20 Intermediate English Phrases | Lingoda

August 2024 · 5 minute read

Are you starting to feel more confident with your English? Once you’re past the beginner stage, you feel like it is time to level up and try to sound as natural as possible. To help you succeed in the challenge, we compiled a list of useful phrases in English that will help you evolve from using a very functional language to a more fluent conversation. These expressions allow you to understand native speakers when they decide to resort to a vocabulary hidden from or less common for English learners. 

Read on and get your memory into gear so you can learn and practice these useful phrases.

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Greetings

“Hello, how are you?”: we are positive you are quite familiar with this expression. However, how often have you actually heard a native English speaker use it? Two more natural ways to ask someone how they are are: 

Depending on the time (and energy) you have available, you can quickly check on a person using the first phrase or, if the moment allows for it, use the second one to really take an interest in the other.

General phrases

Find here some useful sentences to use in everyday life.

This is a great phrase to learn as you can use it in almost any situation. 

Do you fancy going to the Indian restaurant tonight? Or, Do you fancy a coffee? 

You might want to give more detail and say: Can you give me a hand with this bag? for example. However don’t worry, no native speaker will try to romantically hold your hand if you say this. 

Alternative ways to say “I don’t know”

Of course, you can just say: I don’t know. But there are other, natural ways to express the same thing. 

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Accepting and refusing

We are offered things every day and sometimes we want to accept whereas in others we prefer a healthy “no”. Here are some ways to do that (without using the words yes and no!):

First, let’s accept some offers: 

To say no politely, try these two phrases:

Asking for and giving advice

The more you get confident with the use of your English, the more you will want to interact with other participants and to give your own opinion, advices and share your point of view in different contexts.

Here are some common ways to do that. 

Time to practice!

Aside from learning the correct way of expressing yourself, the goal of learning a language is to sound as natural as possible. While knowing some basic phrases is useful and paves your way into the first experiences of real and live communications, mastering idiomatic ones will make you rise to the next level. Now that you know different ways of conveying the same meaning, go out and practice as much as you can.

Learn languages at your pace

Laura Jones

Laura is a freelance writer and was an ESL teacher for eight years. She was born in the UK and has lived in Australia and Poland, where she writes blogs for Lingoda about everything from grammar to dating English speakers. She’s definitely better at the first one. She loves travelling and that’s the other major topic that she writes on. Laura likes pilates and cycling, but when she’s feeling lazy she can be found curled up watching Netflix. She’s currently learning Polish, and her battle with that mystifying language has given her huge empathy for anyone struggling to learn English. Find out more about her work in her portfolio.

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