Stop Saying “Many Schedules”: A Common TOEIC English Mistake Explained Titelbild

Stop Saying “Many Schedules”: A Common TOEIC English Mistake Explained

Stop Saying “Many Schedules”: A Common TOEIC English Mistake Explained

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Many TOEIC learners believe that saying many schedules is correct English. However, in most business situations, schedule refers to the entire set of planned activities, not individual tasks. That is why expressions like busy schedule, tight schedule, and check my schedule frequently appear in TOEIC Listening and Reading sections. Understanding this distinction will help you sound more natural in workplace communication and improve your TOEIC performance. 💡 Full transcript, vocab & grammar: https://toeic.mjenglishclass.com/uncategorized/toeic-schedule-english/ Dialogue Vocabulary Boost Grammar Points 📖 Transcript Quick Check Suggested Internal Links English Dialogue(Office Meeting) Emily: Are you available for a meeting tomorrow morning? Jason: I’m afraid not. My schedule is already full. Emily: Oh, I see. What about Thursday afternoon? Jason: Thursday might work. Let me check my calendar. Emily: We need to finalize the marketing proposal this week. Jason: Understood. My schedule is quite tight, but I’ll try to make time. Emily: If Thursday doesn’t work, we can move it to Friday. Jason: Friday should be fine. My schedule is lighter that day. Emily: Great. I’ll send a meeting invitation later. Jason: Perfect. Please include the project agenda as well. -- Hosting provided by SoundOn
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