Speaking: Fluency & Coherence B1 - Lesson 2: Using a Wider Range of Connectors (although, while, as well as)
Lesson 2: Connecting Ideas with a Wide Range of Connectors Achieving structural flow in spoken English requires shifting away from short, isolated phrases. By utilizing advanced linking words, you build clear pathways between complex thoughts, making your speech sound natural and articulate. Core Connectors Covered: Although: Used to establish a surprising contrast or concession. Can be placed at the beginning or middle of sentences. While: Used to signal actions occurring simultaneously, or to demonstrate a clear comparative difference between two subjects. As well as: Used as a fluent substitute for 'and' to attach extra, descriptive details smoothly. Linguistic Trap: The Double Contrast Error Avoid using 'Although' and 'But' inside the same sentence structure. Choose only one connector to manage the contrast profile. Please enable JavaScript to view the interactive sound nodes, multi-layered evaluation metrics, and resource downloading engines.