 Hello, hello everyone. I am your teacher Robin. Welcome to Learn English Live. I am back to this channel. So I hope everyone can hear me and see me. Please let me know in the comments. It's been a long time since I've done a live stream. I guess I'm a little nervous. I'm scared. Let's see who's in the chat. Oh, I gotta fix something. Already there's technical problems. Already. YouTube is still not perfect. If you have an English question, or I guess any question, now is the time to ask me the questions. If you got a question and it's, you know, you can't sleep. It's just an itch you need to scratch. Now is the time to ask the question. I hope it's about English, but if it's not, that's okay. Only today. All right, I'm fixing the, okay, technical problem fixed. And thank you. Sleepwalkers says we can hear you and see you. That's good to know. Let's check the chat. Leila says it's been long ago. There was no, Leila, I can see your English is getting a little weaker. What's this? It's been long ago. There was no live stream. I am so excited. That's, that's it. That's okay. But the first one, little problem. Here, the weather is getting so warm. What about there? It's just normal spring weather, I guess here. Okay. Raid misses me. Henrik's not speaking English. May is here. Sleepwalker. I guess among these people I haven't seen sleepwalker. The longest. Sadly, May. All right. Anyway, you got the English question. Start popping in those English questions. I'm a little rusty with my teaching, but I'm sure you guys have some questions. And sleepwalker, what are your plans for this channel? Well, sleepwalker, as you know, I did live streams for daily English homework. I did live streams for the IELTS insider. The main reason I did live streams for those two channels was to get them monetized quicker. And both of those channels are now monetized. So I'm making five cents a month on those channels. So I won't be doing much, maybe no more live streams on those other channels. I will probably just be doing live streams on this channel. We'll see how it goes. Sleepwalker, do you have any recommendations? Let me know because I value your opinion. Harry 300 is here. Hello. I'm trying out this new drink today called Marlin. They did not sponsor this. So Marlin zero. I can't point here. And zero, zero, you mean zero sugar, right? And it's a grapefruit. And I bought this today. It was about $2. But it was in Korea, we call one plus one, you get two for the price of one. That's how you would say it in English. Two for the price of one, but Korea one plus one says zero sugar. It says, well, zero calories, but it's so sweet. Like, I don't know why it's so sweet. It's delicious. Hey, I like sweet things. But it's surprising because usually zero, you know, like if you have a zero or zero calorie cola tastes a little different, but this tastes like sugar, sugar. But they did not sponsor me. So I cannot recommend it. Okay, Robin, I want to say it has been a long time. Good. No, any live stream. No, no, we got to fix this up. I guess fixing Layla's English is what we need to do. So you say once you let's go full screen power of the internet puts me full screen. You said, I want to say small letter, it has been a long time. And then you say no, any live stream that is not English. You got to say since we've we've seen this is the perfect place to use since we've seen any live stream. That I want to say it has been a long time. So you have that article there a long time since we've seen any live stream. There you go, Layla in a Maria. Hello, Latif. Yeah. Hello. The A to Z English podcast I found diet Dr. Pepper in Korea the other day. Very exciting. Yeah, a friend of mine showed me that I drank it. But I don't see it very much anywhere. How about sweet girls, Robin? Yeah, you know, especially sweet girls. It is true. I like sweet girls more than sweet Harry 300. It's strange to see the English podcast title here. I'll be talking to you soon. Do you prefer your first trip or your second trip? I took two trips. I prefer I prefer the second trip. Salma, I had a really, really good time. I had a really, really good time on my second trip. It was so good, Salma. I cannot even talk about it. Sleepwalker, don't you want to make Q&A? This is a Q&A live right now. If you got a question, ask. Sleepwalker, I think for the learning English life, I might do two a week. I might do one Q&A and one news. I like doing the news because that keeps me up to date on the news. And it's a topic that a lot of students seem to be interested in. So I'm thinking one Q&A a week and one news study the news live stream. What do you think about that, Sleepwalker? If you have any other advice, let me know. What do you like to learn live? Yeah, we know who you are, Jack. The nicest guy. Jack is so nice. It's disgusting. He is too nice for the internet, for YouTube. And I think everyone here agrees that Jack is definitely a nicer guy than me. He is the nicest. To you, he might be a teacher, but to me, he's just a model of what a man should be or how nice a man should be. And it's, you know, living in Korea is tough. And sometimes Korea beats up people and makes them a little jaded. And jaded means, you know, not so nice. But Jack is a really nice guy. Okay. Surprisingly, Korea did not corrupt him yet. Why didn't you like, I didn't say, I didn't say I didn't like the first trip. Who said I didn't like the first trip? I didn't say that. I like learning new words as we did before here. 10 words, fill the gaps in sentences, and I like different games. Well, I'm going to check. I'm going to check, you know, YouTube people vote what they like, don't like. I'm going to do a quick check here to see. All right. So if I go to here, if we go here, these are my past videos. It's a little bit small. Let's see if we can get that bigger. The past live streams, it's too big. Okay, this is the best size they can do. And we got to look at the views, you know, YouTube's about views. So Saudi Arabia, 192, not so popular. Robin's travel planning 196, not too popular. Interview with May, that was a little more popular. World News headline, that did okay. These were, if we go down, James interview was good, but this World headline news, it's got a lot of views. So yeah, that's what I want to do. And then if we go down, yeah. Oh, here, 10 phrasal verbs, 362, that's not bad. But here, well, this one, 10 essential vocabulary, that got 900 views. Maybe. Yeah, those videos are okay. I might do them depends on my mood. I might test it out. We'll see how it goes. We'll see how it goes. Okay, anyway, thanks for bringing that up. All right, still practicing how to move around here. All right, the easy, the all this praise is going to give me a big ego. I just corrupted Jack after, after this praise, Jack's going to turn into an asshole. Anna, we cat, hello. Definitely Jack is one of the nicest people who I've known. Yeah. I feel a little sad that you liked the second trip more than the first one. It doesn't mean I didn't like the first one. You're disappointed. Well, Leila, you know, it was nice to meet you, but I, what's the total time I met you? So I was gone on trips for, you know, over two months. So over, I must have been gone out of the country at least 60 days. And Leila, I saw you for what, a total of maybe six hours total. So that's a very short time in the 60 days I was away. So yeah, you were a very special event. But in 60 days, that was I saw you for a total of maybe six hours, right? Sleepwalker, oh, you can make a vote about it on the channel. You know, sleepwalker, votes don't work very well because, how can I say this? The sleepwalker and the other people, you are loyal followers, you know me, you like me. But most of the people watching the videos are not you guys, all right? So, you know, of my loyal followers, maybe I have 20, 20 loyal followers. Well, I need a video to hit 1,000 people. So I need, yeah, I'm very happy sleepwalker that you are very loyal. But the target audience is not just you. I have to try and attract more people. I got to get more sleepwalkers here. I got to get more Leila's here. There's a lot of good people out there that I need them to come. Yes, we are lucky to have the A to Z English podcast with Jack. He's amazing. He takes, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, Jack, Jack, Jack, yeah. That's enough. This is not the Jack special. We'll get Jack on here whenever he's ready to come on. Yep. Hello, Ray. The total for about nine hours. Really? I don't think it was nine hours. Nine hours? No. No, no, no, no, no. It was not nine hours because we went driving. We had dinner. We went to the cave. That was, what, three hours in the next day? Two or three hours? Nine hours. We'll see. Any English questions? Have you guys been studying English? Have you been improving English? While Robin is not here, you've been studying from Jack, what other channels, what other live streams have you been going to? You've been cheating on me with who? Which teacher? Don't be jealous, Robin. I am jealous, Salma. Let's make clones, clone accounts. Yeah, I really enjoyed the time meeting you, Leila. I have questions. Well, don't tell me you have questions. You just ask the questions. We were with Jack all the time. Yeah, Jack babysitted the students or he stole my students. I think he stole my students. All right, teachers here. Here we go. Which one is correct? I can't believe how lucky I am to be loved by wonderful friends. I can't believe how lucky to be I am. I think you need the I am there. Can't believe how lucky I am. That's the expression you want to say. I can't believe how lucky I am to be loved by wonderful friends. I can't believe how lucky I am. You want to use the I am. I can't believe how lucky you are. I can't believe how lucky I am. So let me make my own sentence. So I'm going to say you guys can practice making your own sentence using this structure. I can't believe that's how we say it. How lucky I am. And then, yeah, we're usually going to use the infinitive here to have so many loyal followers. All right, there is my example sentence. So you have to start. I can't believe how lucky I am. Or if you're talking about another person, I can't believe how lucky you are. And then, the second part is you're going to have your infinitive here. Do you always use the infinitive? Maybe I can't really think about that, but it's a good structure. And then why you're lucky. So if you guys can try out that sentence, I can't believe how lucky I am to give me a sentence. Jack starts competing with you, Robin, to get most of your. Why do you have a comma there, Layla? Jack starts competing with you comma Robin. Okay, so Jack starts competing with you Robin. I think you'd need a comma Robin comma comma Robin comma identify the name to get most of your fans. Yeah, well, he can take them. Cat, how was day? That's your question, cat. You haven't seen me. You've been studying English. Your question, how was day? It's not even grammatically correct. You should say, how was your day? Cat, do better. Ask a better question, cat. Disappointed in your question, cat. You haven't seen me a few months. You're just wondering about my day. How was your day, cat? Jack starts competing with you, Robin, to get most of your fans. Yeah, Jack can. I have no problem if you guys are following Jack more than me because he deserves all the attention he gets. Harry 300. Oh, this looks long, Harry. You better be a good question. Why is there an $800 charge? Why do you have zeros at zero? Because that's not 800,000. This is 800. This is 800,000 with a comma, but you wrote 800. There is no 800 period. Let's get that bigger. This is $800. This is $800,000, but in English, we do not write numbers with the period unless you wouldn't put three zeros. You'd put two zeros, and you would put cents, some sort of sense there, then 852 cents. But if it's a round number, you wouldn't have. So we'll just go with $800. Why is there an $800 charge on my credit card? Dad, I'm a material girl. Get out of my home. I've been hemma. No, I don't know. I never heard I've been hemma in my life. Where did you get that? That sounds like just terrible, terrible English. I've been hemma. That makes no sense to me. That makes no sense. That is crazy talk. Who are you talking to, hemma? Is that from music video? Is that some sort of slang? I want to play, there's a music video that says being hemma. Okay, I see it in the urban dictionary. Seems to be some sort of slang, and I'm not going to teach it because it's not a popular slang. It seems to be just about some song or something. So, Harry, that's not the type of English I want to teach. All I could say is I don't know that I don't use that native speakers don't use that. That seems to be from a song. So some people may have used that as a slang meaning. I would suggest that you don't use that. How do native speakers express this situation? I fell down the stairs. I think I told you that. We don't say I fell from the stairs. I fell down the stairs. You fall down the stairs. Oh, sorry. I'm tired and sad today. That is why I made that mistake. Well, Kat, you know, I'm interested. Why are you sad, Kat? Explain. Tell me that story. In my opinion, Mr., you have an unprecedented method to teach English. Unprecedented. No one has ever done it before. Thank you. But I'm wondering what is that unprecedented method? Compliment or compliment, which is correct? The spelling? That's a dictionary question. May. You're treating me like a dictionary here. May. You're forcing me to go to the dictionary to see if there's a version. So those are two different words. And you're asking which, you're confusing me, May, because those are two different words used in two different ways. So which word are you trying to use, May? Now, there you go. There's Jack showing off. Jack showing off. He's showing off during my live stream. Come on, Jack. Really? We're going to play this game. He's, he's hip with the slang and he wants, he wants to show, hey, I'm in tune with the young people. Yeah, yeah. You check the urban dictionary two seconds after I did. Robin, can you choose a short textbook and give us an explanation of the vocabulary? I can't use a book. Never be copyright problems. I cannot teach from a book on a live stream. That would be violation of copyright. So I can just throw in the vocabulary, but I can't use a book. All right. A to Z knows, yeah, look at this. Come on, you guys. Look at these A's, Z guys taking over. Hema. How come I'm not seeing Hema? You know, I'm out traveling the world. Where's Hema? You know what? I'm going to go to, hey, I'm going to, I'm going to go to the urban, not the urban dictionary. I'm going to go to Uglish. Here we are on Uglish. We're going to get to the bottom of this. And let's put in Hema. No results found. No one's saying Hema. You, you gotta, you gotta show me where it's used in a spoken way. Where is your evidence? I'm calling you. I'm calling you out on this. Where is your evidence? This is actually an expression. To describe a person who can do multitask, do native speakers use multitasking? Well, what's your sentence? Make a sentence using multitasking or multitasker. Yeah, you can use those, but you can use both those words, but what is the grammatical structure of your sentence? I want to see that you try making a sentence. Yeah, Robin, I found it on TikTok. Ew. You're learning English from TikTok? Ew. Sorry, I can't tell you everything about this, but my teacher scolded me today. Oh, cat. Now we really want to know. Come on. Come on. Tell us what's happening. Busted. Sure. I'm in stories. I will, I will check it. I'll try some stuff. There's so much new slang, Sleepwalker. You know, every day there's new slang. There's a new song and people are saying new things, but slang, slang is often temporary, and it's used by very young people. So as an educator, yeah, I can, if I know the slang, I can teach that, but usually if there's some new slang, I don't want to waste my time learning it, and I don't want to waste my time teaching it, because probably in a year or two, that's gone. That's not even, that's not even popular anymore. Yeah, cat. Let's hear your sad story. Let's keep up the base anyways. Yeah. Well, I like questions. Usually there used to be a lot of questions, but today I'm not so many questions. Remember in the old days, I couldn't keep up with the questions. I was about five, sometimes 10 or 20 minutes behind the questions, but here I am, all caught up on the chat. Just people that are talking, actually, not teaching who are talking. On TikTok, Hima, do you have a link to the video where someone says, I'm going to go to TikTok. I'm going to go to TikTok. TikTok is, TikTok's a drug. Once you get on it, you can never get off. Robin and Jack are the most multitaskers teacher, as far as I know. Oh, you got to try again, Layla, because your multitaskers is a noun. So you can't put most noun. Multitaskers is a noun, Layla. So when you're making a sentence, you probably want to say multitasking there. Do you have any idea about your future video on daily English homework? Yeah, yeah, yeah, Sama, I'll probably make them tomorrow, actually. I think what people ask me to make in the daily English homework, WhatsApp group, if you have a request for a video, I'll probably do that video. So Sama, if you have something I want to teach, you just put that in the daily English homework video and I'll try to teach that. I can't see the link. Wait, let's go to live streams. I don't see the link. I miss a lot English homework. Well, yeah, I can see your Graham. I miss English homework a lot. Hello, Eunice. Ah, Cat. Actually, I did my homework today, but I was wrong. So my teacher scolded me. I cried a lot today. Oh, did your teacher yell? I've changed as a teacher over the years. You know, a long time ago, I used to get angry at students, but these days, I try never to get angry, never to get angry at students at my university when they make mistakes. And these days, actually, there's only one student that makes me angry. Right. Robin and Jack are the most multitasking teachers. As far as you know, this sounds a little bit better, Layla. This is a better structure. You could say Robin and Jack are multitaskers. Multitaskers is a noun and multitasking teachers. There's adjective there, multitasking. And I, let's see what the dictionary says. Multitasking is a noun. It doesn't show multitasking as a, it shows us a noun. Yeah, I can't teach anymore. Multit, multitasking. It's strange. Okay, I get it. So multitasking, yeah, a noun. So you need, if I said you need, you need multitasking skills. So multitasking is a noun, but okay, I got it. So Robin and Jack are the most multitasking teachers. We don't really express multitasking that way. I guess you can. Jack and Robin are the most multitasking teachers. As far as I know, how would we express that? We'll throw that one to the A to Z. We'll throw all the difficult stuff to the A to Z podcast. Have any of your students start crying after remarks? Yes, I make students cry all the time. You know, the new generation is very, very sensitive. If you say some, some negative thing, some people are easy to cry. Uh, there is no baddest. There is no baddest. Baddest, if someone uses baddest, that might be in a song because that's, that would be slang. But we should state a worse for proper English. You want to use worst or worst, bad, worse, worst. That's what you want to follow. But young people as kind of slang instead of worst, they might say baddest in a song or something, but, uh, Eunice, you don't want to use baddest. I never, never use baddest, uh, but it's possible in a very, very casual way, very, very casual way. You don't want to do that in any formal situation. Just use worst. Are your students old or young? They are all ages. Me at the university there is young. Who is that student? Your college student? Your online student that I may cry is the college students. It irritates me as online student. I have met two multitaskers two weeks ago. It is, it is possible to use like this. No, multitasker is not really a title. Everyone multitasks. So you multitask. Everyone here can multitask. So I met two multitaskers. That's not really a title for someone. You're trying to use it as a title. They are multitaskers, but I think you want to express that that they multitask well. You can describe because everyone multitask, but they multitask well. Yeah. Palavi, not here. Yeah. Okay. Well, multitasker and multitasking are like a challenge. I think, uh, you got to simplify that a little, Leila. So I think you, you think they have some special strong meaning. No, no, no, just uh, people usually say it like, Oh, uh, I'm a good multitasker or I'm a bad multitasker. That's usually how we express that. We don't say, well, you could say, yeah, Robin and Jack are good describing them as good multitaskers, but it's, it's not, these are not big titles that we want to put on people. It's just a short description of a people. I need to improve my writing skills, as you mentioned it. So my suggestion would be writing homework, but I know it takes a lot of your time for you to correct that type of homework. Well, uh, we'll see, uh, of course, I'll check your writing, uh, Sama, uh, I'll be testing stuff, but of course there will always be writing homework. They're the best multitaskers. The best. Are we the best? Um, I don't, well, another problem is I don't think I'm a good multitasker because right now, uh, I, I can't, I can't really focus on many things. Uh, I can do one thing at a time, but doing two or three things, I don't think I'm a good multitasker and Jack, a good multitasker, maybe this guy multitasks and he succeeds. Um, you can say that, but we don't usually say, you know, again, you're building up multitask as some great unique skill. It's not some great, amazing skill. Like it can be, but I mean, most people multitask, uh, it sounds like he drinks water and succeeds. Well, everyone drinks water. Uh, does multitasking help them succeed? Uh, I guess you could say, yeah, the ability to multitask well might lead you to more success. Maybe something like that. You can, but you're giving an opinion about multitask, but just every day to day English, how do we use multitask? Just people describe it. I multitask well, I'm, I don't multitask well. I'm not good at, uh, I'm not good at multitasking. That would be a common way people, native speakers say it. It is strange. She is not here, uh, because Kat, why are you asking about Palavi? Is Kat another account for Palavi? I suspect Kat is another account for Palavi. Is that true? Kat, are you Palavi? I feel you are jealous with Jack. No, not at all. Jack is my best friend in the world. I love him to death. I'm not jealous of Jack. Jack, uh, is jealous of me, but he can talk about that on his show. The ability to multitask well can lead you to success. Yes. Palavi, hello everyone. Well, we call some systems multitasking, if they can do, yeah, anything that can do many tasks at once is multitasking. That's what it means, multi, many tasks. This guy, multi-desperacy, because he can teach English while sleeping. Who, uh, that's not, that's not this guy. When I sleep, I hope I do not multitask. I hope I'm not teaching English in my sleep. The detective is investigating. Yeah. What do you think, sleepwalker? So from this question, I guess we can describe people with multitasking, multitasker and multitask, as you explained. Well, usually, yeah, you can, but it's, I don't think it's as common as you think it is. And I don't think you, it's as special as you think it is. Uh, it is just a casual way to describe a certain situation. Uh, but you wouldn't really put that on your resume under skills, multitasker. I don't think you put that on your resume. That's not a real skill. That's just kind of a, kind of observation of someone, oh, that person can do two or three things at once. They're a good multitasker or they're good at multitasking. I think you're guessing, you're guessing are right about, you're guessing is right about cat. Yes, cat. You are Palavi. I think concentrating at one thing at a time, one thing at a time, Trump's hula hoops. What? Uh, sometimes we've got to focus on many things like during, during a live stream, I got to focus on many things. Uh, I see the jack is very kind. Yeah. I respect them too. Harry three and I have to teach you how to sleep. Isn't it called a dream? A dream. That's called a nightmare. If I'm teaching while I'm sleeping, that is definitely 100% a nightmare. I do not want to be teaching in my dream. Leave me alone when I'm dreaming. Cat says, I don't know her. I was asking you because I see her many times. Well, there's other people that come here like Michelle. Where is Michelle? You didn't ask about Michelle or, uh, who else is not here today becomes many times. And Palavi's not always here. Maybe cat is sunny. Who's sunny? All right. So I guess for the future, let's make a quick list here. So upcoming videos, what we'll do one Q and a, but and then vocabulary. Um, these are live streams and then world news. I'm favoring more of world news because that seems to be more popular. Uh, we'll see. I might, I might even stop the Q and a maybe the Q and a is gone. Well, Q and a is important though. So we'll see, we'll see how it goes. Vocabulary. Yeah, we'll see how it goes. So I'll, I'll, I'll try to build those three. The lake just formed because of the rainy days. And this lake just consists consist this. No. Consist means it's made up of the lake is consists of water and fish. I don't know. Uh, formed and consists are not synonyms. So there's the problem Layla. I don't know why you think the, the form and consist are synonyms. They're not even the same word which do native speakers might use in the case form or consist. Oh, these are not the same words. These are not synonyms. So you have to go to the dictionary. I don't, I don't know why you think they're the same word. We're not going to use, you're going to use form in a different way. You're going to use consists in a different way. You could talk, uh, uh, where agree is forming consists where there's close, near synonyms. No, they're, they're, they're in a similar family. They're cousins, but they're not brother and sister. What about homework check live stream? No, I'm not going to do any more homework check live streams. So with the daily English homework, I'm just going to make the videos and maybe, uh, maybe I might, but the focus on the focus on live streams on other channels is no more. Those, those were to get viewing hours for those channels to be monetized. Those channels are now monetized. Uh, so I will just focus on the videos, not the live streams. So I'm, I like a lot, uh, new words because, okay, there we go. So, you know, there's a simple idea, world news and vocabulary. I can just add those two things into one great lesson. So you can learn some, uh, world news and I can take the vocabulary out of there and give some fill in the blanks. There we go. It's one lesson, world news and vocabulary. Uh, Pallavi can't be here because she is banned. Yeah, I know that sleepwalker, but the Pallavi account is banned, not the cat account. So it is suspicious that cat comes in and asks, where's Pallavi? Where's Pallavi? Please don't Q&A from time to time. We need it. All right, Layla, I won't because you said don't. So I won't. Oh, what? She is banned? Why? Well, I think you know why Pallavi. Uh, people are banned for a reason. People are kicked out of WhatsApp groups for a reason. I've forgiven Pallavi a hundred times and I've banned her a hundred times. Uh, cat, if you're Pallavi, that's fine. That's fine. You can be here as cat. That's no problem. You're welcome here as cat because in my language, I don't care about your language. I care about English here. So what are you doing, Layla? Your language, you, if you're comparing the English word in your language and you're not doing the right way because you're saying the translation of form and consists into Arabic is a synonym. So why can't I use that in English? Well, I would say don't translate them. Just know what they mean in English and stop translating. That would be my solution to that problem. It's a translation problem, not an English problem. It's how you're learning those words. If you're learning those words through translating, then you're going to have conflict, not just with those words, hundreds of words. What about learning directly collocations instead of vocabulary as only words and their meanings? I'll think about it, Eunice. I'll try to, I will try to make an amazing lesson where we learn idioms, vocabulary. I'll try to make everyone happy. I think I have the experience, the skills to make an awesome lesson. And the question is when? Next Sunday, we'll see how it goes. How do native English speakers know if people are saying can or can't? Here, English teachers always use a British accent to do that. I don't like to mix the accents since I use the American one. I can be confusing among native speakers too, but you have clues. You have context. If I say I can't drink water, you know, you see my head shaking. You can guess from context. I can dance. I can dance. I can dance. I can dance. I can dance. It's difficult. It's difficult for native speakers. So do your best. Oh, no. I mean, please don't stop. No. Already decided. Stop. Don't do the Q&A's. I'm not Palavi. You know I asked about many people here. I don't know why you think that. Oh, okay. Cat. Okay. Cat is not Palavi. I think collocation. Collocations, that's proper pronunciation. Collocations are very important because they help us to figure out how to use them correctly. Yes, I would agree, Eunice, collocation is very important. I talked to Palavi in one of your live streams. You see that too. Okay. I don't translate them, but I want to know which is proper verb to use with lake. Both of them are proper to use with lake, but they have different meanings. So what do you want to say? Do you want to use form or do you want to use consist? What are you trying to express with that? Because you can use both of those because they have different meanings. They're not synonyms. What do you want to say? So is it correct way to use the lake form because of the rain? Yes, that is one way. That is how you use form. But usually we don't say lakes form because of rain. Lakes are usually permanent. So the the puddle, small puddle would be more appropriate. This puddle, let me put it on the white board here. The sentence, the puddle formed because of the rain. All right. So that sounds something the rain can create. Lakes are kind of created, you know, thousands of years ago and they just saw millions of years ago and they still remain. They're not not entirely formed by rain. I said puddle, P-U-D-D-L-E, not puddle, the dog, puddle, puddle. Let's practice that pronunciation. Poodle, I always say puddle, hug, poodle, and water formed by rain. Puddle, poodle, puddle. The poodle is in the puddle. What kind of video do you prefer to make? I prefer the video that gets views. So I'm a YouTuber. I have to focus on views more going in the future. So I will I will make videos that get watched that has to attract more viewers to the channel. So, you know, I'm not I need more motivation, Sama. I need more people here too. I need 100 Samas. If I had 100 students like you, I'd be very, very happy. The money puddle. Or I could say the puddle, puddle formed because of the poodle. That's funny. In my mind, that's funny. The puddle formed because of the poodle. Okay, Robert, I got it finally. The best word to use is pudding, pudding. The puddle formed because of the rain. The puddle formed because of the poodle. Do you think about making lessons not lives here? That's why I made Dayling's homework. To put my lessons on Dayling's homework and the IELTS insider and then here is just live live stream. So the purpose of this channel is live stream. That's the concept of this channel. And that's what it will do continuing forward. Livestreams do not grow as much as videos, but I have the Dayling's homework for the videos. All right. I'm going to end this live stream now. So I'll be back next week. I'll try out some new something we can learn and study and try to get more people here active. I'm figuring out the WhatsApp groups, things like that. You can see I'm already getting tired after one hour of making jokes about puddles and poodles. Could you please pronounce this word push chair? Push, there's two words there, push chair. You know push, you know chair. What's a push chair? Push chair. Push chair. What is it? British English. That's not American English. So that says a small here. This is what let's go big here. This is a push chair. It looks like a cart or baby. I don't know. Stroller. Yeah. American English stroller. So we I don't say push chair. Push chair. Push chair. Push chair. Push chair. Why is that difficult to pronounce? Push chair. Robin, I think many of us are often sometimes confused about pronunciation also. For example, the silent E rule in service engine. That is the final E. Yeah. Oh, nowhere. Hey, Eunice, no one is confused about that silent E at the end of a word. Who? I have never in over 20 years of teaching have ever heard a student say service A, engine A. There's no confusion about that silent E rule. You're talking about the end of the sentence, right? Because there's no other ease, service. What are you talking about, Eunice? No one ever is confused about the end E. Explain what you're talking about, Eunice. Okay, thank you. I got the, why are you sharing that with us, man? Embarrassing. Oh, I got the poodle joke. Thank you. Finally, someone has, I expect the dad to get the dad joke. The A to Z English podcast, the best joke ever. Yes, I agree. The A to Z English podcast is the best joke ever. All right. Hey, all right. Goodbye, everyone. Talk to you in the future.