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The Cognitio

Days of the Week in French: Pronunciation, Origins, and Real-Life Usage

Days of the Week in French: Pronunciation, Origins, and Real-Life Usage

Talking about your week is one of the first genuinely useful things you can do in a new language. Whether you’re booking a café meeting, planning a weekend trip, or simply telling a friend when you’re free, the days of the week in French show up constantly. The good news is that there are only […]

Korean Sentence Structure Made Simple: A Beginner’s Guide to Word Order

Korean Sentence Structure Made Simple: A Beginner's Guide to Word Order

If you have ever tried to translate an English sentence word-for-word into Korean, you have probably ended up with something that sounds strange to a native speaker. That is because Korean does not simply swap English words for Korean ones — it arranges them in a completely different order and glues on small grammar markers […]

Who vs. Whom: The Simple Trick to Get It Right Every Time

Who vs. Whom: The Simple Trick to Get It Right Every Time

Few grammar questions cause as much quiet panic as choosing between who and whom. Even fluent English speakers hesitate, and many simply avoid “whom” altogether. But here’s the good news: the difference follows one clear rule, and once you learn a simple trick, you’ll never have to guess again. This guide breaks it all down […]

How to Use Dual Subtitles on Netflix to Learn a Language Faster

How to Use Dual Subtitles on Netflix to Learn a Language Faster

Watching Netflix in another language is one of the most enjoyable ways to learn — but standard single subtitles force an awkward choice. Turn on subtitles in your target language and you may not understand a word. Turn on subtitles in your native language and you tune the foreign audio out completely. Dual subtitles solve […]

“Used To” in English: The Complete Guide to Talking About Past Habits

"Used To" in English: The Complete Guide to Talking About Past Habits

Few little phrases in English cause as much quiet confusion as “used to.” It looks simple, but it actually hides three very different structures: used to (past habits), be used to (being accustomed to something), and get used to (becoming accustomed). Mix them up and a sentence can flip its meaning entirely. This guide breaks […]

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