The best English teacher ever!! Her speaking and pronuncing is just amazing and really understandable. Thanks for sharing this with us Arisha, you're an incredible teacher!
The accent this woman “has” is amazing. I understood “all” of what she said. Trying to help out. But she is amazing. I speak English as a primary language and still refer to her for this kind of thing.
Mam, your teaching method is excellent & amazing. English learners will be immensely benefited if they get any chance to attend your class. When you speak, every word is understood easily even by the children also. I am 75 & an Indian. Please stay well & remain Blessed.
So am I. I'm studying B1 english level and I love studying with this RU-vid Videos Channel!! I love Colombia but I would like to live in Canada someday.
Hello miss and learn English, I am from Perú and this is the first time what I see this canal, I understand a little but I don't know so much, very good your explanation.
May i subscribe your RU-vid channel because I'm glad that you taught me a lot of words that i need to keep in my mind I'm promising you that i always a number 1 supporter of yours
I understood that main difference between these words is consisting of letters, one 3, another 5 letters:)). But Alisha's pronunciation is the best👍. And I never get bored from her lessons.
It's good that she does differentiate between American English and the original British English (the foundation for other English dialects/ versions eg in Australia, India etc, although Canada has been migrating towards US conventions...e.g. simplified phonetic spellings, the loss of adverbs being distinct from adjectives etc) Hollywood etc influence!) In UK, Ireland etc, formal English tends to reserve "may" for permission requests, and "might" for possibilities, both being modal verbs...the former is akin to "dürfen" in German, the latter "können") Can" is, as in USA, a less formally correct development. :-) ,,,althought it personally grates that "invite" is now being used as a noun (the noun being "invitation", "invite" beind a verb!!!) :-) :-)
Thanks a lot for your great lesson. Your manner of speech is so much understandable for me. II want to tell you that you're incredible pretty and nice girl. Good luck to you!
as I understood if you have any job, better use May but if you talking with your friends better use 'might'. Am I right? and in American English use more May then Might?
In my private opinion, you've made a convincing explanation in reference to the very differences between May and Might, including making a comparison between British and American English ; and so, I'm getting to have a change for the better with regard to my telling May and Might apart ! Thanks, Madam ! :-):-):-):-):-)
Very effective! You show the differences between the two words very easily. I hope It may help us more and more at the time of using when we talk to others.