# Moments by Akim
**@kareta_ak**

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Showing 10 of 42 moments

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## 1. 8/27/2025

Present Perfect Continuous (“I have been doing”)

⸻

1. What is Present Perfect Continuous?

We use it to talk about:
	1.	An action started in the past and still continues now
	•	“I have been studying English for 2 years.”
	•	“She has been working here since 2020.”
	2.	An action that was happening recently and we can see the result now
	•	“You are tired because you have been running.”
	•	“It has been raining, the ground is wet.”

⸻

2. Structure (formula)

👉 Subject + have/has + been + verb(-ing)

✅ Examples:
	•	I have been reading.
	•	She has been cooking all day.
	•	They have been playing football.

⸻

3. Positive / Negative / Questions

Positive
	•	I have been learning English.
	•	He has been playing guitar.

Negative
	•	I have not been learning English.
	•	She has not been studying.

Questions
	•	Have you been learning English?
	•	Has he been playing guitar?

⸻

4. Time expressions often used
	•	for (a period of time) → “for 3 hours”
	•	since (a point in time) → “since 2010”
	•	all day / all morning / all night
	•	recently / lately

⸻

5. Difference: Present Perfect Simple vs Continuous

Present Perfect Simple → focus on result
	•	“I have written 3 emails.” (The result is 3 emails.)

Present Perfect Continuous → focus on activity / process
	•	“I have been writing emails all morning.” (The activity, not the result.)

⸻

6. Examples in daily life
	•	I have been waiting for you for 30 minutes.
	•	She has been watching TV since 6 p.m.
	•	They have been playing football all afternoon.
	•	We have been studying hard for the exam.

⸻

7. Practice

👉 Fill in the blanks:
	1.	I _______ (wait) for the bus for 20 minutes.
	2.	She _______ (study) since morning.
	3.	They _______ (not/work) today.
	4.	_______ you _______ (practice) your guitar?
	5.	It _______ (rain) all day.

👉 Write 5 sentences about your own life using Present Perfect Continuous.

**Language**: English

*90 views*

[View this moment](https://www.hellotalk.com/moments/u3xFrJzLtwnNHD.md)

---

## 2. 8/26/2025

Present Perfect Simple (“I have done”)

⸻

1. What is Present Perfect Simple?

We use it to talk about:
	1.	Experience in life (no exact time)
	•	“I have visited Paris.”
	•	“She has never tried sushi.”
	2.	Recent actions (the result is important now)
	•	“I have lost my keys.” (I don’t have them now.)
	3.	Unfinished time (this week, today, this year)
	•	“We have studied a lot this week.”

⸻

2. Structure (formula)

👉 Subject + have/has + past participle (3rd form of verb)

✅ Examples:
	•	I have eaten breakfast.
	•	She has finished her homework.
	•	They have gone to the gym.

❌ Wrong: I have eat / She has go

⸻

3. Past participle forms (regular + irregular)
	•	Regular verbs: -ed
	•	play → played
	•	work → worked
	•	study → studied
	•	Irregular verbs (must learn):
	•	go → gone
	•	eat → eaten
	•	see → seen
	•	do → done
	•	write → written

⸻

4. Positive / Negative / Questions

Positive
	•	I have watched that movie.
	•	He has read the book.

Negative
	•	I have not watched that movie.
	•	She has not finished her homework.

Questions
	•	Have you watched that movie?
	•	Has he finished the book?

⸻

5. Time expressions often used with Present Perfect
	•	ever / never
	•	already / yet
	•	just
	•	today / this week / this year
	•	so far
	•	since / for

✅ Examples:
	•	Have you ever been to Spain?
	•	I have never tried sushi.
	•	She has just left.
	•	We haven’t finished yet.

⸻

6. Examples in daily life
	•	I have already eaten lunch.
	•	They haven’t done their homework yet.
	•	She has lived in London for three years.
	•	We have known each other since 2020.

⸻

7. Practice

👉 Fill in the blanks:
	1.	I _______ (see) this movie before.
	2.	She _______ (not/finish) her homework yet.
	3.	_______ you ever _______ (eat) sushi?
	4.	They _______ (just/go) to the shop.
	5.	He _______ (live) here for 10 years.

👉 Write 5 sentences about your own life using Present Perfect.

**Language**: English

*4 likes · 1 comments · 88 views*

[View this moment](https://www.hellotalk.com/moments/nIWvNTZbpzJNHD.md)

---

## 3. 8/25/2025

Present Continuous Tense (“I am doing”)

⸻

1. What is Present Continuous?

We use it to talk about:
	1.	Something happening now → “I am talking to you.”
	2.	Temporary actions → “She is living in London this month.”
	3.	Future plans → “We are meeting tomorrow.”

⸻

2. Structure (formula)

👉 Subject + am/is/are + verb(-ing)

✅ Examples:
	•	I am reading a book.
	•	She is cooking dinner.
	•	They are playing football.

❌ Wrong: I reading / She cooking

⸻

3. Spelling rules for -ing verbs
	•	work → working
	•	write → writing (drop the e)
	•	swim → swimming (double the m)
	•	run → running (double the n)

⸻

4. Positive / Negative / Questions

Positive
	•	I am studying English.
	•	He is watching TV.

Negative
	•	I am not studying.
	•	She is not listening.

Questions
	•	Am I talking too fast?
	•	Is he coming to the party?
	•	Are they playing tennis?

⸻

5. Time expressions (very common with Present Continuous)
	•	now
	•	right now
	•	at the moment
	•	today / this week / this month
	•	tonight / tomorrow (for future plans)

⸻

6. Examples in daily life
	•	I am drinking coffee right now.
	•	She is not working today.
	•	They are studying this week for exams.
	•	We are going to the cinema tonight.

⸻

7. Practice

👉 Fill in the blanks:
	1.	She _______ (read) a book now.
	2.	They _______ (not/play) football today.
	3.	_______ you _______ (study) for the test?
	4.	I _______ (cook) pasta at the moment.
	5.	We _______ (meet) friends tomorrow.

👉 Make 5 sentences about yourself in Present Continuous.

**Language**: English

*4 likes · 73 views*

[View this moment](https://www.hellotalk.com/moments/VWVyyxxIZOJNHD.md)

---

## 4. 8/25/2025

Countable and Uncountable Nouns

⸻

1. What are countable nouns?

Countable nouns = things we can count.
They have singular and plural forms.

✅ Examples:
	•	one apple → two apples
	•	a car → three cars
	•	one friend → many friends

👉 We use a/an, numbers, and many/few with them.
	•	I have a dog.
	•	She has three books.
	•	We don’t have many chairs.

⸻

2. What are uncountable nouns?

Uncountable nouns = things we cannot count directly.
They don’t usually have plural forms.

✅ Examples:
	•	water, milk, sugar, rice
	•	money, information, advice, music

👉 We use much/little/some/any with them.
	•	I drink some water.
	•	He doesn’t have much money.
	•	Do you have any information?

⸻

3. Mixed examples
	•	Countable: I ate two bananas.
	•	Uncountable: I drank some juice.
	•	Countable: She bought a new chair.
	•	Uncountable: He needs advice. (❌ not advices)

⸻

4. Quantifiers (very useful!)

With countable nouns
	•	many (How many apples?)
	•	a few (I have a few friends.)
	•	several (She read several books.)

With uncountable nouns
	•	much (How much water?)
	•	a little (I have a little sugar.)
	•	a bit of (He needs a bit of help.)

With both countable + uncountable
	•	some (some apples / some tea)
	•	any (any chairs / any milk)
	•	a lot of (a lot of cars / a lot of money)

⸻

5. Practice

👉 Fill in the blanks:
	1.	How _______ chairs are in the room?
	2.	How _______ sugar do you want in your coffee?
	3.	I have _______ friends in London.
	4.	She doesn’t have _______ money today.
	5.	Can I have _______ water, please?

👉 Make sentences with:
	•	many
	•	much
	•	some
	•	a few
	•	a little

**Language**: English

*2 likes · 97 views*

[View this moment](https://www.hellotalk.com/moments/HSSSZWTQScFNHD.md)

---

## 5. 8/25/2025

1. Comparative Adjectives (two things)

👉 Structure: adjective + -er + than OR more + adjective + than
	•	My car is faster than your car.
	•	This book is more interesting than that one.

⸻

2. Superlative Adjectives (three or more things)

👉 Structure: the + adjective + -est OR the most + adjective
	•	This is the tallest building in the city.
	•	She is the most beautiful girl in the class.

⸻

3. Spelling Rules
	•	Short adjectives → add -er / -est
	•	tall → taller → the tallest
	•	fast → faster → the fastest
	•	Adjectives ending in -y → change y to i
	•	happy → happier → the happiest
	•	Long adjectives (2+ syllables) → use more / most
	•	interesting → more interesting → the most interesting
	•	expensive → more expensive → the most expensive

⸻

4. Examples
	•	My house is bigger than your house.
	•	Today is hotter than yesterday.
	•	This is the best movie I’ve ever seen.
	•	He is the most intelligent student in the group.

⸻

5. Useful Vocabulary for Comparisons
	•	tall / short
	•	big / small
	•	fast / slow
	•	hot / cold
	•	cheap / expensive
	•	old / young
	•	easy / difficult
	•	good / bad

⸻

6. Practice

👉 Fill the gaps:
	1.	This hotel is __________ (cheap) than the other one.
	2.	She is __________ (beautiful) girl in the class.
	3.	Today is __________ (hot) than yesterday.
	4.	English is __________ (easy) than Chinese.

👉 Make your own sentences with:
	•	bigger
	•	more interesting
	•	the best
	•	the most expensive

**Language**: English

*3 likes · 99 views*

[View this moment](https://www.hellotalk.com/moments/yEqwzUDEq4FNHD.md)

---

## 6. 8/24/2025

Future Forms in English

⸻

1. Different Future Forms

In English, there are a few ways to talk about the future:

a) Will (decisions, promises, predictions)
	•	I will call you tomorrow.
	•	Don’t worry, it will be fine.

b) Be going to (plans, intentions, predictions with evidence)
	•	I’m going to visit my friend next week.
	•	Look at those clouds! It’s going to rain.

c) Present Continuous (future meaning)
	•	I’m meeting my friend at 5 p.m. (fixed arrangement).

d) Present Simple (timetables/schedules)
	•	The train leaves at 8:00 tomorrow.

⸻

2. Structure

➡️ Will
	•	Positive: I will go to the party.
	•	Negative: I won’t go to the party.
	•	Question: Will you go to the party?

➡️ Going to
	•	Positive: She is going to study medicine.
	•	Negative: She is not going to study medicine.
	•	Question: Are you going to study medicine?

⸻

3. Time Expressions for Future
	•	tomorrow
	•	next week / next month / next year
	•	soon
	•	in a few days
	•	in 2026

⸻

4. Examples
	•	I will help you with your homework.
	•	She is going to start a new job next week.
	•	We are having a family dinner on Friday.
	•	The bus leaves at 6:30 a.m. tomorrow.

⸻

5. Vocabulary for Future Plans
	•	travel
	•	study
	•	start a job
	•	buy a house
	•	get married
	•	go shopping
	•	visit a friend
	•	take a holiday
	•	play football
	•	watch a movie

⸻

6. Practice

👉 Fill in with will or going to:
	1.	It looks dark outside. It __________ rain.
	2.	Don’t worry! I __________ help you.
	3.	We __________ visit our grandparents next weekend.

👉 Make a sentence with:
	•	“next week”
	•	“in 2026”
	•	“soon”

**Language**: English

*3 likes · 77 views*

[View this moment](https://www.hellotalk.com/moments/A4RFAKAktmFNHD.md)

---

## 7. 8/24/2025

Present Perfect Tense

⸻

1. Rule

We use Present Perfect to talk about:
	1.	Life experiences (no specific time).
	•	Example: I have visited Paris.
	2.	Actions that started in the past and continue now.
	•	Example: She has lived here for 5 years.
	3.	Recent actions with a result now.
	•	Example: He has broken his leg.

✅ Structure:
Subject + have/has + past participle (V3)

⸻

2. Forms

➡️ Positive
	•	I have seen that movie.
	•	She has finished her homework.

➡️ Negative
	•	I haven’t seen that movie.
	•	He hasn’t finished his homework.

➡️ Questions
	•	Have you seen that movie? → Yes, I have. / No, I haven’t.
	•	Has she finished her homework? → Yes, she has. / No, she hasn’t.

⸻

3. Time Expressions
	•	ever / never
	•	already
	•	just
	•	yet
	•	for (a period of time)
	•	since (a starting point in time)

⸻

4. Examples
	•	I have never eaten sushi.
	•	She has already done her homework.
	•	They have just arrived.
	•	We have lived in London since 2020.
	•	He hasn’t finished his project yet.
	•	Have you ever traveled abroad?

⸻

5. Compare: Past Simple vs Present Perfect
	•	Past Simple = finished action in the past (time is clear).
	•	I watched that film last week.
	•	Present Perfect = life experience (time not important).
	•	I have watched that film.
6. Practice

👉 Complete the sentences:
	1.	I __________ (never / be) to New York.
	2.	She __________ (already / finish) her lunch.
	3.	We __________ (not / see) him today.

👉 Make questions:
	1.	You / ever / try / sushi? → __________
	2.	He / finish / his work yet? → __________

**Language**: English

*6 likes · 82 views*

[View this moment](https://www.hellotalk.com/moments/SbIzLOO3EEFNHD.md)

---

## 8. 8/24/2025

Past Continuous Tense

⸻

1. Rule

We use Past Continuous for:
	1.	An action in progress at a certain time in the past.
	•	Example: At 8 p.m. yesterday, I was studying.
	2.	Two actions happening at the same time in the past.
	•	Example: She was cooking while I was watching TV.
	3.	A longer action interrupted by a shorter action (Past Simple).
	•	Example: I was walking when it started to rain.

✅ Structure:
Subject + was/were + verb(-ing)

⸻

2. Forms

➡️ Positive
	•	I was reading.
	•	They were playing.

➡️ Negative
	•	I was not (wasn’t) reading.
	•	They were not (weren’t) playing.

➡️ Questions
	•	Was he reading? → Yes, he was. / No, he wasn’t.
	•	Were they playing? → Yes, they were. / No, they weren’t.

⸻

3. Time Expressions
	•	at 8 o’clock yesterday
	•	yesterday evening / last night
	•	while
	•	when

⸻

4. Examples
	•	At 7 p.m. yesterday, I was cooking dinner.
	•	They were studying all night.
	•	I wasn’t sleeping at midnight.
	•	Was she reading a book? Yes, she was.
	•	He was walking in the park when he saw his friend.

⸻

5. Compare: Past Simple vs Past Continuous
	•	Past Simple = finished action
	•	I watched TV yesterday.
	•	Past Continuous = action in progress
	•	I was watching TV at 7 p.m. yesterday.
	•	Combination:
	•	I was watching TV when my friend called me.

⸻

6. Useful Verbs in -ing Form
	•	play → playing
	•	eat → eating
	•	write → writing
	•	run → running
	•	swim → swimming
	•	read → reading
	•	dance → dancing
	•	work → working

⸻

7. Practice

👉 Complete the sentences:
	1.	At 10 o’clock last night, I __________ (sleep).
	2.	They __________ (play) football while she __________ (read).
	3.	He __________ (not / study) at 5 p.m. yesterday.

👉 Make questions:
	1.	You / work / at 9 yesterday? → ____________
	2.	She / read / when he called? → ____________

**Language**: English

*5 likes · 3 comments · 95 views*

[View this moment](https://www.hellotalk.com/moments/VRpTTKuEMNFNHD.md)

---

## 9. 8/24/2025

Lesson: Years & Dates

1. Key Vocabulary
	•	year – 365 days (or 366 in a leap year)
	•	month – 12 in a year (January, February…)
	•	decade – 10 years
	•	century – 100 years
	•	millennium – 1,000 years
	•	leap year – a year with 366 days (next one: 2028)
	•	date – a specific day (e.g., 16th August 2025)

⸻

2. How to Say Years

✅ From 1000 – 1999:
	•	1990 = nineteen ninety
	•	1984 = nineteen eighty-four
	•	1066 = ten sixty-six

✅ From 2000 – 2009:
	•	2000 = two thousand
	•	2005 = two thousand and five (or twenty oh-five)

✅ From 2010 onwards:
	•	2010 = twenty ten
	•	2024 = twenty twenty-four
	•	2025 = twenty twenty-five

⸻

3. Saying Dates

👉 Format in British English (used in the UK):
day – month – year
	•	16 August 2025 → the sixteenth of August, twenty twenty-five

👉 Format in American English (USA):
month – day – year
	•	August 16, 2025 → August sixteenth, twenty twenty-five

⸻

4. Example Sentences
	•	I was born in 2006. (two thousand and six)
	•	The Olympics were in 2012. (twenty twelve)
	•	The Internet became popular in the 1990s.
	•	The Second World War ended in 1945.
	•	My birthday is on the 16th of August.

⸻

5. Time Expressions with Years
	•	last year → 2024
	•	this year → 2025
	•	next year → 2026
	•	in the past → before now
	•	in the future → after now
	•	decade → the 1990s, the 2000s
	•	century → the 21st century (2001–2100)

⸻

6. Practice Exercise

👉 Write these years in words:
	1.	1997 = ___________________
	2.	2008 = ___________________
	3.	2025 = ___________________
	4.	1776 = ___________________
	5.	2100 = ___________________

👉 Write your answers:
	•	I was born in ______.
	•	This year is ______.
	•	Next year will be ______.
	•	My birthday is on ______.

**Language**: English

*2 likes · 77 views*

[View this moment](https://www.hellotalk.com/moments/xjA2pxpQOzBNHD.md)

---

## 10. 8/23/2025

Lesson: The Clock & Time

1. Key Vocabulary
	•	clock – the object that shows time
	•	watch – small clock on your wrist
	•	hour – 60 minutes
	•	minute – 60 seconds
	•	second – smallest unit of time

⏰ Parts of the clock:
	•	o’clock – full hour (8:00 = eight o’clock)
	•	half past – 30 minutes (8:30 = half past eight)
	•	quarter past – 15 minutes (8:15 = quarter past eight)
	•	quarter to – 45 minutes (8:45 = quarter to nine)

⸻

2. How to Say Time

✅ On the hour:
	•	1:00 → It’s one o’clock.
	•	7:00 → It’s seven o’clock.

✅ Minutes past the hour:
	•	1:10 → It’s ten past one.
	•	3:25 → It’s twenty-five past three.

✅ Minutes to the next hour:
	•	1:50 → It’s ten to two.
	•	4:40 → It’s twenty to five.

✅ Special times:
	•	12:00 pm → noon / midday
	•	12:00 am → midnight

⸻

3. Examples in Sentences
	•	The class starts at nine o’clock.
	•	I eat lunch at half past twelve.
	•	The train leaves at quarter to four.
	•	I go to bed at ten to eleven.

⸻

4. Useful Phrases
	•	What time is it? = Excuse me, what’s the time?
	•	It’s ______ (time).
	•	At what time does the movie start? → It starts at 7:30.
	•	The shop opens at 9 o’clock and closes at 6.

⸻

5. Vocabulary to Practice
	•	morning (6 am – 12 pm)
	•	afternoon (12 pm – 6 pm)
	•	evening (6 pm – 10 pm)
	•	night (after 10 pm)
	•	early / late
	•	schedule / timetable

⸻

6. Practice Exercise

👉 Write the time in words:
	1.	2:15 = ___________________
	2.	5:45 = ___________________
	3.	11:30 = ___________________
	4.	9:05 = ___________________
	5.	12:00 am = ___________________

👉 Make 3 sentences about your daily routine using time:
	•	I wake up at ______.
	•	I eat lunch at ______.
	•	I go to bed at ______.

**Language**: English

*5 likes · 111 views*

[View this moment](https://www.hellotalk.com/moments/DmvUEvMjpRBNHD.md)

---

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- [Learn German](https://www.hellotalk.com/en/learn/german.md): Master German with native speakers
- [Learn Chinese](https://www.hellotalk.com/en/learn/chinese.md): Master Chinese with native speakers
- [Learn Italian](https://www.hellotalk.com/en/learn/italian.md): Master Italian with native speakers
- [Learn Russian](https://www.hellotalk.com/en/learn/russian.md): Master Russian with native speakers
- [Learn Portuguese](https://www.hellotalk.com/en/learn/portuguese.md): Master Portuguese with native speakers
- [Learn Arabic](https://www.hellotalk.com/en/learn/arabic.md): Master Arabic with native speakers
- [Learn Korean](https://www.hellotalk.com/en/learn/korean.md): Master Korean with native speakers
- [Learn Hindi](https://www.hellotalk.com/en/learn/hindi.md): Master Hindi with native speakers

## Partners by Country

- [USA Language Partners](https://www.hellotalk.com/en/partners/countries/usa.md): Find language exchange partners in United States
- [UK Language Partners](https://www.hellotalk.com/en/partners/countries/uk.md): Find language exchange partners in United Kingdom
- [Canada Language Partners](https://www.hellotalk.com/en/partners/countries/canada.md): Find language exchange partners in Canada
- [Australia Language Partners](https://www.hellotalk.com/en/partners/countries/australia.md): Find language exchange partners in Australia
- [Japan Language Partners](https://www.hellotalk.com/en/partners/countries/japan.md): Find language exchange partners in Japan
- [Korea Language Partners](https://www.hellotalk.com/en/partners/countries/korea.md): Find language exchange partners in Korea
- [China Language Partners](https://www.hellotalk.com/en/partners/countries/china.md): Find language exchange partners in China
- [Spain Language Partners](https://www.hellotalk.com/en/partners/countries/spain.md): Find language exchange partners in Spain
- [France Language Partners](https://www.hellotalk.com/en/partners/countries/france.md): Find language exchange partners in France
- [Germany Language Partners](https://www.hellotalk.com/en/partners/countries/germany.md): Find language exchange partners in Germany
- [Brazil Language Partners](https://www.hellotalk.com/en/partners/countries/brazil.md): Find language exchange partners in Brazil
- [India Language Partners](https://www.hellotalk.com/en/partners/countries/india.md): Find language exchange partners in India

## Resources

- [Download iOS App](https://apps.apple.com/app/hellotalk/id557130558): Get HelloTalk on the App Store
- [Download Android App](https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.hellotalk): Get HelloTalk on Google Play
- [AI Language Apps](https://www.hellotalk.com/en/aiapps.md): Explore AI-powered language learning tools
- [About HelloTalk](https://www.hellotalk.com/en/about.md): Learn more about our mission
- [Blog](https://www.hellotalk.com/en/blog.md): Language learning tips and stories
- [Help Center](https://www.hellotalk.com/en/faq.md): Get answers to common questions

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*HelloTalk connects you with native speakers worldwide for authentic language practice and cultural exchange.*