Vocabulary Builder Set 01 Interactive Activities
Flashcards
Learn
Spelling
Matching
Test
Are you serious about building your vocabulary?

Check out my vocabulary building book series.

Check out my vocabulary building book series.
We live in an era where your attention is the product. Discover how the attention economy is reshaping cognition, memory, and human connection — and what you can actually do about it.
Ever cried at a movie and walked out feeling strangely lighter? Or screamed into a pillow and felt genuinely better? There’s an ancient Greek word for that — and it’s been changing lives since long before movies existed.
A butterfly flaps its wings in Brazil and a tornado forms in Texas. That’s the image. But the butterfly effect is far more than scientific metaphor — it’s a lens for understanding how our smallest actions ripple outward in ways we’ll never fully see. Let’s explore why that matters.

Master the art of apologizing in English — from simple ‘sorry’ to heartfelt, nuanced amends. A progressive lesson covering vocabulary, grammar, and cultural tips at every level from beginner to advanced.

Some things glow. Not because of a light source nearby, but because of something inside them. In this episode, we explore luminous — a word that’s about far more than brightness.

It’s one of those phrases that gets thrown around constantly, often as a critique. But ‘read the room’ is more than social correction — it’s an invitation into one of the most complex and underrated human skills there is. Let’s unpack it.

Learn how to talk about humidity, air quality, and home comfort in English. From basic weather words to advanced discussions about indoor climate — a progressive English lesson for all levels.

You know that smell — when rain hits dry earth and something ancient and alive rises up to meet you? It has a name. And once you know it, you’ll never experience rain the same way again.

We throw this phrase around when something feels insignificant, too tiny to matter. But what if we’ve been reading it all wrong? This episode takes a second look at one of the most commonly used — and most misunderstood — expressions in English.
0 Comments