#EnglishLearning #LinkingPhrases #EnglishGrammar #AdvancedEnglish #BusinessEnglish #EnglishForWork #SpeakEnglishWithDavid #LearnEnglish #EnglishTips #EnglishTeacher #ESL #FluentEnglish #ProfessionalEnglish #GrammarLesson #EnglishSpeaking #EnglishClass #ImproveEnglish #WhomVsWhich #BothAnd #EitherOr #SomeOfWhom #SomeOfWhichLinking
Phrases in English: How to Connect Ideas Smoothly and Sound Fluent | Speak English With David
In today’s lesson, we explore some of the most powerful linking phrases in English — the connectors that make your sentences sound fluent, natural, and professional. Whether you’re writing an email, speaking in a meeting, preparing for a presentation, or improving your overall fluency, linking phrases help your ideas flow clearly and beautifully.
This video breaks down whom, which, both…and, either…or, and some of whom / some of which, with clear examples, visuals, practice slides, and full answers. Perfect for Business English learners, students, and professionals who want advanced but easy-to-understand grammar that improves fluency immediately.
In this video, David opens the lesson by explaining what linking phrases are and why fluent speakers use them to sound smooth, organized, and professional. He begins with a simple idea: linking phrases act like bridges — they connect people, objects, and ideas so your English flows naturally.
The lesson starts with a clear definition of linking phrases and how they reduce repetition, improve clarity, and make your sentences more elegant. David then moves into the first set of connectors: whom (for people) and which (for objects). He shows real examples such as “some of whom” and “one of which,” explaining how these structures instantly make your English sound more advanced without being complicated.
Next, the video teaches both…and, either…or, and the bonus connector neither…nor. Each one is explained with modern, real-life sentences so learners can immediately apply them in conversations, job interviews, emails, and presentations.
After that, David introduces some of whom / some of which, showing how these phrases help describe part of a group and avoid repeating the same sentence structure again and again.
The video continues with a practice slide where students complete sentences using linking phrases, followed by a full answer key. This helps learners check themselves and understand how native speakers connect ideas.
David closes with a recap of the rules and a motivational outro inviting viewers to visit davidenglish.info for more practice, quizzes, and advanced English training.
This lesson is designed to make students more confident, fluent, and professional by mastering the small connectors that elevate English from basic to advanced.
Информация по комментариям в разработке