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Channel Posts
π Phrasal Verb: Put Away
Put away means to place something in its proper location after using it.
β
Examples:
β’ Please put away your toys after playing.
β’ She put away the dishes after dinner.
β’ Don't forget to put away your clothes.
π‘ "Put away" can also mean to save something for future use:
β’ He puts away some money every month for retirement.
π Try using "put away" in your own sentence:
What do you always have to put away at home or at work?
Learning phrasal verbs helps you sound more natural and confident in English! π
| 2 | π Idiom of the Day: βA chip on your shoulderβ
Have you ever met someone who always seems ready to argue, even about small things? English has a perfect idiom for this feeling: βto have a chip on your shoulder.β
Originally, the phrase comes from an old practice where a person would place a wood chip on their shoulder and challenge anyone to knock it off β as a way of showing they were ready to fight.
Today, it doesnβt mean physical fighting. Instead, it describes a lasting feeling of resentment or insecurity.
People with a βchip on their shoulderβ may:
react strongly to criticism
feel easily offended
believe they have to prove themselves
But itβs not always obvious β sometimes it hides behind confidence or sarcasm.
π¬ Example:
βHe always acts like he has a chip on his shoulder when someone gives feedback.β | 96 |
| 3 | π English Collocations About Food π
Want to sound more natural in English? β¨
Native speakers often use special word combinations called collocations when talking about food. Learning them will help you speak more fluently and avoid common mistakes.
π a bunch of bananas
π§ a bulb of garlic
π§ a clove of garlic
π a loaf of bread
π° a piece of cake
π₯ a carton of milk
π§ a slice of cheese
π‘ Try to learn these collocations as whole phrases, not as separate words. This is how native speakers use them every day!
π¬ Which collocation do you think is the most useful? | 133 |
| 4 | πβCreativity is intelligence having fun.β β Albert Einstein
In simple words, this quote means:
Creative ideas come when you use your mind in a playful, curious, and enjoyable way.
Einstein suggests that creativity is not separate from intelligence. Instead, creativity is what happens when intelligence explores, experiments, imagines, and enjoys the process of thinking. | 182 |
| 5 | βKeep Calm and Carry Onβ is a famous British phrase from World War II. The British government created it in 1939 to help people stay calm and strong during difficult times and air attacks.
The slogan later became a symbol of British courage and resilience. Many years later, people rediscovered the poster, and it became popular around the world.
Today, this phrase is also a popular internet meme. People make thousands of funny versions with different endings for everyday situations. π¬π§ | 190 |
| 6 | π Posh π
Have you ever heard someone say, "That's a bit posh"?
In British English, posh means elegant, stylish, luxurious, or associated with wealth and a high social class.
π° A posh hotel might have marble floors and crystal chandeliers.
π½ A posh restaurant serves beautifully presented dishes in an elegant setting.
π Someone may describe a person as posh if they have refined manners, an expensive lifestyle, or a very upper-class accent.
Examples:
β
They stayed in a posh hotel in London.
β
She wore a posh dress to the wedding.
β
His accent sounds quite posh.
Interestingly, British people often use posh humorously. You don't have to be rich to be called poshβsometimes ordering an expensive coffee or using fancy words is enough! π | 207 |
| 7 | Sometimes the best moments happen unexpectedly β¨
Drop by means to visit someone casually and usually for a short time β without long planning.
π Examples:
Why donβt you drop by for a cup of coffee later? βοΈ
She dropped by my office to say hello.
My friend dropped by unexpectedly yesterday.
This phrasal verb sounds warm, friendly, and natural in everyday English. Native speakers use it very often in casual conversations.
π‘ βDrop byβ is perfect when you want to talk about a quick, informal visit.
Try using it today:
Who would you like to drop by and visit? π | 235 |
| 8 | π₯ Add fuel to the fire
Have you ever seen a small problem become much bigger because someone kept arguing, complaining, or making the situation worse?
That's exactly what "add fuel to the fire" means β to make a difficult situation even worse.
π Example:
Tom was already angry, but his friends kept teasing him and only added fuel to the fire.
Sometimes the best thing to do is not add fuel to the fire... but bring water instead π | 216 |
| 9 | 1 | 7 |
| 10 | βWords are our most inexhaustible source of magic.β β J. K. Rowling
Think about it: words can comfort someone on their worst day, inspire a dream, heal a broken heart, or completely change the way a person sees the world.
A single sentence can stay with us for years. A story can take us to places we've never seen. A conversation can change the course of a life.
Magic isn't always hidden in wands and spells. Sometimes it lives in the words we speak, write, and leave behind.
Choose your words carefully β you never know when they might become someone's magic. | 283 |
| 11 | I liked his wife more than Brezhnev's guards at Chernenko's | 78 |
| 12 | I was there too | 80 |
| 13 | Sir Winston Churchill and his wife Clementine were famous for their great sense of humour.
British people loved telling funny stories about them. Many of these stories are probably not true β but they are wonderful examples of British humour.
One day, Winston and Clementine were walking in a garden. They met a gardener, and Clementine smiled warmly at him.
Churchill joked:
βIf you had married that man, you would have been the wife of a gardener.β
And Clementine quickly replied:
βNo. If I had married him, he would have become Prime Minister.β
A perfect example of quick British wit! | 295 |
| 14 | βοΈ British Logic: Tea Solves Everything π¬π§
Bad day? β Tea βοΈ
Good day? β Tea βοΈ
Feeling stressed? β Tea βοΈ
Unexpected life crisis? β Tea βοΈ
Aliens arrive on Earth? β Put the kettle on. π½βοΈ
Tea may not solve every problem... but according to the British, it's a very good place to start π | 269 |
| 15 | π§ British Slang of the Day: "It's chucking it down!"
If someone in Britain says "It's chucking it down," don't worry β nobody is throwing anything! π
This expression means it's raining very heavily. Imagine rain falling so hard that it looks like someone is throwing buckets of water from the sky.
π Example:
"Take your umbrella β it's chucking it down outside!"
Other British ways to say it:
βοΈ It's pouring.
βοΈ It's bucketing down.
βοΈ It's tipping it down.
Learning slang makes your English sound more natural and helps you understand movies, TV shows, and real conversations. | 273 |
| 16 | π Phrasal Verb: SET OFF
βSet offβ means to begin a journey or start traveling.
βοΈ Examples:
β’ We set off early in the morning.
β’ They set off for Paris at dawn.
β’ I love setting off on long road trips.
It can also mean to cause something to start:
π₯ The loud noise set off the alarm.
π§ Easy way to remember:
SET OFF = START MOVING / START SOMETHING | 258 |
| 17 | Written by Oscar Wilde, βThe Picture of Dorian Grayβ is one of the most unforgettable novels in English literature.
Our subscribers can listen to this fascinating audiobook directly in the English Club TV mobile app π±
Download the English Club TV app and dive into the dark and captivating world of Dorian Gray anytime, anywhere. | 259 |
| 18 | π Keep your chin up
Meaning: Stay positive and donβt lose hope, even during difficult times.
β¨ Example:
βI know things are hard right now, but keep your chin up β better days are coming.β
This expression is very common in British English and is often used to encourage someone emotionally. It sounds warm, supportive, and friendly.
π‘ Similar expressions:
β’ Stay strong
β’ Donβt give up
β’ Stay positive | 301 |
| 19 | πβTo love oneself is the beginning of a lifelong romance.β
β Oscar Wilde
This quote means that self-love is not selfish.
When a person accepts and respects themselves, life becomes warmer and more peaceful.
A good relationship with yourself affects everything:
your confidence, your choices, and the way you love other people.
The word βromanceβ here does not mean vanity.
It means learning to treat yourself with kindness for your entire life πΏ | 295 |
| 20 | Both βedibleβ and βeatableβ mean that something can be eaten, but there is a nuance πΏ
πΉ Edible
= safe or suitable to eat
This is the common and natural word.
Examples:
These berries are edible.
The apples are edible too.
π It focuses on:
βYou can eat it safely.β
πΉ Eatable
= possible to eat / not too bad
This word is much less common and sounds more informal or awkward.
Examples:
The soup is eatable, but not delicious.
After adding salt, it became eatable.
π It often implies:
βItβs not great, but you can eat it.β
So:
π βIs this mushroom edible?β βοΈ natural
π² βThis pasta is eatable.β = not amazing, but okay π | 304 |
Available now! Telegram Research 2025 β the year's key insights 
