Learn the vocabulary of English words. How to check vocabulary in English

The language is quite difficult. The complex and large history of Great Britain has led to a very large number of words. The Oxford English Dictionary, known in many circles, has approximately 600,000 words and expressions. And if you add dialect and slang to this list, then the number of words will exceed 1 million. But you should not be afraid of such a large number, because even native speakers do not know all the English words. On average, an educated person, a native speaker, knows 12,000-18,000 words. Well, the average resident of the UK knows 8000-10000 words.

How many words do you need to know?

If a person is not a native speaker and does not permanently live in an English-speaking country, then it will be almost impossible for him to bring his stock to the cherished 8000-10000 words. A good indicator is 4000-5000 words.

There is a standard and generally accepted gradation of the language. If the number of learned words is in the region of 400-500 words, then the level of proficiency is considered basic. If the active stock is in the range of 800-1000 words, then you can safely communicate on various everyday topics. If such a quantity refers rather to a passive vocabulary, then you can safely read simple texts. The range of 1500-2000 words will allow you to communicate freely all day long. If the vocabulary is 3000-4000 words, then you can safely read the English press or various thematic materials. A dictionary base of 8,000 languages ​​guarantees fluency in English. With such a number of learned words, you can freely read any literature or write texts in the language yourself. Those who have more than 8000 words in their luggage are considered highly educated people who learn English.

According to the standard vocabulary base is distributed as follows:
- beginner - 600 words;
- elementary - 1000 words;
- pre-Intermediate - 1500-2000 words;
- intermediate - 2000-3000 words;
- upper-Intermediate - 3000-4000 words;
- advanced - 4000-8000 words;
- proficiency - more than 8000 words.

Thanks to this data, you can determine your level of language proficiency, as well as set goals for yourself. But how many words have already been learned? No, you do not need to measure anything with a ruler for this. Everything is much easier. There is a test capable of determining the number of studied words with a margin of error of 10%.

To create this test, 7000 words were taken from the dictionary. Outdated and rarely used words were removed from there. Also removed the words, the meaning of which can be determined through the usual logic. As a result, 2 small pages with words remained.

How to pass the test?

The test must be taken with extreme honesty. The first page contains a list of words in columns. If at least one of the possible meanings of an English word is known, then a tick is placed next to it. The same columns with words appear on the second page. But there is already a selection of previously unknown words. This program checks whether these words are really unknown. To complete the test, there is another page that indicates age, gender, how many years English has been studied and other important questions. After specifying all the data, the end button is pressed and the number of words in the vocabulary of the tested person appears on the screen.

Hi all! Each language contains a certain number of lexemes. The complete vocabulary of English has about 300,000 words. Of course, such a figure will discourage a beginner from wanting to learn a foreign language. However, I hasten to reassure you that you will not need to learn all these lexemes, since even educated native speakers have an arsenal of about 100,000 words. Today we will find out how many English words you need to know in order to speak English fluently. Minimum vocabulary There are methods of learning English, in which students are forced to learn up to 200 words daily. For some, this approach is applicable, but for the majority, these numbers remain incomprehensible, and the learned words do not bring them closer to free communication with native speakers. In my opinion, the best organization of classes is, on the contrary, the economy of words, that is, memorizing less, but more effectively.

Do not chase quantity, quality should be your prerogative. It is much better if you know 1000 words by heart than to know 3000-4000 lexemes badly. Each teacher determines his own minimum required number of lexemes. But only you can decide how many words you need to know so that they are necessary and sufficient to achieve your goals.

As experience shows, a minimum vocabulary of 450 correctly chosen lexemes can compensate for about 90% of the vocabulary required for free everyday communication in English. For comfortable English reading, you need a little more words, but passively. With knowledge of approximately 1600 lexemes, you will be able to navigate freely in artistic and journalistic texts.

The famous teacher, polyglot and methodologist E. Gunnemark made calculations of the necessary vocabulary for the English language, dividing them into several categories.
So, he calculated that for oral speech it would be enough to learn from 40 to 1000 correctly selected, most frequent words:

  • 40 lexemes will cover about 50% of everyday use in communication
  • 200 words will already raise this figure to 80%
  • 300 lexical units will add a few more percent - 85%
  • 450 words is almost 90%
  • 900-1000 - almost 98% of what you can say or hear in everyday conversation

I note that these indicators are not exact calculations, but a general idea of ​​how many units you need to remember in order to feel confident when communicating with native English speakers. E. Gunnemark A well-known polyglot found out that for reading, you will need to pick up and learn about 80 - 8000 high-frequency words in order to understand an ordinary simple text:

  • 80 words will help to understand about 50% of the text
  • 200 units - 60%
  • 400 tokens - cover about 70%
  • 2000 words - approximately 90%
  • 8000 lexical units will help you understand written or printed text at 100%

Again, these are just indicative numbers. In some cases, you will be able to understand the text, knowing only 45 words, and in others, you will not have enough knowledge even 1,000.

Why know 100,000 words?

You ask, why do we need 100,000 words, if only a few thousand are enough for communication? On the one hand, you are right - this number of lexemes is quite enough for everyday conversations. BUT - this is the minimum vocabulary. If you want to become a full-fledged, educated member of society who will be able to carry on a conversation on any topic that a native English speaker will offer, then you need to constantly increase your vocabulary. Rich vocabulary What gives a rich vocabulary:

  • 350-700 words - enough for language proficiency at a threshold level
  • 800-1200 lexemes - an active arsenal for communication or a passive reserve for reading at a beginner level
  • 1500-2500 units - confident reading or fluent communication on everyday topics
  • 3000-7000 words - free reading of specialized literature and the press
  • 8000-9000 lexemes - full-fledged oral and written communication, reading any kind of literature
  • 10,000-40,000 words - active vocabulary of the speaker
  • 50,000-100,000 units - a passive arsenal of words for an educated native speaker of English

Thus, for you as a foreigner, knowing 9,000 English words will be enough to confidently study, work and live among English speakers.

I also note that the knowledge of this vocabulary in itself does not guarantee you free communication. To be able to speak a foreign language requires practice and constant training, knowledge of basic knowledge of English grammar and syntax.

With regard to international vocabulary and special terms, here you should not have any particular difficulties. Since it is enough to check these words once with the term in the native language and remember.

Core vocabulary levels

In pedagogical practice, teachers and linguists distinguish several levels of the basic vocabulary, which serve as a guide for the beginner. They significantly reduced the huge gradation by creating a list of three main levels:

  • Level A— basic vocabulary and phrase stock — 350 — 500 lexemes. This amount is quite enough to cover about 85-90% of all uses in daily oral conversation or about 70% of plain text in writing.
  • Level B- mini-level or minimum vocabulary - phrasal stock - 900 -1000 units. This number is enough to make up for approximately 95% of uses in everyday spoken conversation and approximately 85% of simple printed text.
  • Level C- media level or average vocabulary - 1200-2000 words. This amount is enough to compensate for almost 100% of the use of phrases in everyday oral communication or about 90% of a literary text.

According to this gradation, 2,000 words are enough for a beginner for everyday communication in English. Again, I note that everything is relative, and only you determine for yourself how many English words you need to know. But it’s also not worth overloading yourself with a lot of unnecessary information.

Estimating the number of learned and memorized words of a foreign language is primarily interesting for understanding how far a person has advanced in “passive” perception of information: texts, speech, films, etc. I propose to familiarize yourself with several methods that I used, found on the net and "home-made". Below - a couple of tests for assessing vocabulary, a technique for finding important words that have not yet caught on in the brain, some reasoning and some links.

Online tests

Of the many tests for evaluating the number of words, I liked two. A couple of years ago I came across a rather simple Test Your Vocabulary . As you go through three screens of words, you tick off the ones you (you think) know, and then get an estimate of the total number of words learned. Many of my friends complained about his inadequacy - they received an amount less than "the one about whom I know for sure that he knows worse." But when passing, there may be a mistake of a different kind - it seems that you know the word, but in fact you have already forgotten it. They say that the hand itself reaches out to put a tick next to a word that seems vaguely familiar, so you can subconsciously overestimate your overall rating.

You know at least 10,500 English word families!

What do my results mean?

In general, there is no minimum vocabulary size. Language ability is related to vocabulary size, so the more words you know, the more you will be able to understand. However, if you want to set a learning goal, Paul Nation's (2006) research suggests that the following sizes might be useful:

How large a vocabulary is needed for reading and listening?
Skill Size estimate Notes
Reading 8,000 - 9,000 Word Families Nation (2006)
listening 6,000 - 7,000 Word Families Nation (2006)
native speaker 20,000 word families Goulden, Nation, & Read (1990)
Zechmeister, Chronis, Cull, D'Anna, & Healy (1995)

What is a word family?

There are many different forms of a word, so this test measures your knowledge of the most basic form of a word and assumes that you can recognize the other forms. For example, nation, a noun, can also be an adjective (national), a verb (nationalize), or an adverb (nationally). There are also forms which can be made with an affix such as de- or -ing which also modify the way that the word is used or adds to the basic meaning. For a test of receptive vocabulary knowledge such as this one, word families are considered to be the most accurate way of counting words.

Frequency Dictionaries

After registering at www.wordfrequency.info, you can download the American English Frequency Dictionary excel. There is also a text version.

Like this:

Rank Word Part of speech Frequency Dispersion

1 the - a 22038615 0.98
2 be - v 12545825 0.97
3 and - c 10741073 0.99
4 of - i 10343885 0.97
5 a - a 10144200 0.98
6 in - i 6996437 0.98
7to-t 6332195 0.98
8 have-v 4303955 0.97


4996 immigrant - j 0.97
4997 kid - v 5094 0.92
4998 middle-class-j 5025 0.93
4999 apology - n 4972 0.94
5000 till - i 5079 0.92

The file contains 5000 English words, sorted by frequency of occurrence. The frequency was calculated on a huge heterogeneous array of English texts. I recently saw a friend of mine look up words he didn't know by checking his vocabulary. Looking through the first 500, I did not find any unknowns. He showed an extract on his smartphone - about a dozen words from the second thousand (that is, from 1000 to 2000) and about 20 from the third. It's funny that when you go through the list, you come across sequences of words that successfully add up to phrases or even short sentences. The logic is very simple - if the word is very common according to statistics, and you don't know it, then it's better to learn it and see examples of use.

After reading the list of words unknown to him (already with translation), I saw the following thing. I knew about 50-60% of these words unknown to him, but some of the meanings of the translations recorded there were unknown to me, there were several words completely unknown to me.
In general, the site tries to be commercial, they sell lists over 5000 long, but this is not so interesting anymore.

So far, this friend of mine is writing a program with a convenient interface to look up unknown words - for learning purposes. I suggested to him that for a global assessment, not this list, but thinned one: every seventh word from the total list of 60,000 words is given. In fact, even watching the first couple of thousand is disheartening, not everyone will get to 5000. Although I can’t say for all 100, but the thinned dictionary will certainly show at least one word from the “family”, and the time will be spent, respectively, 7 or 10 times less (depending on the frequency of thinning).
By the way, such frequency dictionaries of the Russian language contain about 160 thousand words, including abbreviations and abbreviations. There are several different similar "corpuses" of English words from different organizations.

I'm interested in another question: how accurate are the tests that estimate the number of words you know? It is possible that this could be determined just by checking the frequency dictionary, as well as comparing the list of selected unknown words - their number and entry into different "families".

There are general laws of remembering and forgetting. One of the main things: if a person has learned something and does not repeat, does not use it, the information is forgotten exponentially from time to time. On the other hand, a few repetitions lengthen, stretch the falling exponent to an acceptable level. I was very surprised when a friend who worked as a tutor for schoolchildren told me that there is a sequence of time intervals for deep memorization: say, after 20 minutes, then after 8 hours, another day, etc., after which the information is planted firmly in the brain . That is, the statistically maximum level of the excitation signal is provided in the brain when it encounters this information.

Ebbinghaus curve, from Wikipedia.

How I learned words at the institute.

Without taking into account the standard course, where the requirements for the first three years were quite tough, I tried to read fiction. The first big book was the old Soviet edition of Conan Doyle's The Lost World. I don’t know how it was adapted, but there were plenty of Victorian words and expressions in the text, and this greatly delayed the progress towards the end ... Of course, it was possible to look into Lingvo from a computer, but I didn’t like to read at the computer, but to run back and forth for each new word quickly tired. Tablets were not common then, a pocket electronic translator is an expensive rarity, so I developed a paper system for myself. In a thick 96-sheet notebook, the spread was divided into 6 columns. Now I tried to find a notebook - I got lost. Will have to describe in words. Divided the alphabet into groups of letters, for example - a..d, e..f, g..j, k..n, o..q, r..t, u..w, x..z. Approximately, by eye, I estimated the statistical percentage of words that begin with these letters and divided the columns in the spread into rectangles. For example, the group a..d gave 2/3 of the first column, and so on. The group x..z was assigned the last remaining smallest piece in the 6th column. Then everything is simple. I met an unknown word - enter with the translation in the desired rectangle. Nothing inside the block is not in alphabetical order - it will not take long to find. To get the translation while lying on the bed, you need to get into the book dictionary. That is, the value of receiving a translation is quite large, more than now look at Lingua or an online translator like

The well-known Ellochka from the novel "12 Chairs" easily managed thirty words of the Russian language, but, apparently, she did not achieve great success in life. How many words do we need to know in English in order to communicate on everyday and professional topics? According to researchers, about 40 words are the minimum required for 50% of understanding and speaking in everyday speech situations, 400 words should be enough for 90% of cases, and 1000 words will provide you with 95% successful communication. Native speakers use an average of 3,000 to 20,000 words, it depends on the education of each individual and the typical situations in which he has to communicate. Practice shows that for English learners it is enough to learn 1500-2000 words to feel confident in a conversation. As for professional terms, they usually do not cause difficulties, because in most cases this is an international vocabulary. But the most important thing is to understand that words should not just be written on beautiful cards and hung around the house, they should become your working tools. Let's see what steps will help you to firmly master the necessary vocabulary, that is, vocabulary.

1. Read carefully and draw conclusions

Whether you read fiction, stock market news, or a gardening blog, pay attention to how words are used and what combinations they make. Highlight, write out, copy what seems useful to you. For example, here is an excerpt from the article "How to Become an Early Riser" (by Steve Pavlina):

It seems there are two main schools of thought about sleep patterns. One is that you should go to bed and get up at the same times every day. It's like having an alarm clock on both ends - you try to sleep the same hours each night. This seems practical for living in modern society. We need predictability in our schedules. And we need to ensure adequate rest.

How can we analyze what we have read?

  • "It seems" - it seems, apparently. We just take it as an introductory word.
  • "This seems practical" - it seems practical. We understand that an adjective is used after “seems”, and now we can speak by analogy: “This seems interesting”, “This seems stupid”, “Your ideas seem nice”.
  • "Predictability" - predictability. If we know that “predict” means to predict and “ability” means ability, then we can calculate the meaning of this word as well.

2. Watch videos with and without subtitles

The same work can be done when watching your favorite movies, series and TV shows. If you use subtitles, it will be more convenient for you to write out the phrase you like, if not, then train your auditory perception, pause and repeat after the speaker. We can recommend an excellent resource that provides the opportunity to watch TV shows in the original with super-useful subtitles: when you hover over a word, a Russian translation appears. It saves a lot of time and improves memorization.

3. Sing your favorite songs

We have already discussed how songs can help us learn English. Vocabulary expansion is one of the areas where songs can be applied particularly well. It is always much easier to remember what you like and what is associated with positive emotions. There are many sites with lyrics on the Internet, for example:

By listening to your favorite songs and singing along to the performers, you learn whole phrases easily and with pleasure.

4. Take a cue from celebrities

Search for something like "Brad Pitt interview" or "chat show with celebrities" and you'll get a ton of do-it-yourself material. After reading or listening to interview fragments, you will probably notice that certain words are used more often. For example, "amazing" is a very popular adjective for expressing delight:

  • "You look amazing!"
  • "The film was amazing!"
  • It was an amazing experience.

5. Mastering typical phrases for standard situations

If you like to travel, you will surely need a set of certain phrases and expressions that you may need at the airport, customs, hotel, store, etc. As you know, such conversations do not differ in a special variety, therefore, for greater certainty, you can learn several mini-dialogues on the necessary topics. Various Internet resources will help you with this, where audio recordings and texts are collected, as well as tasks for them are presented. For example, you can start from this site

6. Learning words by topic

It is much easier to memorize new words that are related in meaning. If, for example, you are studying the topic "Food", you just need to learn the names of different products, ready meals, adjectives to describe them, etc. By discussing the tasks with the teacher, you will be able to activate these words, i.e. transfer from a passive stock to a set of "working tools". Learning will be more effective if you use different types of memory: look at pictures, listen to pronunciation and repeat yourself. Use, for example, such a resource that will help you do all of the above and learn new words with ease.

7. Use Dictionaries

In our age of information technology, paper dictionaries are no longer popular, and even schoolchildren are willing to use their online versions. Starting from the Pre-Intermediate level, it is recommended to use the so-called "English-English dictionaries", that is, not to translate unfamiliar words, but to look for their definitions in English. In addition, dictionaries can provide you with a stock of synonyms, antonyms, and idioms for a given word. According to Wikipedia, the following dictionaries are the most useful and reliable sources of information:

8. Playing word games

Crosswords, gallows, scrabble and other games can also help you enrich your speech, because thanks to them you will remember the spelling of the words you know in a fun way. In addition, many word games can be played in a fun company, combining business with pleasure: learning English with friendly communication. Tip for the curious: try playing Scrabble with an open dictionary.

9. We arm ourselves with devices and gadgets

It takes a long time to write words on cards, there is no time to make sentences, but we always have smartphones, iPhones and other devices at hand. When a free minute appears, you can start learning new words, and you don’t need to carry any leaflets, printouts, textbooks with you. If you don't know which app to choose, take advice from the British Council experts.

10. Use it or lose it!

The most important thing in mastering vocabulary is to use it in your speech. Passive vocabulary is good for reading and listening, that is, for recognizing words. For speaking and writing, we need to learn how to retrieve words from memory very quickly, and this is achieved only by practice. According to researchers, in order for a word to become active in speech, it must be used in various contexts about 17 times. Therefore, before class, set yourself the task of speaking more than the teacher and be sure to use new words.

Big and friendly family EnglishDom

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  • I have been trying to learn English for a long time. I need it for study and work. I went to courses, tried to use various computer programs, but the results were not encouraging. I learned about Puzzle-English on the Internet. Liked the project. Decided to try. Having already completed 50 lessons (auditing, videos, serials), I noticed that I began to understand English quite well by ear. It inspired me, because. could almost independently understand lectures in English. In this, I think it was Puzzle-English that helped me a lot. I continue to study English on Puzzle-English further and I am sure that the results will be even better. Make it interesting and exciting. Well done authors! We creatively approached the creation of the site - from idea to practical implementation. I am glad that the guys do not stop there, but constantly improve and develop services.

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  • In the evenings I like to sit in Puzzle English. I like the game space that the site offers. I love to sing songs, although they often change and sometimes I don’t even have time to remember or write them down. I love children's songs, especially since their author is a very talented musician. I like a series of programs about who and what lives in London. This greatly broadens the horizon and gives a lot of frequently used words, in different versions. I liked the videos about the Buddha and the Angkor Wat temple complex, I love the series about travel. I liked the new Sherlock, the only thing I regretted is that there is no series about Poirot with David Suchet. The songs are the best. I began to understand English by ear, although if they are not native speakers, but Asians, Latin Americans, Indians, I still understand with difficulty. For me, this is gurgling in a cauldron... The vocabulary has expanded and it was done effortlessly, without any tension. And I'm just happy to learn English on this site.

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    Minsk
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  • When I found out that in 5 years I would need a decent knowledge of English, I went to reconnaissance on the Internet. It was in October 2012 and I was almost zero in English (basic reading rules, 3 simple tenses, 500 words of vocabulary as a result of all my previous attempts). Having tried a bunch of sites, I ended up on Puzzle English... And fell in love... Because that I found such a wonderful idea here that I didn’t have to study in the classical sense, but I could just play with words, trying to put them in the right order. And to help and translate right next to the word, and the voice acting is right there, and cool, clear. It's great that the words are all in context and therefore remembered much faster. And besides, videos ... After watching a bunch of different ones, I forever got rid of the fear of whether I could speak correctly in English, as I saw that straight people often use pretty free sentence construction. When the cinema appeared, I already understood the series by 50%, and TED by almost 90%. In a word, the results I have surpassed all my ideas about them. I recently passed an interview-testing with teachers from the USA, which defined me as a strong Advanced. But it hasn't even been 2 years since I ended up on puz-eng. And all thanks to such a wonderful invention - not to practice, but to PLAY in folding puzzles. Super! Now I am sure that by staying with you, in a couple of years I will become a doctor in English. I wish you to grow and develop, well, I am with you.

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  • Thank you very much for your site. Working with your site is very helpful for developing listening skills. I have been learning English for many years, but understanding English has been my main problem. After studying on your site, I made a big leap in this area and began to understand English texts by ear much better. An important innovation of the site developers are interactive exercises - puzzles. They allow not only to watch a video and read subtitles, but to actively act, making sentences heard from words. Very impressive selection of videos and movies. Personally, I especially like non-fiction documentaries, a large number of which are available on the site. In the future, I would like to see on your site the series "Friends" (at least its first series) and classic English detective stories (such as, for example, "Inspector Morse" or "Inspector Lewis"), as well as films in which you can hear correct and competent English speech ("Royal English"). Also, in my opinion, it would be useful to create a general rating table for site participants so that they can compete with each other while being active. I would like to wish the site developers further success and further development of this very useful undertaking.

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    Anton,
    28 years old, Khabarovsk
  • Usually I don't write reviews, I don't like (or maybe I don't know how). But for my favorite site Puzzle-English I will make an exception :-) In my opinion, Puzzle-English is the best site for self-learning English, and even in a playful way. The site is never boring, you can always choose a video to your liking, regardless of the level of language proficiency. The site will be interesting for both a beginner and an experienced student: before you is a huge catalog of cute songs for children, cartoons, music hits that thunder all over the world, performances by famous artists and politicians, fragments of TV shows, educational videos and other videos of various levels of complexity. Your task is to listen to part of the video, try to hear the phrase well and assemble a mosaic from its words. I treat this service as a game, entertainment, when I want to take a break from my main work and relax for ten minutes, I just go to Puzzle-English and collect the video I like. There is an interesting effect with songs when you UNDERSTAND what this song is about. Those who are interested in English grammar can go to the exercises section and practice the chosen topic, collecting specially selected sentences, of course, first listening to a short theoretical video themes. All phrases in this section are voiced by the announcer. The Puzzle-English website has a unique service "Series". Before you are several dozen episodes of famous TV series and programs: “Two and a Half Men”, “Sherlock”, “Great Expectations”, “Life on Mars”, TED conference speeches, etc. You just watch your favorite TV series and press pause in difficult moments and it becomes possible to read the script of the series, listen to the phrase again, watch the video explanation of slang expressions and words. If you are a beginner, you can set up subtitles in English and/or Russian. The site has a built-in player specially designed, and therefore convenient, for learning the language. All unfamiliar words can be placed in the "personal dictionary". It is noteworthy that in addition to the word, the corresponding phrase with a translation into Russian is placed in the dictionary. And in the end, I want to recommend you the Puzzle-English channel on YouTube, the guys share tips for self-learning languages ​​there, and the entire collection of educational videos of the site is collected there. PS. In order to use the site, it is not necessary to be a user with a paid account. Many sections can be used for free, just an annoying sign with a payment offer will be displayed all the time. P.P.S. And yet I urge you to pay for the services of the site, this money will help make the site even better, and its creators deserve to be paid for their work, in addition, you will have a lot of additional opportunities.

    Inga,
    Hero City Sevastopol
  • When I started learning English in the eighteenth last century we had only boring and incomprehensible English manuals. At that time didn't exist the mp3 players, smartphones and laptops. I remembered even how People lived without the internet. And If I'd such stuff earlier, I'd been probably speaking English fluently now and could understand the English speech, movies and songs. Modernity has given us awesome facilities to study English. We can read the authentic books and newspapers, hear the English songs and audio books, watch the foreign movies and TV, communicate with native speakers. But we haven't any time to practice this. Because I was glad when I found the site Puzzle English. On this website you can take a maximum of English stuff for yourself and spend a minimum of your time. Where are huge plenty of useful and interested English lessons, exercises, TV "s serials and so long. All of the ones were carefully prepared for education purpose. You can instantly find translation and pronunciation each English word or phrase and add one in your private vocabulary to try it later. All workouts are doing easy and fast. And I"m visiting on every day this site to improve my English language. Of course I use not only this website, but Puzzle English is my favorite one. And I hope with Puzzle English my awful English will have been reached the perfection.

    Vladimir Schepkov,
    49 years old, Sergiev Posad