English Flow: The Podcast

Learn English with podcast! Daily English conversation, slow English podcast, simple English for beginners A1-A2-B1. Improve English speaking, English listening practice, speak English fluently through shadowing English speaking practice & chunks in English.

English Flow teaches English speaking practice through chunking English phrases. Daily English practice helps you speak English confidently using shadowing technique English, English easy practice, and English conversation practice.

Perfect for English for beginners who understand but can't speak. Learn English speaking.
✓ English phrases & chunks in English
✓ Shadowing practice for English fluency
✓ Daily conversation & speaking skills
✓ English listening comprehension
✓ Real conversation practice

Chunking in English works - native speakers use phrases. Improve fluency, speak fluent naturally.
American English | Chunks + Shadowing method
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English Flow: The Podcast

A little update 🙌
I'm now continuing the content on my new channel with the same name.
I've made a fresh start for better content.

I'd love to see your support there too ❤️
Link 🫴🏻 youtube.com/@English0Flow

2 months ago | [YT] | 0

English Flow: The Podcast

IT'S LIVE 🔥
The response was INSANE. Thanks for kind words 🤗

English Flow — 2000 Essential English Chunks
🎁 LAUNCH SPECIAL (48 hours only):
First 100 buyers get:
✅ A1 to C2 (every level)
✅ Live searchable database
✅ PDF for offline practice
✅ Categorized by situation
✅ 50% discount

After 48 hours? Regular price.

Comment "BOUGHT" when you get it 👇
Let's see who's really serious about fluency.

Link: www.etsy.com/listing/4442891468/2000-essential-eng…

4 months ago | [YT] | 4

English Flow: The Podcast

I've been working on something for 6 months.
2000 English chunks. Every single one you need. A1 to C2.

Tomorrow, I'm revealing what this actually is. 🎉
Comment "READY" if you want to see it 👇

(Hint: It's NOT just a list...)

4 months ago (edited) | [YT] | 6

English Flow: The Podcast

6 Secrets to Speaking English Naturally and Automatically

1️⃣ Stop Studying Grammar: Grammar doesn't build speech, it hinders it.
The formula + translation mentality kills the speaking reflex.
Speaking should be formula-free and automatic.
Studying grammar directly sabotages speaking skills.

2️⃣ Stop Memorizing Vocabulary Lists: Words memorized individually are unusable.
Words should be learned in sentence structures, in a natural context. (i.e., the chunk method)
Words learned in sentences: are more permanent, teach how to use them, and increase fluency.
Word + story + emotion = real learning

3️⃣ Only Receive “Comprehensible Input”: You should understand at least 70% of the content you listen to/read.
Listening without understanding doesn't lead to learning. The mind rejects input it cannot make sense of.
Start with simple content appropriate to your level (children's materials if necessary).

4️⃣ Learn with Your Ears, Not Your Eyes: If there's no input through the ears, there's no output through the mouth. Priority: listening. Eyes can only be a supporting element.

5️⃣ Automate What You Hear (Repeat): Less content + more repetition = deep learning.

6️⃣ Study While Moving: Accelerates learning, reduces stress, and increases motivation. Listening while walking in the park, on the road, or inside the house is ideal. This is exactly how babies learn language.

🔑 Listen to understandable content with your ears, repeating it many times, for a long time, mirroring it; speech will come naturally. In other words, you need to live English, not just learn it. ❤️

5 months ago | [YT] | 6

English Flow: The Podcast

So... Americans don't actually say "How are you?" in daily life.

They say stuff like "What's going on?", "What have you been up to?", "Long time no see"

And when they agree? It's "I know, right?" or "Tell me about it" – not "I agree" 😅

Just dropped a video with 100 of these. The real phrases I hear every single day. Honestly wish someone showed me these when I first started learning. So, here's.👇

6 months ago | [YT] | 0

English Flow: The Podcast

Final 200 sentences = 1000 COMPLETE! 🤌🏻
quick question: what should the next topic be?

7 months ago | [YT] | 0

English Flow: The Podcast

This might be the most important video I've made.

Why?

Because the difference between A2 and B1 isn't vocabulary.

It's questions.

B1 speakers ask 30+ per conversation. You? Probably 5.

Just dropped: 100 question chunks Americans use EVERY. SINGLE. DAY.

Try 10 for 7 days. Your English will never be the same.

Which question are you starting with? 👇

7 months ago | [YT] | 0

English Flow: The Podcast

Quick poll: What's stopping YOU from speaking English?

A) I'm afraid of making mistakes 😰
B) I don't know enough words 📚
C) I understand but can't speak 🤐
D) I have no one to practice with 👥

Vote below!
I'm making a video about the #1 answer.

Your vote = your topic 🎯

7 months ago | [YT] | 3

English Flow: The Podcast

The TH sound doesn't exist in most languages. Your mouth literally doesn't know what to do with it. But here's what works: 5 minutes a day for 7 days. No theory. Just practice.

Min 1- Feel the Difference: Put two fingers on your throat. Say "Think" (no vibration). Say "This" (feel the buzz). Do this 10 times.
Min 2 - Lock the Position: Look in a mirror. Place your tongue tip gently between your teeth. Breathe out: "th... th... th..." 20 times.
Min 3 - The Air Push: Hold your hand in front of your mouth. Say these 5 times each: Think, Thank, Three, Thirty, Birthday. You should feel air on your palm.
Min 4 - The Buzz: Fingers back on your throat. Say these 5 times each: This, That, They, Mother, Brother. Feel the vibration.
Min 5 - Real Sentences: Say slow, then normal, then fast: "I think three things." Then: "This is their mother."

The Position (see image below) Tongue tip between teeth. Gentle. Not biting. Same position for both sounds.
Comment "TH" if you're starting the 7-day challenge today. Come back on Day 7 and drop "DONE" 👇

8 months ago | [YT] | 2

English Flow: The Podcast

I just watched someone say "I need to take a SHEET" instead of "I need to take a SEAT" in a meeting.
The room went silent.
Here's the thing: one vowel sound can change EVERYTHING.
So I want to know - which English sound makes YOU nervous when speaking?

🧐 Comment your hardest word below. I'll include it in the practice sessions.

8 months ago | [YT] | 3