kochi's avatar
kochi

yesterday

1
Day One

I started studying English.
I want to communicate with many people, and I want to understand English movies.
My English skills are still very poor, but I want to change my life because life is about taking on challenges.
So, I practice English sentences every day.

Corrections

Day One

I have started studying English.

It's grammatically correct, but there's a subtle nuance.
If you focus on the fact that you "started", leave it as is. (past simple)
If you want to emphasize that you're going to continue, "I have started ..." (present perfect)
Since this is Day One and you intend to continue, it's better to say "I have started ..." / "I've started ..."

I want to communicate with many people, and I want to understand English movies.

My English skills are still very poorlevel is still elementary, but I want to change my life because life is about taking on challenges.

"My English skills" sounds vague and awkward to me.
If you name specific abilities, like "My English writing skills are poor", "My English speaking skills are weak", then using "skills" sounds appropriate.

So, I practice English sentences every day.

It's grammatically correct, but since your title is "Day One", it sounds unnatural.
You can say "I'm starting to practice ..." or "I'm going to practice ..." or "I've decided to practice ...".

Feedback

Great start!

Day One

I've started studying English.

I want to communicate with many people, and I want to understand English movies.

My English skills are still very poor, but I want to change my life because life is about taking on challenges.

So, I practice English sentences every day.

Feedback

Great job! I wish you the best on your English studies!

UmbrellaTerms's avatar
UmbrellaTerms

yesterday

1

Oops, I messed up on my previous sentence: I wish you the best on your English learning journey!

Day One


This sentence has been marked as perfect!

This sentence has been marked as perfect!

I started studying English.


I've started studying English.

I have started studying English.

It's grammatically correct, but there's a subtle nuance. If you focus on the fact that you "started", leave it as is. (past simple) If you want to emphasize that you're going to continue, "I have started ..." (present perfect) Since this is Day One and you intend to continue, it's better to say "I have started ..." / "I've started ..."

I want to communicate with many people, and I want to understand English movies.


This sentence has been marked as perfect!

This sentence has been marked as perfect!

My English skills are still very poor, but I want to change my life because life is about taking on challenges.


This sentence has been marked as perfect!

My English skills are still very poorlevel is still elementary, but I want to change my life because life is about taking on challenges.

"My English skills" sounds vague and awkward to me. If you name specific abilities, like "My English writing skills are poor", "My English speaking skills are weak", then using "skills" sounds appropriate.

So, I practice English sentences every day.


This sentence has been marked as perfect!

So, I practice English sentences every day.

It's grammatically correct, but since your title is "Day One", it sounds unnatural. You can say "I'm starting to practice ..." or "I'm going to practice ..." or "I've decided to practice ...".

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