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Storm in a teacup
Storm in a teacup













storm in a teacup

You can sign up for our free course, The Seven Rules of Adept English and learn how to use the courses and the podcasts to give you the best advantage. If you’re really serious about your English language learning and you’d like to progress even faster, then we have a number of things of interest on our website for you. Listening to Adept English will help you grow an ‘English area, an English part of your bran’, so that you stop translating from English into your own language and you can become more fluent. If you would like to improve your spoken English language, then you’re in the right place. Hi there and welcome to this short podcast from Adept English. Transcript: English Idioms A Storm In A Teacup You can still download and listen to this lesson as part of one of our podcast bundles. Listen To The Audio Lesson Now The mp3 audio and pdf transcript for this lesson is now part of the Adept English back catalogue. So it was of no surprise to hear a news reporter on the BBC news talking about the English idiom “A storm in a teacup”. As you can imagine there are arguments about how we should leave are many, and when they happen, they can be loud and angry, especially in parliament between MPs (Members of parliament).

storm in a teacup

So in the UK right now we are swapping prime ministers, the top job in UK government is tough right now as the 67 million people who live in Britain are arguing over how we should leave our countries current membership of the European Union. We often hear something or say something in conversation and think “Now that is something a new English language learner would not understand…” The English being spoken right now by native British English speakers. If you follow our podcasts and listen regularly, then you will know we focus our lessons on everyday English. Something you will probably never come across. When we talk about English idioms, you might think this is a little used or useless part of your English language learning.















Storm in a teacup