Ver English Grammar | Launch: Upgrade Your Speaking And Listening Vídeos Extra Quality
Don’t just read about grammar. Ver it. Share this post with a friend who says “I understand but I can’t speak.” They need to see this. 🎬
| | Video (Ver Grammar Launch) | | --- | --- | | Static example sentences | Dynamic conversations with real people | | No pronunciation help | Native intonation & connected speech (e.g., “gonna,” “wanna,” “didja”) | | You imagine the context | You see the context (facial expressions, gestures, situation) | | Listening is separate | Listening + grammar + speaking happen together | Don’t just read about grammar
This is where you “ver” the grammar. Pause when a structure appears. Read the on-screen explanation. Listen to the same sentence 2–3 times. 🎬 | | Video (Ver Grammar Launch) |
[Insert link to your videos or YouTube playlist] Listen to the same sentence 2–3 times
Play the video again, but this time speak along with the speaker — like a shadow. Match their speed, stress, and melody. Do this even if you feel silly. Your mouth needs the workout. Pro tip: Record yourself on your phone. Compare with the video. That’s how you upgrade fast. Bonus: Why Listening Improves When You Watch Grammar Videos There’s a secret: Listening problems are often grammar problems .
Ver English Grammar Launch: Upgrade Your Speaking and Listening with Videos
If you don’t know that “I’d’ve” means “I would have,” you’ll never hear it correctly. If you’re not sure how “must have” changes meaning, you’ll get lost.