for starting conversations in English
Reported Speech: Rules, Examples, and Exceptions!
When do we use ANYMORE vs. ANY MORE?
Which is correct: A historic event or AN historic event?
Which is correct: IN school or AT school?
Difference between SEE a movie and WATCH a movie?
Everybody IS or everybody ARE?
When to use HAVEN'T vs. DON'T HAVE?
Do we get ON a bus or get IN a bus?
What does AIN'T mean, and when do we use it?
"Have a good look" or "Be good-looking"?
Speak WITH or Speak TO?
SHOULD vs. SUPPOSED TO?
Which is right: FACE problems or FACE WITH problems?
CALL someone or CALL TO someone?
IN a long time or FOR a long time?
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