TOMO_o's avatar
TOMO_o

Feb. 9, 2025

0
What Has Been a Surprising Finding for You Lately?

I've learned that conversation goes well in English without difficult words. Recently I watch a lot of movies and find that characters use simple words. I might to change a way of study.

Corrections (5)
Correction Settings
Choose how corrections are organized

Only show inserted text
Word-level diffs are planned for a future update.

TOMO_o's avatar
TOMO_o

Feb. 12, 2025

0

TOMO_o's avatar
TOMO_o

Feb. 10, 2025

0

What Has Been a Surprising Finding for You Lately?

TOMO_o's avatar
TOMO_o

Feb. 10, 2025

0

What Has Been a Surprising Finding for You Lately?

I've learned that conversation goes well in English without difficult words.

TOMO_o's avatar
TOMO_o

Feb. 10, 2025

0

What Has Been a Surprising Finding for You Lately?

I've learned that conversation goes well in English without difficult words.

TOMO_o's avatar
TOMO_o

Feb. 10, 2025

0

I might to change a way of study.


I might to change athe way ofI study. I might change the way I study.

I might to change amy way of study.ing. I might change my way of studying.

You could also say "I might change the way I study".

I might to change amy way of study. I might change my way of study.

"might" is an auxiliary verb, this means it comes before a verb in a sentence. The verb here would be "change", so you can remove "to". I assume you're talking about your personal way of study, so it would be better to say "my".

I might to change a way of studmy study strategy. I might change my study strategy.

"to change a way of study" = infinitive in this context, "a way of study" is your "study strategy".

Because of this, I might to change athe way ofI study English. Because of this, I might change the way I study English.

Added 'because of this' just to specify that you are thinking of changing the way you study because of what is stated on the last sentence.

What Has Been a Surprising Finding for You Lately?


This sentence has been marked as perfect!

This sentence has been marked as perfect!

This sentence has been marked as perfect!

I've learned that conversation goes well in English without difficult words.


This sentence has been marked as perfect!

This sentence has been marked as perfect!

I've learned that conversation goes well in English without difficult words. I've learned that conversation goes well in English without difficult words.

Or: "conversation can go well"

I've learned that conversation goes well in English without difficult wordsdifficult words aren't required for good conversations in English. I've learned that difficult words aren't required for good conversations in English.

I've learned that english conversations goes well in English withoutwithout the use difficult words. I've learned that english conversations go well without the use difficult words.

Recently I watch a lot of movies and find that characters use simple words.


Recently I watched a lot of movies and fiound that characters use simple words. Recently I watched a lot of movies and found that characters use simple words.

or "Recently I've been watching a lot of movies and find that characters use simple words."

Recently I watched a lot of movies and fiound that characters use simple words. Recently I watched a lot of movies and found that characters use simple words.

Since you said "recently", you need to use the past tense for all your verbs.

Recently I watched a lot of movies and fiound that characters use simple words. Recently I watched a lot of movies and found that characters use simple words.

"watched" and "found" are in past tense. You could also say: "recently I have been watching a lot of movies", this would mean you watched them in a period of time, which is recently.

Recently I've been watching a lot of movies and fiound that characters use simple words. Recently I've been watching a lot of movies and found that characters use simple words.

In the previous sentence, "I have learned" was used. So in this sentence, "I have been watching" -> "I've been watching" is appropriate to match tense. "find" -> "found": tense match

Recently, I have been watching a lot of movies and findnotice that the characters use a lot of simple words. Recently, I have been watching a lot of movies and notice that the characters use a lot of simple words.

have been watching (present perfect continuous) - used for talking about repeated activities that is still continuing or a finished activity in the recent past.

You need LangCorrect Premium to access this feature.

Go Premium