A expressão "At the point" existe?
Does the expression "at the point" exist? If it does, is it correct on the next sentence?
"I would like to be fluent in English at the point where any native English speaker couldn't figure out I am not an English native speaker. And I WILL achieve that goal, you bet!"
I would really appreciate if you could correct others English mistakes I had made as well.
Thank you very much indeed!
"I would like to be fluent in English at the point where any native English speaker couldn't figure out I am not an English native speaker. And I WILL achieve that goal, you bet!"
I would really appreciate if you could correct others English mistakes I had made as well.
Thank you very much indeed!
TESTE DE NÍVEL
3 respostas
Ordenar por: Data
Olá Tiago,
Minha sugestão:
"I´d like to be fluent in English and get to a point where no native speaker would be able to notice I´m Brazilian."
"Where there´s a will,there´s a way."(Querer é poder.)
Go for it!(Vai nessa!)
Boa sorte!
Minha sugestão:
"I´d like to be fluent in English and get to a point where no native speaker would be able to notice I´m Brazilian."
"Where there´s a will,there´s a way."(Querer é poder.)
Go for it!(Vai nessa!)
Boa sorte!
Yes, there is an expression almost like that.Tiago escreveu:Does the expression "at the point" exist? If it does, is it correct on the next sentence?
"I would like to be fluent in English at the point where any native English speaker couldn't figure out I am not an English native speaker. And I WILL achieve that goal, you bet!"
I would really appreciate if you could correct others English mistakes I had made as well.
Thank you very much indeed!
You can say, " I'd like to be fluent in English to the point that no native speaker could figure out that I an not a native speaker."
Ohter examples from the web:
I would really like to actually be conversationally fluent to the point where I wouldn't feel like a retard when I speak french.
But I'm fluent to the point that people get confused trying to figure out where I'm from.
i want to be very fluent to the point where its as if im a native speaker any advice?
I became fluent in Gujarati, my family language (I became fluent to the point that I remember arguing with the rickshaw driver in front of a family friend.
Unfortunately, while I can conduct business in German, I would not consider myself completely fluent to the point where 1 can do two things at one time.
Thanks for the answer Mary. So, the expression "at the point" doesn't exist in any context?maryziller escreveu:Yes, there is an expression almost like that.Tiago escreveu:Does the expression "at the point" exist? If it does, is it correct on the next sentence?
"I would like to be fluent in English at the point where any native English speaker couldn't figure out I am not an English native speaker. And I WILL achieve that goal, you bet!"
I would really appreciate if you could correct others English mistakes I had made as well.
Thank you very much indeed!
You can say, " I'd like to be fluent in English to the point that no native speaker could figure out that I an not a native speaker."
Ohter examples from the web:
I would really like to actually be conversationally fluent to the point where I wouldn't feel like a retard when I speak french.
But I'm fluent to the point that people get confused trying to figure out where I'm from.
i want to be very fluent to the point where its as if im a native speaker any advice?
I became fluent in Gujarati, my family language (I became fluent to the point that I remember arguing with the rickshaw driver in front of a family friend.
Unfortunately, while I can conduct business in German, I would not consider myself completely fluent to the point where 1 can do two things at one time.
TESTE DE NÍVEL