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  • ⚽ This episode teaches intermediate English learners the vocabulary Americans use to talk about teams and outcomes during the FIFA World Cup.

    Learn English Podcast covers essential sports terms including defending champion, dark horse, underdog, upset, and Cinderella story — all explained in context with real World Cup examples like Saudi Arabia's upset win over Argentina and Morocco's historic 2022 run.

    This is part of the World Cup Vocabulary Series, designed to help ESL and EFL learners at the B1–B2 level understand native speakers and have confident conversations about the tournament in American English.

    Perfect for intermediate English learners who want to use real vocabulary the way Americans actually use it in everyday conversation.

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    📝 Vocabulary list:

    1) defending champion — the team that won the last tournament and is competing to win again

    2) reigning world champion — another way to say defending champion; the current title holder

    3) the favorite — the team most people expect to win

    4) the team to beat — the strongest team that others must defeat to win

    5) dark horse — a team not expected to win but capable of surprising everyone

    6) don't sleep on them — don't underestimate them; take them seriously

    7) underdog — the team not expected to win; considered the weaker side

    8) root for — to support and cheer for a team

    9) upset — when the weaker team unexpectedly beats the stronger team

    10) pull off an upset — to achieve an unexpected win

    11) Cinderella story — when an underdog keeps winning far longer than expected

  • ⚽ This shadowing practice episode helps intermediate English learners improve their American English pronunciation using real World Cup vocabulary.

    Follow along with the text:

    "The World Cup is taking place right now in North America. It is soccer's biggest tournament and happens every four years. This year, 48 teams are competing, which is more than ever before. But only one team can become the world champion."

    Follow along, repeat each sentence, and shadow a native American English speaker using natural sentences about the 2026 FIFA World Cup in North America.

    This is one of the best ways for ESL and EFL learners to build pronunciation rhythm and sound more natural in English — using vocabulary learners are actually hearing right now.

    Designed for B1–B2 English learners who want to speak with more confidence and move toward advanced American English fluency.

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  • ⚽The World Cup is here — and if you want to talk about it confidently in English, you need to know the vocabulary. This episode of the Learn English Podcast covers the essential World Cup English terms that intermediate learners need right now, from the group stage and knockout rounds to brackets and elimination.

    Every term is explained clearly with real examples so English learners can follow the tournament and join the conversation naturally. This episode also explains why Americans call it soccer instead of football — and why using the wrong word can cause confusion when talking to a native speaker.

    Perfect for B1–B2 English learners who want to build real American English vocabulary through sports and culture. Part of the Learn English Podcast World Cup vocabulary series — more episodes are coming throughout the tournament. Search for Learn English Podcast in your podcast app and subscribe so you don't miss them.

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    📝 Vocabulary list:

    1) soccer: the American English word for the sport that most of the world calls football

    2) football: in the U.S., this word refers to American football, not soccer

    3) tournament: a competition where many teams play against each other to determine a winner

    4) group stage: the first phase of the World Cup where teams are divided into small groups and play each other

    5) knockout rounds: the stage of the tournament where losing a game means you are eliminated

    6) eliminated: removed from the competition, no longer able to continue

    7) bracket: the visual chart that maps out every team and every match in the tournament

    8) fill out a bracket: to predict which teams will win each match before the tournament begins

    9) perfect bracket: when every prediction in a bracket turns out to be correct

    10) root for: to support and cheer for a team or person

  • 🍔 This episode of the Learn English Podcast teaches American English vocabulary through the real culture of eating out in the United States. Intermediate English learners at the B1–B2 level will learn the essential restaurant terms Americans use every day — from fast food and casual dining to sit-down restaurants, tipping culture, and local California food recommendations.

    Learning English through real American culture helps intermediate learners build practical vocabulary and listening comprehension naturally. This episode covers restaurant-specific expressions like tourist trap, local spot, mom and pop, hole in the wall, and gratuity — all explained clearly in context using real-life examples. Learners will also hear how Americans actually talk about tipping, reservations, and dining expectations, giving them the language skills to feel confident in any American restaurant setting.

    This episode is ideal for ESL and EFL learners who want to improve their American English listening comprehension, build real-world vocabulary, and understand U.S. culture more deeply through natural, context-based learning.

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    📝 Vocabulary list:

    1) fast casual restaurant: a restaurant where you order at a counter but receive higher-quality food than fast food, often brought to your table

    2) sit-down restaurant: a restaurant where customers are seated at a table and served by a waiter

    3) buffet: a restaurant where customers pay one price and can eat as much food as they want

    4) tip: extra money given to a service worker to thank them for their service

    5) gratuity: a tip that is automatically added to a restaurant bill, usually for large groups

    6) tourist trap: a restaurant or place that targets tourists and often has high prices and lower quality

    7) local spot/joint: a restaurant that local residents regularly go to

    8) chain restaurant: a restaurant brand with multiple locations offering the same menu

    9) mom-and-pop restaurant: a small restaurant owned and run by a family

    10) hole in the wall: a small, simple restaurant known for good food despite its appearance

    11) turn over tables: to finish serving one group and seat new customers

  • 🎙️The silence was deafening. He gave her the silent treatment. The room went dead silent. Native speakers use expressions like these all the time — but for English learners, the differences between them are not always clear. This episode of the Learn English Podcast breaks down seven English idioms that use the word silence, with real-life examples showing exactly how and when native speakers use each one.

    Idioms covered include dead silence, silence is deafening, a loaded silence, the silent treatment, awkward silence, a moment of silence, silence implies consent, and silence is complicity. Each one carries a different emotional meaning — from tension and punishment to respect and moral responsibility — and this episode explains them all in plain, natural American English.

    Perfect for intermediate English learners at the B1–B2 level who want to understand real American English idioms and sound more natural in conversation. Learning idioms in context is one of the most effective ways to build fluency, and this episode gives you the cultural and emotional background you need to recognize these expressions and use them correctly yourself.

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    📝 Vocabulary list:

    1) dead silence: a complete absence of sound, usually after something surprising or serious happens

    2) silence is deafening: when someone's lack of response sends a strong emotional message, even though nothing is said

    3) a loaded silence: a quiet moment that is full of strong emotion like anger, sadness, or disappointment

    4) the silent treatment: when someone deliberately refuses to speak to another person as a form of punishment

    5) awkward silence: an uncomfortable pause in conversation when no one knows what to say next

    6) a moment of silence: a planned period of quiet to show respect, usually after someone has died

    7) respectful silence: staying quiet to show respect while someone is speaking or during an important event

    8) silence implies consent: the idea that staying quiet in a situation is taken as agreement or approval

    9) silence is complicity: the idea that staying silent about something wrong makes a person partly responsible for it

    10) deafening: extremely loud

    11) intent: the idea or purpose behind someone's words or actions

    12) complicity: shared responsibility for something wrong

    13) injustice: a situation that is unfair or morally wrong

    14) emotionally charged: full of strong feeling or emotion

  • 🏔️Alaska is the largest state in the United States — but also the least populated, the most remote, and one of the most culturally unique. This episode of the Learn English Podcast explores Alaska's history, climate, economy, and culture as part of the ongoing U.S. states series, with vocabulary explained naturally in context throughout.

    Topics include how Alaska was purchased from Russia in 1867, the history of indigenous peoples like the Inuit and the Aleut, why Alaska has a high median income despite a small population, what homesteading and living off the grid mean, and how bush pilots are a normal part of everyday life in remote communities.

    Perfect for intermediate English learners at the B1–B2 level who want to build real American English vocabulary through history and culture. Expressions covered include "the lower 48," "living off the grid," "population density," "self-reliance," and more — the kind of language native speakers use in everyday conversation that most English courses never explain. If you want to understand Americans when they talk about geography, culture, and daily life, this episode is a great place to start.

    📝 Vocabulary list:

    1) population density: number of people living in an area

    2) median income: the typical amount people earn

    3) indigenous: original people of a region

    4) territory: land controlled by a country but not a state

    5) remote: far away and difficult to reach

    6) cost of living: amount of money needed to live

    7) seasonal work: jobs available only during certain times of year

    8) homesteading: living independently by using the land for survival

    9) off the grid: living without public utilities

    10) preserve food: keep food safe for long periods

    11) mountaineer: person who climbs mountains

    12) self-sufficient: able to provide for oneself

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  • 🎙️ Some of the most common English words used today came from real historical groups of people — and most English learners have never heard their stories. This episode of the Learn English Podcast explains six everyday English words that come directly from history: Luddite, Puritan, Spartan, Barbarian, Bohemian, and Chauvinist.

    Each word is taught in context with its original story, its modern meaning, and real-life examples. Perfect for intermediate English learners at the B1–B2 level who want to expand their vocabulary and understand why English words mean what they mean.

    Learning vocabulary through history and culture is one of the most effective ways to remember new words. Once you know where a word comes from, it sticks. If you want to sound more natural in English and understand native speakers more clearly, this episode gives you six powerful words and the stories behind them.

    📝 Vocabulary list:

    1) luddite: a person who dislikes or resists new technology

    2) wages: money earned from work

    3) rise up: to protest or rebel against authority

    4) purify: to remove what is considered wrong or unwanted

    5) devotion: strong commitment to a belief or practice

    6) exile: to force someone to leave a community or country

    7) puritanical: overly strict about morality or pleasure

    8) spartan: extremely simple and lacking comfort

    9) barbarian: a person viewed as uncivilized or violent

    10) customs: traditional ways people behave in a culture

    11) barbaric: extremely cruel or violent

    12) bohemian: a creative person living an unconventional lifestyle

    13) unconventional: different from normal social expectations

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  • 🗣️Practice your American English pronunciation with this weekly shadowing exercise. This episode focuses on one of the most commonly mispronounced features of American English — the past tense ED ending. Native speakers pronounce ED three different ways, and most English learners have never been taught the difference. This shadowing session trains your ear and your mouth to produce all three naturally through guided imitation and repetition.

    Follow along with the text:

    "Last weekend, I visited a farmers market with my friend. We walked around and looked at everything they had. She wanted to try the fresh fruit, so we stopped at a few stands.

    We stayed for a couple of hours and really enjoyed ourselves. I grabbed some coffee and listened to a musician who played near the entrance. By the time we finished, we both agreed it was a perfect morning."

    🎙️Each sentence is modeled clearly with a neutral California accent at natural speed and then broken down so intermediate English learners can repeat, imitate, and shadow at their own pace. Past tense verbs practiced in this episode include visited, walked, looked, wanted, stopped, stayed, enjoyed, grabbed, listened, played, finished, and agreed.

    Perfect for B1–B2 English learners who want to improve their American English accent, reduce their foreign accent, and sound more natural in real conversations. A new shadowing practice episode is released every week on the Learn English Podcast. For the full explanation of past tense ED pronunciation, search for Learn English Podcast in your podcast app and listen to this week's full episode.

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  • 🗣️In this episode, learners discover the three correct ways to pronounce the English past-tense ending “-ed.” The explanation is clear and beginner-friendly but designed for intermediate listeners who want stronger pronunciation and listening comprehension.

    The episode breaks down when “-ed” sounds like “ed,” when it sounds like “t,” and when it becomes a soft “d,” with examples of voiced and unvoiced consonants. Learners also hear natural example sentences and a practice paragraph at the end to reinforce each pattern.

    This lesson is great for ESL and EFL learners who want to improve speaking confidence, understand Americans more easily and build a stronger foundation in real-life English.

    Practice Paragraph:

    Yesterday we visited the lake and watched the birds as they floated on the water. We walked along the trail and laughed at some funny signs we spotted. After a while, we played music on a speaker and danced together by the shore. Finally, tired and happy, we called a taxi and headed home.

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    📝 Vocabulary list:

    1) correctly: in a way that is accurate and without mistakes

    2) pattern; a repeated way something works or appears

    3) interact with: to communicate or have an effect on someone or something

    4) absorb: to take in information and keep it in the mind

    5) voiced consonant; a sound made with vibrating vocal cords

    6) unvoiced consonant; a sound made without vocal cord vibration

    7) vocal cords; the tissues in your throat that vibrate to make sound

    8) aspiration; a small burst of air released during pronunciation

    9) hard palate; the bony part of the roof of the mouth

    10) omit: to leave something out or not include it

    11) vowel; a sound made without blocking air in the mouth

    12) consonant; a sound made by blocking or restricting air

  • 🗣️Practice your American English pronunciation with this weekly shadowing exercise. Shadowing is one of the most effective methods for improving your American accent, building natural rhythm, and training your ear to recognize how native speakers actually sound. This episode focuses on real American food vocabulary — root beer, pizza toppings, and Chicago deep dish pizza.

    Follow along with the text:

    "Root beer is one of the most popular sodas in the United States. Some people say it tastes like medicine. But others say it’s sweet and flavorful.

    🎙️Each sentence is modeled clearly at natural speed and then broken down so English learners can repeat, imitate, and shadow at their own pace. The goal is not perfection — it is consistent practice that builds real spoken fluency over time.

    Perfect for intermediate English learners at the B1–B2 level who want to improve their American English accent and sound more natural in conversation. A new shadowing practice episode is released every week on the Learn English Podcast, connected to the weekly long-form vocabulary and culture episode. For the full American foods episode, search for Learn English Podcast in your podcast app.

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  • 🍕 Would you try canned cheese? Corn dogs? Biscuits and gravy?

    This episode of the Learn English Podcast explores some of the most unique American foods that are common in the United States but might seem very strange to people from other countries. From root beer and peanut butter to deep dish pizza, Velveeta cheese, and state fair foods, this episode covers the real cultural context behind these foods and the English vocabulary Americans use when talking about them.

    Designed for intermediate English learners (B1–B2), this episode builds food vocabulary naturally in context while exploring the American eating habits and regional specialties that define everyday life in the United States.

    Learn American English naturally through real culture, real vocabulary, and real stories — not grammar drills.

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    📝 Vocabulary list:

    1) relatively common: fairly normal or often seen

    2) odd: strange or unusual

    3) gross: very unpleasant, especially about food

    4) carbonated: containing bubbles or gas

    5) flavor profile: the overall mix of tastes

    6) spread: a soft food put on bread or crackers

    7) separate into layers: to split into different parts

    8) allergic: having a bad body reaction to a food

    9) batter: thick liquid used before frying food

    10) deep fry: to cook food in hot oil

    11) vendor: someone who sells food or goods

    12) toppings: foods added on top of another food

  • 🗣️Improve your pronunciation and listening skills with this American English shadowing practice episode from the Learn English Podcast.

    Follow along with the text:

    My friend invited me to run a marathon with her. I didn’t want to, so I told her right away, “hard pass.” She kept asking, but I was a hard no. Some things you just don't negotiate.

    Later, my friends were going out, but I was hard up for cash. I told them I had a hard out so I could leave early. It’s a hard knock life, but I do the best I can.

    🎙️In this episode, learners listen first, repeat, and then shadow full conversational paragraphs containing common slang expressions like hard pass, hard no, hard up, and hard knock life. Shadowing is one of the most effective techniques for developing natural American English pronunciation, listening comprehension, and speaking confidence.

    This episode is perfect for English learners around the world who want to sound more natural, understand fast native speech, and learn American English for work, travel, and study.

    Watch the full lesson, follow the rhythm closely, and try to match the pronunciation, stress, and intonation of a native speaker.

    The Learn English Podcast teaches real American English through culture, conversation, pronunciation training, and contextual learning designed for serious B1–B2 English learners worldwide who want to become fluent, confident speakers of natural American English.

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  • 🎧Native speakers use phrases like "hard pass," "hard no," and "hard out" constantly in everyday American English — and most English learners have never seen them in a classroom. This episode of the Learn English Podcast explains the most common American slang expressions built around the word "hard," with real-life examples that make each one easy to understand and remember.

    Perfect for intermediate English learners at the B1–B2 level who want to improve their listening comprehension and start using natural American slang in real conversations. Each expression is taught in context — no lists, no drills, just real American English explained the way native speakers actually use it.

    Topics include hard pass, hard no, hard out, hard up, hard knock life, and the school of hard knocks. If you want to understand native speakers and sound more natural yourself, this episode is a great place to start.

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    📝 Vocabulary list:

    1) Durable – Something that is strong and lasts a long time.

    2) Emotionally strong – Able to handle stress or difficult feelings without breaking down.

    3) In charge – Responsible for something or in control of a situation.

    4) Set time – A fixed time that cannot be changed.

    5) Hard pass – A slang phrase meaning you strongly say no to something, especially an invitation.

    6) Hard no – A slang phrase meaning a very strong refusal or disagreement.

    7) Hard out – A slang phrase meaning a fixed time when someone must leave or stop doing something.

    8) Hard up – A slang phrase meaning to have no money or very little money.

    9) Hard knock life – A slang phrase meaning a life full of challenges or difficulties.

    10) School of hard knocks – A phrase meaning learning from life’s difficult experiences instead of from school.

    11) Adversity – A difficult or unpleasant situation.

    12) Sarcastic – Saying something in a way that means the opposite, often to be funny or critical.

  • 🗣️Improve your pronunciation and listening skills with this American English shadowing practice episode from the Learn English Podcast.

    Follow along with the text:

    "Alabama is in the southern part of the United States. Most people don't know much about it, but it has a rich history. It was also at the center of the civil rights movement.

    In Alabama, football is king, which means it is very popular. Every year, Alabama and Auburn face off in a game called the Iron Bowl. The whole state stops to watch."

    🎙️🇺🇸 Practice speaking natural American English with this guided shadowing lesson. In this episode, learners listen, repeat, and shadow real spoken English while learning about the U.S. state of Alabama. Shadowing helps improve pronunciation, rhythm, fluency and confidence by training your ear and mouth together.

    This American English shadowing practice is designed for B1–B2 English learners who want to sound more natural when speaking. Follow along, repeat the sentences, and then shadow the full paragraph to build real conversational pronunciation. For deeper cultural learning, watch the full Alabama episode linked in the channel.

    The Learn English Podcast teaches real American English through culture, conversation, pronunciation training, and contextual learning designed for serious B1–B2 English learners worldwide who want to become fluent, confident speakers of natural American English.

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  • 📗You've heard of California and New York — but how much do you know about Alabama?

    This episode of the Learn English Podcast explores the state of Alabama — its history, culture, food, sports, and famous people — while teaching real American English vocabulary in context. Alabama has one of the most important histories in the United States, from its role in the Civil War to its central place in the American civil rights movement.

    Designed for intermediate English learners (B1–B2), this episode covers Alabama's economy, its famous college football rivalry between Alabama and Auburn, regional foods, and film and TV recommendations including Forrest Gump, To Kill a Mockingbird, and Selma — all chosen to help learners practice listening comprehension in natural American English.

    This is the first episode in the Learn English Podcast's series covering all 50 U.S. states. Learn American English naturally through real history, culture, and context — not grammar drills.

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    📝 Vocabulary list:

    1) GDP (Gross Domestic Product): the total value of goods and services produced in one year

    2) Economic output: how much a state or country produces in goods and services

    3) Wealth inequality: when some people have a lot of money and others have very little

    4) Agriculture / Agricultural: farming and growing crops like peanuts, cotton, and soybeans

    5) Aerospace: the industry related to airplanes, rockets, and space travel

    6) Capital city: the main city where a government is located

    7) Motto: a short phrase that expresses beliefs or goals

    8) Sovereignty: the power or right of a place to govern itself

    9) Confederacy: the group of southern states that left the U.S. during the Civil War

    10) Controversial: something that causes disagreement or strong opinions

    11) Civil rights movement: the period when African Americans fought for equal rights

    12) Rivalry: strong competition between teams, groups, or people

    13) Documentary: a film or TV program that gives real information about a topic

  • 🗣️Shadowing is one of the most effective ways to improve English pronunciation and fluency. In this episode of the Learn English Podcast, learners practice listening, repeating, and shadowing sentences about reading and how it helps build natural English skills.

    Follow along with the text:

    "Reading is one of the best ways to improve your English. It helps you see real vocabulary in context. You begin to notice patterns, sentence structure, and natural phrasing. The more you read, the more natural English starts to feel.

    Short books are especially powerful for language learners. They feel manageable and less overwhelming. When you finish a book, you build confidence. And that confidence makes you want to keep going."

    🎙️This episode of the Learn English Podcast is a focused English pronunciation and shadowing practice session for intermediate learners at the B1–B2 level. Learners listen and repeat individual sentences before shadowing complete paragraphs on the topic of reading and English fluency, building the natural American English rhythm and intonation that comes from consistent speaking practice.

    This episode pairs with the main Learn English Podcast episode on reading and English fluency. Learners who want to build their vocabulary and listening comprehension alongside their pronunciation practice can listen to both episodes together for a complete English learning experience.

    🔔 Follow us on social media @LearnEnglishPod and visit our website:

    Podcast website: https://learnenglishpod.com/

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  • 🎧 Are you an English learner who wants to read in English but feels overwhelmed by long or difficult books? In this episode of the Learn English Podcast, five short real books are recommended specifically for intermediate English learners at the B1–B2 level — all under 250 pages and all chosen for how effectively they build vocabulary, reading confidence, and natural American English comprehension.

    The episode covers Of Mice and Men, The Old Man and the Sea, The Call of the Wild, The Giver, and Convenience Store Woman. Each recommendation includes the English level, approximate length, story summary, and a clear explanation of how reading it will improve your English. This is English learning through real literature — not textbooks, not grammar drills, but actual stories that help you absorb natural English in context.

    Perfect for B1–B2 learners who want to build a reading habit, grow their vocabulary naturally, and gain real confidence in English. Learn English the way it was meant to be learned — through stories.

    🔔 Follow us on social media @LearnEnglishPod and visit our website:

    Podcast website: https://learnenglishpod.com/

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    Take lessons with me: https://www.italki.com/en/teacher/8531387

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    📝 Vocabulary list:

    1) exhausting: extremely tiring

    2) chore: an annoying task you don’t want to do

    3) exposure: how much you come into contact with something

    4) long-term: over a long period of time

    5) informal grammar: casual, real-life grammar (not textbook-perfect)

    6) perseverance: continuing even when it’s hard

    7) stamina: ability to keep going without getting tired

    8) gold rush: a period when many people rush to find gold

    9) internal narration: a character’s thoughts written in the story

    10) harsh: very difficult, unpleasant, or hard to survive

    11) abstract thinking: thinking about ideas that are not physical, like freedom or memory

    12) bias: a preference toward something, sometimes without realizing it

  • 🗣️Learn English with this shadowing practice episode focused on heist vocabulary and natural American English rhythm.

    Follow along with the text:

    "A heist is when a group steals something valuable. It isn’t random, but is carefully planned. The team gets together to study their target.

    On the day of the job, everyone knows their role. One person keeps a lookout while the others move fast. They want to grab the score and make a clean getaway. But the police might stop them first."

    🎙️This B1–B2 level English lesson helps intermediate English learners improve listening comprehension and pronunciation through guided repetition. In this episode, learners practice sentences about what a heist is, how it is planned, and what happens during it. The lesson models real-life American English usage in context, including phrases like “keep a lookout,” “grab the score,” and “clean getaway.”

    This episode is ideal for ESL and EFL learners who want to improve fluency through shadowing, rhythm training, and imitation — not grammar drills. By repeating and shadowing natural spoken English, learners strengthen stress patterns, linking, and smooth sentence flow.

    🔔 Follow us on social media @LearnEnglishPod and visit our website:

    Podcast website: https://learnenglishpod.com/

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  • 🎧Robbery, burglary, and heist — do you know the difference?

    This episode of the Learn English Podcast uses the real-life Louvre Museum jewel theft to teach essential English vocabulary that comes up constantly in news, TV shows, and movies. The episode explains the key differences between robbery, burglary, and heist — then covers the vocabulary used to describe planned crimes, including recon, mastermind, accomplice, inside job, smash and grab, getaway, lay low, and blow over.

    Designed for intermediate English learners (B1–B2), this episode also includes film and TV recommendations — Ocean's 11, Money Heist, Good Girls, Lupin, and The Italian Job — chosen specifically to help learners practice this vocabulary through natural English conversations.

    Learn American English naturally through real stories, current events, and vocabulary in context — not grammar drills.

    🔔 Follow us on social media @LearnEnglishPod and visit our website:

    Podcast website: https://learnenglishpod.com/

    Follow us on social Media: https://linktr.ee/learnenglishpod

    Take lessons with me: https://www.italki.com/en/teacher/8531387

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    📝 Vocabulary list:

    1) robbery: stealing from a person using force or threat while the person is present

    2) robbery: stealing from a person using force or threat while the person is present

    3) heist: a planned burglary targeting something valuable (art, jewels, money)

    4) spontaneous: happening in the moment without planning

    5) to score: successfully steal something valuable

    6) case the place/joint : secretly study a location before a crime

    7) case the place: secretly study a location before a crime

    8) recon: gathering information before a crime (short for reconnaissance)

    9) mastermind: the main planner/leader behind the heist

    10) accomplice: a person who helps commit a crime

    11) smash and grab: break a display/window and steal quickly

    12) lay low: hide and avoid attention after doing something risky/illegal

  • 🗣️This English shadowing practice episode helps intermediate English learners (B1–B2) improve fluency, pronunciation, and listening comprehension in American English.

    Follow along with the text:

    "Long before she changed careers, Elena felt burnt out. She worked late most nights and knew she needed a change. But the idea of starting over felt too far out of reach.

    Friends encouraged her to take small steps forward. Before long, she started exploring new options online. She looked into careers such as teaching, researching, and coding. Now she only wishes she had made the change sooner."

    🎙️Through guided repetition of a short story, learners practice natural rhythm, stress, and connected speech. This lesson does not focus on grammar explanation. Instead, it helps you learn English through listening and imitation, which strengthens real-life speaking confidence.

    If you are an ESL or EFL learner looking for structured English listening practice and American English pronunciation training, this shadowing episode is designed to build natural fluency step by step.

    🔔 Follow us on social media @LearnEnglishPod and visit our website:

    Podcast website: https://learnenglishpod.com/

    Follow us on social Media: https://linktr.ee/learnenglishpod

    Take lessons with me: https://www.italki.com/en/teacher/8531387

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