Disclaimer: the post reflects personal experience from 2 founders and may vary from person to person. The "500 Global" part is covered by @duran, and the "Antler" part β by @ybeymlina
Both accelerators give you a strong label, but the experience is drastically different. Swipe through the carousel to find out more and welcome to ping us with questions, even - and especially (!) - silly ones :)
For more,
WBU
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β€3π¦2π1
Remember 4 posts ago, we shared 3 common struggles that hold "PitchUp" members back from delivering high impact speeches?
The 1st step - recognising the problems: done
The 2d step - finding adequate tools to tackle the problems: in progress
The 3d step - execution
TIMECODES
00:00 Intro, Challenge and a Special Offer
01:25 Exercise 1 - for Intonation
05:59 Exercise 2 - for Filler Words
10:23 Exercise 3 - for Signposting
WARNING
The 1st time you're doing these exercises: they feel awkward
The 3d time you're doing these exercises: you start giggling* and having fun
After a week of doing these exercises: you're addicted
*Glossary
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Any of "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" fans here? π
In the book, a supercomputer is asked to find βthe Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything.β After thinking for 7.5 million years, it answers:4οΈβ£ 2οΈβ£
The joke is that they got a clear answer (42) but realized they never actually knew what the question was. So the answer is meaningless without knowing what question itβs answering.
As a meme, β42β is used as a funny response when:
π«§ Someone asks a big, impossible-to-answer question
π«§ The answer to something is unclear or absurd
π«§ To joke that life has no simple explanation
Itβs basically saying βthe answer is meaninglessβ or βnobody really knowsβ in a nerdy way.ββββββββββββββββ
In the book, a supercomputer is asked to find βthe Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything.β After thinking for 7.5 million years, it answers:
The joke is that they got a clear answer (42) but realized they never actually knew what the question was. So the answer is meaningless without knowing what question itβs answering.
As a meme, β42β is used as a funny response when:
Itβs basically saying βthe answer is meaninglessβ or βnobody really knowsβ in a nerdy way.ββββββββββββββββ
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π€3β‘2π1
Anonymous Quiz
20%
rhubarbs
80%
retards
LAST CALL for ambitious high level English learners
"S2S" and "PitchUp" prices will go up one more time on Wednesday, January, 21, to remain stable till April.
YOU CAN
β’ start acting on the promises you've been giving to yourself
β’ get a subscription extension before the expiration at the old price
β’ activate the subscription at any time before July, 1
β’ buy a gift subscription for your friend (I will prepare a special design following your brief β professional or meme-like)
β’ discover a new quality of language training, from @ybeymlina, the expert blending linguistics, business, and psychology training
DISAMBIGUATION
β’ PitchUp - Business English for entrepreneurs and top managers. 90 min weekly workshops in small groups with Yulia
β’ S2S - General English training, for high levels. 45 min one to one meetings with other learners (peer to peer) with personal feedback from a teacher (based on Zoom recording) + 60 min group training with Yulia every week
Text "PitchUp" and/or "S2S" to @ybeymlina to apply
Thank you for choosing @englishforimpact and our productsπͺ΄
"S2S" and "PitchUp" prices will go up one more time on Wednesday, January, 21, to remain stable till April.
YOU CAN
β’ start acting on the promises you've been giving to yourself
β’ get a subscription extension before the expiration at the old price
β’ activate the subscription at any time before July, 1
β’ buy a gift subscription for your friend (I will prepare a special design following your brief β professional or meme-like)
β’ discover a new quality of language training, from @ybeymlina, the expert blending linguistics, business, and psychology training
DISAMBIGUATION
β’ PitchUp - Business English for entrepreneurs and top managers. 90 min weekly workshops in small groups with Yulia
β’ S2S - General English training, for high levels. 45 min one to one meetings with other learners (peer to peer) with personal feedback from a teacher (based on Zoom recording) + 60 min group training with Yulia every week
CURRENT PRICES
PitchUp
3 m $207
6 m $350
12 m $620
S2S
3 m $95
6 m $143
12 m $239
Text "PitchUp" and/or "S2S" to @ybeymlina to apply
Thank you for choosing @englishforimpact and our products
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1β€2π2π₯2
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4 Reasons Why You Don't Understand Fast English Native Speech
SUMMARY
"What did you have?" >
"How is it going?" > "
"How did you?" >
π reference
2 Reasons
1. Linking (Joining Words)
Native speakers often join words so they sound like 1 long word instead of 3 or 4 separate ones.
Example: At [00:27], "How is it going" sounds like one single word: "Owsitgan."
The words "stick" together.
2. Dropping Sounds (Elision)
Sometimes, speakers completely "delete" or drop sounds from a word to save time.
Examples:
At [00:27], the speaker drops the "g" at the end of "going," so it sounds like "gan."
At [00:13], the "t" in "What" & the "d" sounds in "did"become very quiet.
Some letters are not spoken at all.
The Other 2 Reasons
3. Assimilation
4. Weak Forms
Want to understand how Assimilation and Weak Forms work? Invite one friend to join the channel > comment or DM @ybeymlinaπͺ΄
SUMMARY
"What did you have?" >
"Whajav" "How is it going?" > "
Owsitgan" "How did you?" >
"Owja"sammfenton2 Reasons
1. Linking (Joining Words)
Native speakers often join words so they sound like 1 long word instead of 3 or 4 separate ones.
Example: At [00:27], "How is it going" sounds like one single word: "Owsitgan."
The words "stick" together.
2. Dropping Sounds (Elision)
Sometimes, speakers completely "delete" or drop sounds from a word to save time.
Examples:
At [00:27], the speaker drops the "g" at the end of "going," so it sounds like "gan."
At [00:13], the "t" in "What" & the "d" sounds in "did"become very quiet.
Some letters are not spoken at all.
The Other 2 Reasons
3. Assimilation
4. Weak Forms
Want to understand how Assimilation and Weak Forms work? Invite one friend to join the channel > comment or DM @ybeymlina
+1. If we have 5 new readers with your help, I will post the continuation Please open Telegram to view this post
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β€2π2 2 2
The real no BS (bullshit) pill you can take for your English is to pay attention to collocations. Simply, to what words are used together. Yep, not only to separate word translations, but to whole phrases.
Boy π£
ΛneΙͺ.kΙͺd/ means 'not covered by clothes'Man π
4 Collocation Groups with NAKED1. Physical appearance
Examples: naked body, naked skin, stark naked (completely without clothes), half naked2. Figurative / emotional exposure
Examples: naked truth (unembellished truth), naked fear (pure, intense fear), naked ambition (blatant ambition), naked aggression (overt aggression), naked power (unconcealed power), naked hostility3. Perception / visibility
Examples: visible to the naked eye (without instruments), naked flame (open, uncovered flame), naked light bulb (unshaded bulb)4. Literary / poetic uses
Examples: naked branches (bare trees), naked landscape (devoid of covering or shelter), naked soul (emotionally exposed self)
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β€3π₯2π1
Most of the activity has to do with the "PitchUp" club.
2 Noteworthy Moments:
1) I am a free user
2) I got the slides on January, 18 (a bit late, right?) the day after I complained about Miro's UX on my LinkedIn. A coincidence? No idea. Like the slides, though.
Any Miro board fans here? Did you get 2025 Recaps?
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β€2π2π₯1