• 26. Somewhere y Anywhere
    Apr 28 2026
    This is episode 26 of the podcast Quick Tips to Improve Your English by @comeinschool, published on April 28, 2026. You can leave text and audio comments at this link. Listen to this. Somewhere. Why anywhere confunden mucho. Pero hoy lo dejamos clarísimo. Somewhere es en algún sitio. Se usa en frases afirmativas. For example, I want to go somewhere cool this weekend. Anywhere es a ningún sitio o a cualquier sitio. Va mejor en negativas y preguntas. So I don't want to go anywhere crowded. Do you want to eat anywhere near the cinema? Quick note. Nowhere significa en ningún sitio. Ya es negativo. So the verb stays positive. I'm going nowhere tonight I'm looking for somewhere quiet to watch Netflix Estoy buscando algún sitio tranquilo para ver Netflix See you tomorrow, guys!
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    1 min
  • 25. Uso de whose para posesión
    Apr 27 2026
    This is episode 25 of the podcast Quick Tips to Improve Your English by @comeinschool, published on April 27, 2026. You can leave text and audio comments at this link. You're gonna love this one. Today's word is whose. It's a relative word for possession. Osei, signifca, kuio kuya, kuiozo kuyas. Here's the thing, we use whose to connect two ideas and show that something belongs to someone. Listen, you don't say the daughter of that man. You can sound smoother. You say that man whose daughter is. Quick note, whose works for people and sometimes things too. That's super useful in real English. Example, that's the streamer whose videos Always go viral on TikTok Ace es el streamer Cuyos videos siempre se hacen virales En TikTok See you tomorrow for another quick tip
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    1 min
  • 24. Uso de "as" para comparaciones
    Apr 24 2026
    This is episode 24 of the podcast Quick Tips to Improve Your English by @comeinschool, published on April 24, 2026. You can leave text and audio comments at this link. You're gonna love this one. Today's quick tip is about as. We use it for equal comparisons. O se, para decir que dos cosas son igual de algo. So say she is as funny as her favorite TikToker, not she is more funny as... That sounds wrong. Here's the thing. As, as goes with adjectives. As tall as, as fast as, as popular as. Listen, this is important. If both things are equal, use as. Nevermore. As. Example. This new Netflix series is as addictive as a mobile game. Esta nueva serie de Netflix es tan adictiva como un videojuego de móvil. See you tomorrow, guys. Keep going.
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    1 min
  • Adverbs que terminan en ly
    Apr 23 2026
    This is episode 23 of the podcast Quick Tips to Improve Your English by @comeinschool, published on April 23, 2026. You can leave text and audio comments at this link. Listen to this. Adverbs often end in lie. Super easy rule. If the adjective is quick, the adverb is quickly. So quick means rápido and quickly means rapidamente. Now pay attention. Some words break the pattern. Fast stays fast. Hard stays hard. Here's the thing. Hardly is different. It means casi no, not duramente. Example, she learns songs quickly, but she sings live fast and works hard. Aprende canciones rapidamente, pero canta en directo rápido y trabaja duro. This is important Don't say fastly or hardly for Duro See you tomorrow Keep going
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    1 min
  • 22. Neither nor con verbos
    Apr 23 2026
    This is episode 22 of the podcast Quick Tips to Improve Your English by @comeinschool, published on April 23, 2026. You can leave text and audio comments at this link. You're gonna love this one. Today's quick tip is neither nor. We use it for ni uno ni otro or ni esto ni aquello. Here's the thing, the verb stays positive. Listen, you say neither my dad nor my mom can drive, not can't drive, this is important. Neither nor connects two negative ideas, but the verb does not go negative again. So one negative idea is enough. Let me show you. Neither Netflix nor TikTok is working today. Ni Netflix ni TikTok están funcionando hoy. Super useful, right? Try making your own sentence today. See you tomorrow, guys!
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    1 min
  • 21. Using "either or
    Apr 21 2026
    This is episode 21 of the podcast Quick Tips to Improve Your English by @comeinschool, published on April 21, 2026. You can leave text and audio comments at this link. Listen to this. I'm Holly, your virtual teacher from Cummins School, and I'm here to help you with quick daily English tips. Today's one is super useful. Either or we use it when there are two options. O una cosa o la otra. Not both. So it's perfect for choices. You can say, you can either stay home or come with us. Puedes o quedarte en casa o venir con nosotros. Quick note or keep the structure similar. That makes your English sound cleaner. Like this, we can either watch Netflix or play Fortnite tonight. Podemos ver Netflix o jugar Fortnite esta noche. That's it for today. See you tomorrow. Keep practicing.
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    1 min
  • 20. Uso de "both
    Apr 20 2026
    This is episode 20 of the podcast Quick Tips to Improve Your English by @comeinschool, published on April 20, 2026. You can leave text and audio comments at this link. You're gonna love this one. Today's quick tip is both, and we use it to join two things and say the two are true. O sea, los dos, a la vez. So, instead of one or the other, you can conclude both. Example, both my brother and my sister love Minecraft. Mi hermano y mi hermana am in Minecraft. Super useful, right? Here's the thing, the verb usually agrees with the second part only in very specific cases, but normally keep it simple. Listen to this. Both Netflix and TikTok are full of trends. Netflix by TikTok están llenos de tendencias. Pay attention and try one today. See you tomorrow, guys.
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    1 min
  • 19. Uso de "for a moment
    Apr 17 2026
    This is episode 19 of the podcast Quick Tips to Improve Your English by @comeinschool, published on April 17, 2026. You can leave text and audio comments at this link. Hey, welcome back. I'm Holly, your virtual teacher from Cummins School, and I'm here to help you with quick daily tips. Short, useful, and super easy to remember. So let's go with today's one. For a moment means durante un instante, just for a very short time. Listen, this is important. It's perfect when something happens briefly, maybe a feeling, a thought, or a reaction. So if you say, I felt nervous for a moment, it means te sentiste nervioso un instante, but not for long. Quick note. It sounds very natural in conversations Like this I thought my favorite singer deleted Instagram for a moment Pensé que mi cantante favorito había borrado Instagram durante un instant See you tomorrow Keep practicing
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    1 min