I like your lesson and your clear prononciation believe me I sent those videos to Tunisia to my niece she teaches financial in English in private university thanks alots
Excellent format for motivating acquisition of new vocabulary "live"! Plus welcome periodic pauses for such dense listening!! Very high interest content for our adult learners. Vocabulary, itself, was a nice range of more to less common choices, with many easily put into everyday conversation. Very engaging to offer students an opportunity to submit their own sentences! On behalf of my advanced ELLs, thank you. Do you have more of these stories?
Derek, the video is cool (as always)! Thanks for preparing this info for us :) I have a question: isn't it a mistake to say "suggest that he leadS ..."?
Hi Darya and thanks for the nice feedback 😊 Regarding your question, I think you're referring to the prediction exercise after Part 1: "Will Alex suggest that someone else leads the project?" The s in leads is grammatically correct because it follows the third-person singular form for the present tense. In this sentence, "someone" is the subject, so "leads" is the correct form of the verb to agree with the singular subject. Hope this answers your question 👍
@@derekcallan-englishforpros thanks for explaining. However, as far as I know, when using the verb "suggest" in this way, followed by a subordinate clause expressing a suggestion or recommendation, the verb in the subordinate clause should be in the base form (infinitive) without "s". Doesn't it work like that?
Thank you for this short story, it gives me more vocabulary words to learn! well done!
You're very welcome!
this format is awesome! thanks
Glad you enjoy it!
Best teacher I have ever found on youtube. Love from INDIA
Wow! Thanks very much 😃👍
You have created something wonderful 👍🤩❤
And one more thanks for the PDF 😊
You’re very welcome 😊
I like your lesson and your clear prononciation believe me I sent those videos to Tunisia to my niece she teaches financial in English in private university thanks alots
That's great! Thanks for sharing 👍
As a marketer, I was mind blown that the story was too good to be true.😂
😄 this comment made me smile! Anything can happen in a story 😉
Thanks, Derek. I hope to see more of this format!
More to come!
Great Lesson! Thanks Derek😇
my English teacher across the Pacific❤
😊👍
❤ you are good teacher well done
Thank you! 😃
Thank you laaa
No problem 😊
All correct 😊
Daunting challenge
Brilliant!
We need a Podcast !! Please
WOW I love this type of lessons so much highly beneficial
Great! Glad you like it 👍
Thanks for pdf . You're so detailed in explaining the subject. I'll keep following further on.
Great!
Excellent format for motivating acquisition of new vocabulary "live"! Plus welcome periodic pauses for such dense listening!! Very high interest content for our adult learners. Vocabulary, itself, was a nice range of more to less common choices, with many easily put into everyday conversation. Very engaging to offer students an opportunity to submit their own sentences! On behalf of my advanced ELLs, thank you. Do you have more of these stories?
Great format !
I would appreciate it if you could include an MP3 file for the story, allowing me to listen repeatedly and imprint the new words on my brain
that was great
Glad you liked it!
Thanks
No problem!
Derek, the video is cool (as always)! Thanks for preparing this info for us :) I have a question: isn't it a mistake to say "suggest that he leadS ..."?
Hi Darya and thanks for the nice feedback 😊
Regarding your question, I think you're referring to the prediction exercise after Part 1:
"Will Alex suggest that someone else leads the project?"
The s in leads is grammatically correct because it follows the third-person singular form for the present tense. In this sentence, "someone" is the subject, so "leads" is the correct form of the verb to agree with the singular subject.
Hope this answers your question 👍
@@derekcallan-englishforpros thanks for explaining. However, as far as I know, when using the verb "suggest" in this way, followed by a subordinate clause expressing a suggestion or recommendation, the verb in the subordinate clause should be in the base form (infinitive) without "s". Doesn't it work like that?
Perhaps I answered too quickly 😲 I just double-checked this and of course you are right! Thanks for pointing that out and keeping me on my toes 😅 😊👍
@@derekcallan-englishforpros thanks! and again, thanks a lot for your videos! I find them very helpful.
Get the PDF and try the extended version of the quiz: bit.ly/BusinessEnglishStartUpStory
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😊
B
👌👌
Glad you like it!
Nina
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍😍
Hi Sally! Glad you like this one 👍