
Hosted by LV Linguistics · EN

Someone at a networking event asks what you do for work. Simple question. Your mind goes blank. You start explaining your department structure, your reporting lines, all the internal systems you work with. By the time you finish, the person looks confused and you feel embarrassed because you couldn't give a straightforward answer to a basic question. You know what you do. You do it every day. But explaining it clearly in English, especially to someone outside your company or industry, suddenly feels impossible.This episode gives you a simple, repeatable framework for describing your job without fumbling or overexplaining. We start with job titles, which are confusing because every company uses different terms for similar roles. What one place calls a "senior associate" another calls a "team lead" or "specialist." The solution is translating your official title into something anyone would understand. Instead of "Junior Account Management Specialist," just say "I work in account management" or "I'm an account manager." Add your industry if it helps. "I'm a project manager at a construction company." That's it. Clear formula that works every time.The episode includes common verbs that appear constantly in job descriptions: manage, coordinate, support, lead, handle, organize, develop, analyze, oversee. These work across virtually any role and sound professional without being complicated. We also cover how to add context about why your work matters without sounding boastful, connecting what you do to bigger organizational goals.Resources:Download this episode's worksheet with example job descriptions, useful verbs, and practice exercises: lvlinguistics.be/episode57Ready to Practice Your English with Real People?Listening to podcasts is great for learning, but nothing builds confidence like actually speaking. That's where our English practice membership Level Up comes in. It's made especially for professionals just like you.Inside Level Up, you'll find tons of exercises you can do on desktop or mobile, a community of professionals who are working on their English confidence for work and business, daily unlimited live practice sessions you can join anytime, anywhere, and support from our team of coaches who answer questions and track your progress.If you're serious about getting confident with English, keep doing what you're doing right now (studying, listening to podcasts, doing exercises), but don't forget the critical piece: actually speaking. The more you speak, the more confident and comfortable you'll be with the English language.My amazing team of coaches and I are ready to support you in Level Up. Head over to lvlinguistics.be/levelup for more information. I hope to see you on the inside.Rate, Review, & Follow 💜"I love Business English Made Easy. It's so useful!"If that sounds like you, please consider rating and reviewing our show. This helps us support more people in enhancing their business English skills. Rate with five stars and write a review. Let us know what you loved most about the episode!Also, if you haven't done so already, follow the podcast. We're adding bonus episodes to the feed, and if you're not following, you might miss out. Follow now to stay updated!

You hit send on an email asking a colleague to finish something by Friday, then immediately reread what you wrote. Was that too harsh? Should there have been more softening language? Or maybe you went the opposite direction and wrote three apologetic paragraphs when one clear sentence would've worked better. Now the recipient isn't even sure what you actually want from them. This tension between being clear and being courteous shows up in every request you make, every piece of feedback you give, and every time you need to say no to someone.This episode tackles the specific challenge of balancing directness with politeness in professional English. Different cultures handle this differently. Some workplaces value getting straight to the point. Others expect you to soften every message and never quite state things directly. When all these communication styles collide in one English-speaking workplace, misunderstandings multiply. The direct people accidentally offend someone. The indirect people don't get what they need because nobody realized they were actually making a request.We also address saying no without shutting down relationships. "We can't do that" or "That's not possible" feels dismissive. "Unfortunately, that won't be possible with our current capacity" or "I wish we could accommodate that request, but we don't have the resources available right now" shows empathy while still being clear. Even better is offering an alternative instead of just refusing. The episode includes real examples of how to push back on unrealistic requests from managers without sounding difficult or uncommitted.Resources:Download this episode's worksheet with before and after examples, tone matching exercises, and practice scenarios: lvlinguistics.be/episode56Ready to Practice Your English with Real People?Listening to podcasts is great for learning, but nothing builds confidence like actually speaking. That's where our English practice membership Level Up comes in. It's made especially for professionals just like you.Inside Level Up, you'll find tons of exercises you can do on desktop or mobile, a community of professionals who are working on their English confidence for work and business, daily unlimited live practice sessions you can join anytime, anywhere, and support from our team of coaches who answer questions and track your progress.If you're serious about getting confident with English, keep doing what you're doing right now (studying, listening to podcasts, doing exercises), but don't forget the critical piece: actually speaking. The more you speak, the more confident and comfortable you'll be with the English language.My amazing team of coaches and I are ready to support you in Level Up. Head over to lvlinguistics.be/levelup for more information. I hope to see you on the inside.Rate, Review, & Follow 💜"I love Business English Made Easy. It's so useful!"If that sounds like you, please consider rating and reviewing our show. This helps us support more people in enhancing their business English skills. Rate with five stars and write a review. Let us know what you loved most about the episode!Also, if you haven't done so already, follow the podcast. We're adding bonus episodes to the feed, and if you're not following, you might miss out. Follow now to stay updated!

The email arrives at 4pm on Friday. Your client wants the project scope changed, the presentation moved up by a week, or the entire deliverable restructured. Your first instinct is panic. Your second instinct is to write back something that either sounds too apologetic, too cold, or just "OK" with no actual plan. None of these responses help. The first makes you look flustered, the second damages relationships, and the third leaves everyone uncertain about what happens next.The episode addresses two common mistakes. The first is barely communicating at all, just announcing changes without context or acknowledgment. The second is over-apologizing when you didn't actually cause the problem. One simple acknowledgment like "I know this isn't ideal timing, and I appreciate your flexibility" handles both issues. It validates the inconvenience without drowning in apologies.You'll also learn how to push back on unrealistic expectations without sounding difficult. When someone expands the project scope but keeps the deadline unchanged, saying "I want to make sure we deliver quality work, with the expanded scope could we discuss either extending the timeline or prioritizing certain deliverables" proposes solutions while making clear something has to give. That's solution-oriented communication that protects both quality and relationships.Resources:Download this episode's worksheet with key phrases, sample emails, and practice scenarios: lvlinguistics.be/episode55Ready to Practice Your English with Real People?Listening to podcasts is great for learning, but nothing builds confidence like actually speaking. That's where our English practice membership Level Up comes in. It's made especially for professionals just like you.Inside Level Up, you'll find tons of exercises you can do on desktop or mobile, a community of professionals who are working on their English confidence for work and business, daily unlimited live practice sessions you can join anytime, anywhere, and support from our team of coaches who answer questions and track your progress.If you're serious about getting confident with English, keep doing what you're doing right now (studying, listening to podcasts, doing exercises), but don't forget the critical piece: actually speaking. The more you speak, the more confident and comfortable you'll be with the English language.My amazing team of coaches and I are ready to support you in Level Up. Head over to lvlinguistics.be/levelup for more information. I hope to see you on the inside.Rate, Review, & Follow 💜"I love Business English Made Easy. It's so useful!"If that sounds like you, please consider rating and reviewing our show. This helps us support more people in enhancing their business English skills. Rate with five stars and write a review. Let us know what you loved most about the episode!Also, if you haven't done so already, follow the podcast. We're adding bonus episodes to the feed, and if you're not following, you might miss out. Follow now to stay updated!

Your colleague just handled a difficult client call brilliantly. You want to acknowledge it, but "good job" feels inadequate and anything longer feels awkward or over the top. So you say nothing. Later, a team member finishes a complex report after working late for three nights. You recognize the effort, but you're not their manager, so commenting feels like overstepping. These moments happen constantly, and your silence isn't neutral. It's a missed opportunity to build trust, strengthen relationships, and create the kind of team culture where people actually want to perform well.This episode gives you the exact phrases to motivate colleagues and team members without sounding forced, overly formal, or insincere. We cover how to give encouragement in everyday situations when something goes well, not just during formal performance reviews. You'll learn the difference between generic praise that feels empty and specific feedback that actually lands. Saying "good job" doesn't carry much weight. Saying "good job managing that client call today, you stayed calm and professional" shows you were paying attention and creates real motivation.We also address how to encourage progress rather than waiting for perfect results. When someone is learning a new system or developing a skill, acknowledging their effort keeps them moving forward. You'll get phrases that work whether you're a manager giving feedback to your team or a peer recognizing a colleague's contribution. The episode covers group motivation, one on one encouragement, and how to handle situations where the work wasn't perfect but the effort deserves recognition.Resources:Download this episode's worksheet with key phrases, email templates, and practice exercises: lvlinguistics.be/episode54Watch the video version of this episode on our YouTube channel for additional context and delivery examples: youtube.com/@lvlinguisticsReady to Practice Your English with Real People?Listening to podcasts is great for learning, but nothing builds confidence like actually speaking. That's where our English practice membership Level Up comes in. It's made especially for professionals just like you.Inside Level Up, you'll find tons of exercises you can do on desktop or mobile, a community of professionals who are working on their English confidence for work and business, daily unlimited live practice sessions you can join anytime, anywhere, and support from our team of coaches who answer questions and track your progress.If you're serious about getting confident with English, keep doing what you're doing right now (studying, listening to podcasts, doing exercises), but don't forget the critical piece: actually speaking. The more you speak, the more confident and comfortable you'll be with the English language.My amazing team of coaches and I are ready to support you in Level Up. Head over to lvlinguistics.be/levelup for more information. I hope to see you on the inside.Rate, Review, & Follow 💜"I love Business English Made Easy. It's so useful!"If that sounds like you, please consider rating and reviewing our show. This helps us support more people in enhancing their business English skills. Rate with five stars and write a review. Let us know what you loved most about the episode!Also, if you haven't done so already, follow the podcast. We're adding bonus episodes to the feed, and if you're not following, you might miss out. Follow now to stay updated!

You're drafting an email to clarify project responsibilities and you write "Sarah is responsible of the client updates." It sounds wrong, but you're not sure why. Later in a meeting, you need to represent your manager's position and you say "I'm speaking in behalf of the director" when the correct phrase is "on behalf of." These aren't individual preposition mistakes. They're fixed phrases that professionals use constantly, and getting them wrong makes you sound less credible even when your overall English is strong.This final episode in the Preposition Mastery series focuses on advanced prepositional phrases that signal leadership, formality, and precision. These are the expressions that appear in every status update, formal presentation, and strategic discussion. Phrases like "in charge of," "on behalf of," "at risk," and "in line with" aren't just vocabulary. They're the building blocks of how senior professionals communicate about responsibility, compliance, and organizational alignment.We break down each phrase with workplace examples showing exactly when and how to use them. You'll learn why "in charge of" signals clear accountability while "responsible of" is simply wrong. We cover "on behalf of" for formal representation, "at risk" for flagging problems without sounding alarmist, and "in line with" for showing compliance with standards or strategy. The episode also covers "out of" in multiple contexts, from resource constraints to motivation, plus "in terms of" for organizing complex discussions and "by means of" for formal explanations of methodology.Resources:Download this episode's worksheet with practice exercises and scenario-based applications: lvlinguistics.be/episode53Ready to Practice Your English with Real People?Listening to podcasts is great for learning, but nothing builds confidence like actually speaking. That's where our English practice membership Level Up comes in. It's made especially for professionals just like you.Inside Level Up, you'll find tons of exercises you can do on desktop or mobile, a community of professionals who are working on their English confidence for work and business, daily unlimited live practice sessions you can join anytime, anywhere, and support from our team of coaches who answer questions and track your progress.If you're serious about getting confident with English, keep doing what you're doing right now (studying, listening to podcasts, doing exercises), but don't forget the critical piece: actually speaking. The more you speak, the more confident and comfortable you'll be with the English language.My amazing team of coaches and I are ready to support you in Level Up. Head over to lvlinguistics.be/levelup for more information. I hope to see you on the inside.Rate, Review, & Follow 💜"I love Business English Made Easy. It's so useful!"If that sounds like you, please consider rating and reviewing our show. This helps us support more people in enhancing their business English skills. Rate with five stars and write a review. Let us know what you loved most about the episode!Also, if you haven't done so already, follow the podcast. We're adding bonus episodes to the feed, and if you're not following, you might miss out. Follow now to stay updated!

You write "I'll meet the client tomorrow" in an email and hit send. A native English speaker would have written "I'll meet with the client tomorrow." The difference seems minor until you realize that omitting one small word makes you sound less collaborative, less professional, and sometimes unclear about the nature of the interaction. These aren't dramatic errors that break communication. They're subtle gaps that accumulate over dozens of emails and meetings, quietly undermining how polished you sound.This episode focuses on four prepositions that carry more professional weight than most people realize: with, without, over, and under. In casual conversation, these words seem straightforward. But in business contexts, they signal collaboration, authority, scope, and management structures. Getting them wrong doesn't just sound awkward. It changes what you're actually communicating about responsibility and relationships.We break down why "with" doesn't just mean "accompanied by" but also signals partnership and the tools you're using to accomplish something. You'll learn when "without" emphasizes absence versus independence, and why that distinction matters when you're describing how work gets done. The episode covers why "over" can mean above a threshold, during a time period, or the subject of a disagreement, depending on context. And we explain why "under" shows up constantly when discussing budgets, reporting structures, and situations affecting your work.Resources:Download this episode's worksheet with practice scenarios and mistake correction exercises: lvlinguistics.be/episode52Ready to Practice Your English with Real People?Listening to podcasts is great for learning, but nothing builds confidence like actually speaking. That's where our English practice membership Level Up comes in. It's made especially for professionals just like you.Inside Level Up, you'll find tons of exercises you can do on desktop or mobile, a community of professionals who are working on their English confidence for work and business, daily unlimited live practice sessions you can join anytime, anywhere, and support from our team of coaches who answer questions and track your progress.If you're serious about getting confident with English, keep doing what you're doing right now (studying, listening to podcasts, doing exercises), but don't forget the critical piece: actually speaking. The more you speak, the more confident and comfortable you'll be with the English language.My amazing team of coaches and I are ready to support you in Level Up. Head over to lvlinguistics.be/levelup for more information. I hope to see you on the inside.Rate, Review, & Follow 💜"I love Business English Made Easy. It's so useful!"If that sounds like you, please consider rating and reviewing our show. This helps us support more people in enhancing their business English skills. Rate with five stars and write a review. Let us know what you loved most about the episode!Also, if you haven't done so already, follow the podcast. We're adding bonus episodes to the feed, and if you're not following, you might miss out. Follow now to stay updated!

Two tiny words. Massive difference in meaning. You write "the director of marketing" without thinking twice, but then pause when describing a presentation topic. Is it "presentation of leadership strategies" or "presentation about leadership strategies"? One sounds natural. The other feels clunky. The problem is you can't always articulate why, and that hesitation creeps into your writing every single day.This episode tackles the specific confusion between "about" and "of" that shows up constantly in professional contexts. These prepositions aren't interchangeable, and mixing them up doesn't just sound awkward. It changes what you're actually saying. When you discuss the contract, you're talking about it as a topic. When you review the terms of the contract, you're examining what it contains. That distinction matters when you're setting agendas, writing emails to leadership, or describing organizational structures.We work through direct comparisons that make the pattern obvious. You'll see why "meeting about the budget" and "meeting of the budget" mean fundamentally different things, and why only one works in standard business communication. You'll learn why "about" always introduces what you're discussing, while "of" shows possession or structural connection. The episode includes real workplace scenarios where both prepositions appear in the same sentence, so you can hear how they work together without creating confusion.You'll also get email templates and meeting phrases that demonstrate correct usage in context. We cover the most common mistakes professionals make when introducing roles, scheduling discussions, and presenting information to senior stakeholders. By the end, you'll recognize the pattern automatically instead of guessing each time.Resources:Download this episode's worksheet with direct comparisons and scenario-based practice: lvlinguistics.be/episode51Ready to Practice Your English with Real People?Listening to podcasts is great for learning, but nothing builds confidence like actually speaking. That's where our English practice membership Level Up comes in. It's made especially for professionals just like you.Inside Level Up, you'll find tons of exercises you can do on desktop or mobile, a community of professionals who are working on their English confidence for work and business, daily unlimited live practice sessions you can join anytime, anywhere, and support from our team of coaches who answer questions and track your progress.If you're serious about getting confident with English, keep doing what you're doing right now (studying, listening to podcasts, doing exercises), but don't forget the critical piece: actually speaking. The more you speak, the more confident and comfortable you'll be with the English language.My amazing team of coaches and I are ready to support you in Level Up. Head over to lvlinguistics.be/levelup for more information. I hope to see you on the inside.Rate, Review, & Follow 💜"I love Business English Made Easy. It's so useful!"If that sounds like you, please consider rating and reviewing our show. This helps us support more people in enhancing their business English skills. Rate with five stars and write a review. Let us know what you loved most about the episode!Also, if you haven't done so already, follow the podcast. We're adding bonus episodes to the feed, and if you're not following, you might miss out. Follow now to stay updated!

Your team member sends you an update saying they'll handle the budget "after the meeting in Friday." You understand what they mean, but something feels off. Or you're drafting an email to leadership about a cross-departmental initiative, and you keep second-guessing whether to write "meeting about the strategy" or "meeting on the strategy." These aren't grammar mistakes that break communication. They're precision gaps that make otherwise competent professionals sound less polished than they actually are.This episode focuses on four prepositions that appear in nearly every professional email, meeting request, and status update you write: about, for, of, and after. Getting these right doesn't just improve clarity. It changes how authoritative you sound when assigning responsibilities, how professional your scheduling language feels, and whether your organizational references land with the precision expected at senior levels.The episode includes email phrases you can adapt immediately, a workplace dialogue showing all four prepositions in natural context, and explanations of why certain patterns sound awkward to native speakers even when they're technically grammatically correct.Resources:Download this episode's worksheet with practice exercises and ready-to-use email templates: lvlinguistics.be/episode50Ready to Practice Your English with Real People?Listening to podcasts is great for learning, but nothing builds confidence like actually speaking. That's where our English practice membership Level Up comes in. It's made especially for professionals just like you.Inside Level Up, you'll find tons of exercises you can do on desktop or mobile, a community of professionals who are working on their English confidence for work and business, daily unlimited live practice sessions you can join anytime, anywhere, and support from our team of coaches who answer questions and track your progress.If you're serious about getting confident with English, keep doing what you're doing right now (studying, listening to podcasts, doing exercises), but don't forget the critical piece: actually speaking. The more you speak, the more confident and comfortable you'll be with the English language.My amazing team of coaches and I are ready to support you in Level Up. Head over to lvlinguistics.be/levelup for more information. I hope to see you on the inside.Rate, Review, & Follow 💜"I love Business English Made Easy. It's so useful!"If that sounds like you, please consider rating and reviewing our show. This helps us support more people in enhancing their business English skills. Rate with five stars and write a review. Let us know what you loved most about the episode!Also, if you haven't done so already, follow the podcast. We're adding bonus episodes to the feed, and if you're not following, you might miss out. Follow now to stay updated!

You know what you want to say. The grammar is fine. Your vocabulary is strong. But then you write "I'll send this report at John" or "I'm attending to the meeting," and something feels off. People understand you, but the sentence doesn't sound right. These small preposition mistakes don't usually cause confusion, but they do make you sound less polished than you actually are.This episode launches a five-part series on the prepositions that trip up working professionals most often. We start with two of the most common: to and at. These tiny words carry specific meanings in English, and using the wrong one creates friction in your communication. The difference matters more in professional settings where clarity and precision build credibility.We work through real workplace scenarios where these prepositions show up constantly. Forwarding documents to colleagues. Scheduling calls at specific times. Explaining processes to new team members. Meeting clients at their offices. Each example gets practice time built in so you can repeat the phrases out loud and train your mouth to produce them automatically.The bigger challenge isn't understanding the rules. It's breaking old habits that feel natural in your first language but don't transfer to English. Many professionals have been using the wrong preposition for years without realizing it creates that subtle "something's not quite right" feeling in listeners. This episode gives you the pattern recognition you need to catch those mistakes before they happen.Resources:Download this episode's worksheet with all the examples and practice exercises: lvlinguistics.be/episode49Ready to Practice Your English with Real People?Listening to podcasts is great for learning, but nothing builds confidence like actually speaking. That's where our English practice membership Level Up comes in. It's made especially for professionals just like you.Inside Level Up, you'll find:Tons of exercises you can do on desktop or mobile. A community of professionals who are working on their English confidence for work and business. Daily unlimited live practice sessions you can join anytime, anywhere. Support from our team of coaches who answer questions and track your progress.If you're serious about getting confident with English, keep doing what you're doing right now (studying, listening to podcasts, doing exercises), but don't forget the critical piece: actually speaking. The more you speak, the more confident and comfortable you'll be with the English language.My amazing team of coaches and I are ready to support you in Level Up. Head over to lvlinguistics.be/levelup for more information. I hope to see you on the inside.Rate, Review, & Follow 💜"I love Business English Made Easy. It's so useful!"If that sounds like you, please consider rating and reviewing our show. This helps us support more people in enhancing their business English skills. Rate with five stars and write a review. Let us know what you loved most about the episode!Also, if you haven't done so already, follow the podcast. We're adding bonus episodes to the feed, and if you're not following, you might miss out. Follow now to stay updated!

You already understand the numbers. The math part is easy. But when you need to say those figures out loud in English during a meeting or presentation, something happens. You pause. You second-guess yourself. Should you say "one in five" or "twenty percent"? That small moment of hesitation breaks your flow and chips away at your confidence.This episode focuses on the gap between knowing the data and communicating it clearly. We cover how to pronounce percentages and ratios naturally, which form to choose based on your audience and context, and the common mistakes that confuse listeners even when your numbers are correct. You'll also learn conversational approximations that native speakers use constantly, like "just under forty percent" or "roughly two-thirds," which keep presentations moving without getting stuck in decimal points.We’ll walk through practical scenarios you face regularly. Reporting survey results in a team meeting. Negotiating budget increases with suppliers. Explaining trends to colleagues who need quick clarity, not spreadsheet precision. Each situation requires a slightly different approach, and you'll learn exactly which phrasing works where. We also tackle the subtle grammar issues that trip people up, like whether to use singular or plural verbs after percentages, and why "three point five" sounds right while "three comma five" marks you as non-native immediately.Resources:Download this episode's worksheet with practice exercises and example phrases you can use immediately: lvlinguistics.be/episode48Ready to Practice Your English with Real People?Listening to podcasts is great for learning, but nothing builds confidence like actually speaking. That's where our English practice membership Level Up comes in. It's made especially for professionals just like you.Inside Level Up, you'll find:Tons of exercises you can do on desktop or mobile. A community of professionals who are working on their English confidence for work and business. Daily unlimited live practice sessions you can join anytime, anywhere. Support from our team of coaches who answer questions and track your progress.If you're serious about getting confident with English, keep doing what you're doing right now (studying, listening to podcasts, doing exercises), but don't forget the critical piece: actually speaking. The more you speak, the more confident and comfortable you'll be with the English language.My amazing team of coaches and I are ready to support you in Level Up. Head over to lvlinguistics.be/levelup for more information. I hope to see you on the inside.Rate, Review, & Follow 💜"I love Business English Made Easy. It's so useful!"If that sounds like you, please consider rating and reviewing our show. This helps us support more people in enhancing their business English skills. Rate with five stars and write a review. Let us know what you loved most about the episode!Also, if you haven't done so already, follow the podcast. We're adding bonus episodes to the feed, and if you're not following, you might miss out. Follow now to stay updated!