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01:09
Word of the day: death recorded
In British courts, beginning in 1823, a sentence of death recorded meant that the judge was abstaining from voicing a sentence of capital punishment in cases where the judge foresaw that a royal pardon would be forthcoming if a proper death sentence were to be issued. It was, in other words, a death sentence in name only, with no actual effect in law. Royal pardons for capital punishment had become routine at the time for most common crimes. A "death recorded" sentence allowed the judge to meet common law sentencing precedent while avoiding mocking by the sentenced or the public who realised...
 
2 hours later…
02:51
I noticed people are more likely to use phrasal verbs in everyday conversations. I am not sure if I am right, but I here phrasal verbs more often than the single word verb counterparts. It's interesting. So, I believe to improve the spoken English, one has to bring the phrasal verbs from the passive memory into active one.
@CowperKettle :))
03:22
Phrase of the night: put out feelers
2
 
4 hours later…
07:19
> شهر
پر از صدا
ولي
از سخن تهي

نادر نادرپور
07:45
A city is full of voices, but empty of words.
meaningful words, yes
 
2 hours later…
09:33
@Cardinal Yep!
Multi-word idioms make your speech idiomatic. Sometimes stacking a lot of them can sound a little weird, but I've seen and heard sentences where the person keeps using one after another without it sounding weird.
09:46
They're a little difficult for me, though, especially the verb + preposition(s) ones. That may be because most of my English comes from books, I think, where more informal English is less likely to be seen. But I don't think you have to try to actively root out single-word alternatives. Just use what seems best. Your brain will adjust anyway.
 
2 hours later…
11:32
@Cardinal I think you’re right. Maybe podcasts where the conversations are informal, like Joe Rogan would be a good way to learn the patterns (warning-Joe curses a lot if that bothers you)
 
2 hours later…
13:28
@userr2684291 Yes, same here my English comes from books. I've noticed even one mistake (I mean unidomatic) in word selection can cause me to stall when speaking. I don't know why I feel "phrasal verbs" make it essier and more fluent.
@ColleenV I'll check it out.
they say the best way to become fluent is through immersion, but then you have to think in English and that is hard
@Cardinal There are some others as well. I think Joe is a good candidate because I don’t perceive him to have a strong accent, he’s very informal and he talks about all sorts of different topics.
There is a guy named Zuby from the UK that seems similar, but his accent is odd- he went to American schools in Saudi but his family is Nigerian and he lives in the UK
He might be difficult to understand
accents are a thorny issue, some say you can never get rid of them
13:58
@skullpetrol some accents are beneficial, if they’re posh enough and you can be easily understood
Indeed.
 
2 hours later…
15:58
Outdeed.

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