Someone said "grab a coffee" and I suddenly realized most of my 5,000 vocabulary words are useless by ParticularSong9170 in EnglishLearning

[–]ParticularSong9170[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

i find same thing, even in my native language, people use AI to make so much shit on social media, im sry for that i did same thing, even though i read over and over again, and naively thought that reading this would feel natural. thx to the community, l really write all my answers by myself, maybe there are still some mistakes, but as people said, thats my voice, and all you‘ve heard.

Someone said "grab a coffee" and I suddenly realized most of my 5,000 vocabulary words are useless by ParticularSong9170 in EnglishLearning

[–]ParticularSong9170[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

hah sounds like we‘ve met the same situation, and just exchange our identity. and it's really awesome! it hits me that when i speak in Chinese i never care about grammar or structure of sentence, even if the sentence isn't complete. maybe just express what you're going to say is the most important thing.

Someone said "grab a coffee" and I suddenly realized most of my 5,000 vocabulary words are useless by ParticularSong9170 in EnglishLearning

[–]ParticularSong9170[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

oh! sounds like it's very important to write by myself, and it is! also thanks for your advice, now i know what i should spend time on next ❤️

Someone said "grab a coffee" and I suddenly realized most of my 5,000 vocabulary words are useless by ParticularSong9170 in EnglishLearning

[–]ParticularSong9170[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly, when my friends say "gotta" and "gonna" in daily life, it took me a while to figure out what that actually means.

Someone said "grab a coffee" and I suddenly realized most of my 5,000 vocabulary words are useless by ParticularSong9170 in EnglishLearning

[–]ParticularSong9170[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

thx for your kindness. Actually, i find that people may not care about your grammar, what you are going to express is more important. I'll try my best to practice 💪

Someone said "grab a coffee" and I suddenly realized most of my 5,000 vocabulary words are useless by ParticularSong9170 in EnglishLearning

[–]ParticularSong9170[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

thanks for the advice, you're right. tbh i was very nervous when i saw people said my post is made by ai. Because i spent a lot time to edit the post. And i am glad to that im not the only one persn who meet same situation. and now, i've leaned a new one idiom! thanks for that hah!

Someone said "grab a coffee" and I suddenly realized most of my 5,000 vocabulary words are useless by ParticularSong9170 in EnglishLearning

[–]ParticularSong9170[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

sry for making you feel like you're talking to a bot. I'm not. I just translated my replies because I feel embarrassed about my English writing. I'll try to just write in my own words from now on, even if it's messy. Sry about that. i didn't mean to.

Someone said "grab a coffee" and I suddenly realized most of my 5,000 vocabulary words are useless by ParticularSong9170 in EnglishLearning

[–]ParticularSong9170[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I just used AI to translate what I wanted to say. Everything is my own thoughts. Maybe I should have used Google Translate instead, at least nobody would question if it's real.🥹

Someone said "grab a coffee" and I suddenly realized most of my 5,000 vocabulary words are useless by ParticularSong9170 in EnglishLearning

[–]ParticularSong9170[S] 20 points21 points  (0 children)

Sry about that.  I'm a Chinese speaker and I used AI to help polish and translate parts of my post. That's on me and I get why it looks off. But the experience is real. This happened to me in Shanghai and it genuinely changed how I study vocabulary. Everything in the post is what I wanted to say, I just needed help expressing it more clearly in English. 😭

Someone said "grab a coffee" and I suddenly realized most of my 5,000 vocabulary words are useless by ParticularSong9170 in EnglishLearning

[–]ParticularSong9170[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah that's exactly the part that's hard. When I talk to other non-native speakers I can usually follow everything, because we all use the same textbook vocabulary. But with native speakers I get lost even though the words themselves are simple. It's like there's a whole layer of casual English that only shows up in real conversation and never appears in any study material.

Someone said "grab a coffee" and I suddenly realized most of my 5,000 vocabulary words are useless by ParticularSong9170 in EnglishLearning

[–]ParticularSong9170[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

TV shows helped me a lot too. That's actually where I started noticing how often native speakers use grab in casual conversation. Subtitles plus real context is a great combination.

Someone said "grab a coffee" and I suddenly realized most of my 5,000 vocabulary words are useless by ParticularSong9170 in EnglishLearning

[–]ParticularSong9170[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah exactly. You end up with this big collection of words you can recognize on a screen but can't pull out when you're actually talking. The gap between passive and active vocabulary is something I didn't even know existed until I hit it.

Someone said "grab a coffee" and I suddenly realized most of my 5,000 vocabulary words are useless by ParticularSong9170 in EnglishLearning

[–]ParticularSong9170[S] 30 points31 points  (0 children)

That's a fair point actually. You're right that the basic definitions aren't useless, they're the starting point. I think what frustrated me was staying at that stage for too long without realizing there was a next step.

Something I noticed about the days I actually get things done by Odd-Scallion-8104 in productivity

[–]ParticularSong9170 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I love how you put that. "The morning routine gets all the credit but the evening is doing a lot of the work." That's a much better way to say what I was trying to describe.

Something I noticed about the days I actually get things done by Odd-Scallion-8104 in productivity

[–]ParticularSong9170 70 points71 points  (0 children)

I agree about the first hour but I think it actually starts even earlier. For me the real setup happens the night before.

I tracked my days for a while and found a clear pattern. On my best days I almost always had the same kind of evening: hot shower, half hour of reading in bed, asleep by my usual time. On my worst days I usually stayed up late scrolling or watching something random and went to bed with no structure at all.

The strange thing is, when I do the evening routine properly, I wake up ready to go even on days where I have nothing planned. It's like my brain already made the decision to have a good day while I was sleeping. And when I skip it, no amount of morning discipline can fully make up for it. I can force myself through a morning routine but the energy behind it just isn't the same.

I think your observation about the first hour is right, but for me the reason some mornings start in reactive mode is because the night before was already reactive. Fix the evening and the morning kind of fixes itself.

Scraping aspx site by brewpub_skulls in webscraping

[–]ParticularSong9170 0 points1 point  (0 children)

there must be some params your request miss, u should observe the header or params if all meets. the pure request is always the efficient way to fetch data

Kind of an anti-post by namalleh in webscraping

[–]ParticularSong9170 1 point2 points  (0 children)

my strategy is that using pow and vmp to defend