English [patched] — Tell Me More

Anchoring the story in time helps you hear verb tenses.

English is a metaphorical language. We speak in pictures. When you ask for "more" English, you are asking for the cultural code.

For the next 48 hours, try this: every time someone tells you something—even something mundane—resist the urge to top it, fix it, or dismiss it. Instead, take a breath and say: tell me more english

Here’s an interesting, thought-provoking piece on the phrase

Consider the difference between:

Mastering the schwa allows you to speak with the correct rhythm and stress. It is the secret ingredient to sounding like a native speaker.

This replicates the software's interactive flow. It forces the AI to elaborate, giving you repeated exposure to past tense narration, descriptive adjectives, and connectors (however, therefore, meanwhile). Anchoring the story in time helps you hear verb tenses

Since the original Tell Me More software is legacy, modern learners must recreate the experience using current technology. You can simulate the "Tell me more" dynamic using AI chatbots like ChatGPT or Google Bard.

But hidden in plain sight is a tiny, three-word superpower: When you ask for "more" English, you are

Phrasal verbs are the shorthand of English. They combine a verb with a preposition (or particle) to create a new meaning entirely.

To practice this, try the