What You Can Practise in General English
The General English portal is for learners who want useful English beyond a single exam. You can practise conversation, pronunciation, vocabulary, grammar, dictation, listening for details, and workplace communication. The goal is not only to know rules, but to use English faster and more confidently in real situations.
Speaking practice helps you turn passive knowledge into active communication. Vocabulary practice builds useful word groups and collocations. Grammar lessons focus on patterns that cause repeated mistakes, such as tense control, articles, prepositions, sentence structure, and conditionals.
Best Practice Plan for Everyday English
A simple weekly plan works best: speak three times per week, review vocabulary daily, complete two grammar lessons, and use dictation or listening-for-details practice when you need better accuracy. For workplace learners, add one business-English task each week, such as explaining a project, writing a short email, or answering an interview-style question.
For students, connect General English practice to school tasks: summarise an article, explain a graph, discuss an opinion, or present a short topic aloud. These activities build the same foundation later needed for IELTS, TOEFL, and university classroom communication.
Beginners should keep sessions short and repeatable. Intermediate learners should add longer speaking turns, more precise vocabulary, and grammar review based on mistakes found in their own answers.
Choose the Right General English Starting Point
If you freeze when speaking, start with AI speaking practice and short recordings. If you understand lessons but forget words, start with vocabulary review and dictation. If your sentences sound unnatural, start with grammar patterns and rewrite practice. The best starting point is the skill that currently blocks communication most often.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is General English practice?
General English practice builds everyday speaking, vocabulary, grammar, listening, and communication skills instead of focusing only on one exam.
Should I study General English before IELTS or TOEFL?
If your foundation is weak, yes. Better vocabulary, grammar, listening accuracy, and speaking confidence make exam preparation much easier.