ENGLISH FOR IT™
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Language & soft skills for tech professionals and companies. If you would like to enroll for the English course, reach out to Alina 👉 @eng4it_ua
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-424 години
-87 днів
-2930 день
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7 172
Will You Survive a Work Meeting in English? 🤔
How well do you actually handle work meetings in English? Not just following the conversation - but actually being part of it.
Find out where you really stand - in just 2 minutes:
🔗 https://www.english4it.online/quiz-will-you-survive-a-work-meeting-in-english
Drop your result below 🤓
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🌞 Are you planning to recharge your batteries this weekend?
🔋 Recharge your batteries
= rest and get your energy back
💬 Example:
I’m taking a few days off to recharge my batteries before the next project starts.
🌿 Work hard, rest well, come back stronger.
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Grammar tip 💡
Not sure where to put words like often, sometimes, usually, or currently?
Look at the verb 👇
📌 With most verbs, put the adverb before the main verb.
Examples:
I usually check my messages in the morning.
We often have quick syncs on Fridays.
She sometimes works with the design team.
📌 But with the verb to be, put the adverb after am / is / are / was / were.
Examples:
I’m usually available after 2.
The team is often busy before a release.
The instructions were sometimes unclear.
✔️Simple rule:
Most verbs → adverb + verb
To be → be + adverb
⭐️Improve your communication with our English For Tech course.
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Idiom of the day ⭐
📡 On the radar — we know about it / we’re keeping an eye on it.
Use this phrase when something is important, but not necessarily being worked on right now.
Examples
The issue is on our radar, but we’re fixing something else first.
Better onboarding is on our radar for next quarter.
Your feedback is on our radar. We’ll discuss it in the next planning meeting.
🌟Learn to communicate better at work with our course English For IT: Communication
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Three phrases with ON you need to know 😎
On brand 🎯 = matches the style / image of a company, person, or project
Example:
The design looks great, but the colors don’t feel on brand.
On schedule ⏰ = happening at the planned time
Example:
The project is still on schedule, so we should be ready to launch next week.
Spot on ✅ = exactly right / very accurate
Example:
Your feedback was spot on. That’s exactly what we need to fix.
👉Learn real English for work with English For Tech
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Welcome to our new challenge!
30 days of real work situations + how to handle them in English.
We publish a new post every day. Each article gives you:
⏱️ 3 minutes to read
💼 1 real workplace problem solved
🗣️ 5+ useful English phrases
We’ll cover:
☑️How to ask for a raise or promotion
☑️How to make a great first impression in English
☑️How to make yourself heard in meetings
and more
Subscribe and start with Day 1: How to Disagree at Work Without Starting a Fight.
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Words that don’t look like real words but are 😏
Oomph 🚀= energy / impact
Example:
This presentation is good, but the opening needs more oomph.
Wow 🤩= to impress someone
Example:
The new design really wowed the client.
Meh 😕= not very good / not very exciting
Example:
The idea isn’t bad, but honestly, it feels a bit meh.
Did you know all these?
👍Yes
💡No
👉Learn real English for work with English For Tech. Use code SUMMER at checkout for 40% off. Code expires this week!
https://www.english4it.online/english-for-tech
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IT, poor English, why client-facing roles always go to Americans, imposter syndrome in international companies, cultural miscommunication, AI replacing the need to learn English at all...
We're planning a podcast episode and want to talk about what matters to you.
What would YOU want us to raise? Any topic, any problem, any question.
No filter. Drop it below 👇
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Idiom of the day ⭐
👣 Step on someone’s toes — to accidentally interfere with someone’s work, responsibilities, or area of ownership.
📌 Use this idiom when you want to be careful, polite, and respectful of someone’s role.
Examples
I don’t want to step on anyone’s toes, but I think we should review the timeline again.
Before I contact the client, I want to make sure I’m not stepping on your toes.
We should clarify who owns which part of the project so we don’t step on each other’s toes.
🌟Learn to communicate better at work with our course English For IT: Communication
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Some useful English abbreviations you can use at work👇
1. WDYT = What do you think?
Example:
“I added a new intro slide. wdyt?”
2. WDYM = What do you mean?
Example:
• The system crashed.
• wdym? It was up and running last night.
3. ICYMI = In case you missed it
Example:
“ICYMI, we moved tomorrow’s meeting to 3 PM.”
4. WIP = Work in progress
Example:
“This is still wip, but I’d love your feedback on the structure.”
🔥This wek only, get 40% off English For Tech
👉Use code SUMMER at checkout
https://www.english4it.online/english-for-tech
7 172
Happy Monday 🌞 Let’s kick off the week with some useful phrases for alignment at work.
1. That tracks = that makes sense / that sounds logical.
Example:
-If users keep dropping off at the payment step, we probably need to simplify the checkout flow.
-That tracks. Let’s look at the data and confirm.
2. Align on = agree on something or make sure everyone has the same understanding.
Example:
Before we start building, let’s align on the main goal, timeline, and success metrics.
3. At odds = in conflict / not aligned.
Example:
That seems at odds with what we agreed on earlier.
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👉Use code SUMMER at checkout
https://www.english4it.online/english-for-tech
7 172
Grammar tip 💡
Not sure if it's Past Simple or Present Perfect?
Look for the word when 👇
📌 “When” points to a specific moment or period in the past.
That’s why we usually use Past Simple after it.
Examples:
When I joined the company, I worked on the support team.
We got great feedback when we launched the product.
📌The same logic applies when you answer the question “When?”
When did you join the team?
I joined the team last year.
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Idiom of the day ⭐
💥 Blow something out of the water — to completely outperform or impress compared to something else.
📌 Note: This phrase is informal and a little dramatic. It works well in workplace conversations, marketing, product discussions, or casual team updates.
Examples
The new design blows the old version out of the water.
Their demo completely blew the competition out of the water.
This AI tool blows our previous workflow out of the water. It’s faster, cleaner, and much easier to use.
🌟Learn to communicate better at work with our course English For IT: Communication
7 172
Sneak peek: Eda can personalize speaking practice based on what you choose to share - your interests, job, learning goals, or your pet’s name 🐶
A few other things Eda can do besides personalizing your conversations:
✨ teach you new vocabulary
Hover over the highlighted phrases to see the explanation or translation.
For example:
draw a blank = be unable to remember something
🛠️ fix your grammar mistakes as you go
Check the “Live Corrections” panel for instant feedback.
Start your free trial of Eda 🚀
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Happy Monday 🌞 Let’s kick off the week with some cool phrases you can use at work.
1. I’m with (you) on this one = I agree.
Example:
I’m with Brian on this one. We should write more unit tests.
2. I’m working my way through it = I'm doing some task step by step.
Example:
I’ve got the buggy source code and I’m working my way through it now.
3. We’re on track to (do something) = things are going according to plan.
Example:
We’re on track to finish the first version by Friday.
⭐️Improve your communication with our English For Tech course.
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🚨 FINAL HOURS!
Last chance to get 30% off all English For IT™ courses & e-books ⏳
Use code: SAVE30
👉 english4it.online
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Word of the day ⭐
🎭 Bogus - fake, false, or not what it claims to be.
📌Note: This word is informal. You'd say this with colleagues or friends, not in a formal report or client meeting.
Examples
They sent us a bogus expense report.
The project status looked green on the dashboard, but the actual progress was completely bogus.
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FLASH SALE at English For IT™
May 15-17 only - enjoy 30% off all English For IT™ courses & e-books
👉 This is for the developer who keeps switching to Ukrainian in meetings.
👉 For the QA engineer preparing for their first English interview.
👉 For the designer who wants to pitch ideas with confidence.
👉 For anyone in tech who knows their skills deserve a bigger stage.
Use code SAVE30 at checkout
Browse all courses/e-books → english4it.online
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Communication tip 💡
Say "at the time" when describing something from your past experience.
At the time = at that moment in the past
Examples:
At the time, we didn’t have enough data to make a better decision.
My manager at the time supported this decision. (= my former manager)
⭐️Improve your communication with our English For Tech course.
7 172
Are you an English teacher - or know someone in teaching? 👀
Claude for ESOL Teachers: Smarter Lessons, Less Prep
Live Workshop for Educators
✔️ Official certification included
You'll learn:
1️⃣ What makes Claude different from ChatGPT and every other tool you've tried
2️⃣ The 5-Part Prompt Framework
3️⃣ Real-life docs into leveled lessons, differentiation, error correction, speaking activities, interactive webpages
4️⃣ How to chain Claude across lesson planning, differentiation, and feedback into a weekly teaching system
You'll create an interactive lesson webpage inside Claude in under 5 minutes - no coding needed
Learn more and register for $29 ⬇️
https://www.english4it.online/hack-esol-teaching
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