Teaching on Cafetalk this year has reminded me again and again of one very real, very human truth: learners aren’t just trying to use English — they’re trying to connect with other people through it.
Students tell me things like:
“I can explain what I want to say in English…
but I can’t always catch what my foreign colleagues are saying.”
“I want to sound more natural — not just correct.”
“I want to join the conversation — not feel like I’m standing outside it.”
And I hear these requests. I take them seriously. Because this isn’t about memorising more grammar — it’s about communicating like a real person.
Part 1: Textbook vs Real-Life English (Lower-Intermediate)
The biggest difference I’ve seen is this:
Textbook English focuses on describing facts.
Real English often carries attitude and feeling.
You already do this in your own language — you don’t only state facts, you express what you feel about them.
A simple example from weather:
Textbook English (describing):
“It is very humid today.”
Perfectly correct.
Natural English (communicating feeling):
“It’s really muggy today, isn’t it?”
Now there’s texture — a sense of stickiness and discomfort.
This is what students keep asking me for:
“How can I say things more naturally?”
“How can I understand what native speakers really mean?”
And I love working with that.
Part 2: Everyday Vocabulary & Phrasal Verbs (Intermediate)
To sound natural, native speakers often choose vocabulary that carries emotion or vibe rather than just meaning.
Common everyday alternatives
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humid → muggy
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cold → chilly / nippy
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hot → roasting / boiling
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tired → worn out / beat
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busy → swamped / snowed under
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angry → annoyed / fed up
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happy → over the moon
None of these are “advanced.” They’re simply human.
And then there are phrasal verbs — the real engine of casual speech.
Formal:
“We need to investigate this issue.”
Natural:
“We should look into this.”
Formal:
“Could you review this section?”
Natural:
“Can you go over this section?”
Other common ones my students often ask about:
-
wrap up (= finish)
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point out (= indicate)
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sort out (= fix / organise)
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take in (= understand / absorb)
These are the bread-and-butter of everyday speech.
Part 3: Nuance, Intonation & Body Language (Upper-Intermediate)
Vocabulary and phrasal verbs help you participate in conversation —
but posture and tone help you navigate it.
Natural collocations (words that “belong together”)
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heavy rain (not strong rain)
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strong coffee (not heavy coffee)
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deep sleep
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close friend
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subtle difference
These are the combinations that make English sound right.
Now add intonation and body language — the invisible layer:
“Interesting!”
(forward posture, bright tone)
= I’m engaged — please tell me more.
“Interesting.”
(back posture, flat tone)
= I’m not totally convinced.
“Really?”
(rising tone, leaning forward)
= I’m genuinely curious.
“Really.”
(flat tone, leaning back)
= I doubt it / I already knew that.
“That’s… interesting.”
(long pause after “that’s…”)
= I’m politely disagreeing.
Same words — completely different meanings.
Final Thought
You’re not starting from scratch.
You already know how to communicate naturally in your own language — how to be polite, how to show curiosity, how to soften a question, how to read the room.
What my students have reminded me this year is that the real job isn’t to teach you a new way of thinking — it’s to help you map your natural social instinct onto English.
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