Have you ever tried studying a foreign language out of a textbook without regularly speaking the language with a native speaker. Fluency Fix is here to feel your conversation practice gap by providing video conversation practice sessions. Our interactive videos allow you to have a back and forth conversation with an animated native speaker. No more juggling time zones to practice. It's on demand and always available. Each course provides
three hundred and sixty five conversations. Because fluency happens a lot faster when you have daily practice. Every conversation practice session has four parts. Preview it. Watch a short video with two people doing the conversation. Prepare to have a great conversation by learning how to pronounce all the words correctly. Skip it.
If your pronunciation is already great, practice it. This is where you have an interactive conversation and practice the conversation three times with the help of text on the screen. Produce it. This is where you show your mastery of the conversation by doing the conversation without the help of any text. Are practicing your first conversation. Now visit fluencythis dot com. Hello and welcome to Beginner's English conversation eleven. Today we will talk about the days of the week. Let's
review the days of the week in order. Remember we use a big letter for the days of the week. The first day of the week is Sunday. Sunday is first. The second day of the week is Monday. Monday is second. The third day of the week is Tuesday. Tuesday is third. The day of the week is Wednesday. Wednesday is fourth. The fifth day of the week is Thursday. Thursday is fifth. The sixth day of the week is Friday. Friday is sixth. The seventh day of the week
is Saturday. Saturday is the seventh. Last. We can also use last to describe Saturday. Saturday is the last day of the week. Let's review the days of the week. Repeat after me Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday. Great job. We see is and was many times in this conversation. Is is for the present, is for the past. Yesterday is in the past. Yesterday already happened. We use was to talk about yesterday. Let's look at the last two lines in the
conversation. What day was yesterday? Yesterday was Sunday, today tomorrow and the day after tomorrow are all in the present or future, so we use is. Let's look at the words used to describe the days of the week. First, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh or last. These are called ordinal numbers. You can spell them out or you can write them with numbers. For example, first you can write the number one s T. Second, you can write the number two in D. Third
you can write the number three, are the and so on. Let's pretend today is Thursday. Practice answering the questions what day is it? Today? Today is Thursday? M Yesterday is the day before? What day was yesterday? Remember today is Thursday? What day was yesterday? Yesterday was Wednesday? What day is tomorrow? Tomorrow is Friday? What day is the day after tomorrow? The day after tomorrow is Saturday. Great job, Go ahead and
practice this conversation with your practice partner. Goodbye. It's invisible but very powerful. It is intangible but can change lives, build bridges, open up new worlds, bring about new opportunities. It creates friendships, makes new love stories possible, and builds careers. It's fluency and it is accelerated when you have the chance to practice the language every day. Start practicing conversations now at fluencyfix dot com.
