📖 Learn English Every day · 7 PM – 9 PM
Free English Coaching — Starting Where You Actually Struggle
Most English learners can say "I am going to the market." But they write "I am going to market" — and do not know why it is wrong. The answer is one letter: the. These sessions start there — with the small words that make the biggest difference.
The name "The A OK" — and why it matters
Nine out of ten Bengali-speaking English learners make the same mistakes. Not with big vocabulary. With small, invisible words.
The
Definite article. Used for specific, known things.
I went to market. I went to the market.
A / An
Indefinite article. Used for general, unspecified things.
She is doctor. She is a doctor.
OK
And all the words like it — prepositions, conjunctions, linking words that hold sentences together.
I am agree with you. I agree with you.
What sessions cover
- Articles (The, A, An): When to use them, when not to, the rules and the exceptions
- Prepositions: In, on, at, by, with, for, to — used correctly in context
- Verb tenses: Present, past, future — with practice, not just theory
- Common Bengali-English errors: The mistakes that native Bengali speakers make most often
- Spoken vs written English: When formal language is needed and when it is not
- Sentence structure: Building clear, natural sentences
- Vocabulary in context: Learning words through real sentences, not lists
- Reading and writing practice: Short exercises to reinforce each session
Common errors — and the fixes
Common mistake Correct form Why
I am agree. I agree. No "am" with agree — it is a main verb
She went to hospital. She went to the hospital. "The" needed for a specific place
He is very good person. He is a very good person. "A" needed before singular countable noun
I have many informations. I have a lot of information. Information is uncountable — no plural
She is more better. She is better. "More" and "-er" are not used together
I did not went. I did not go. After "did", verb stays in base form
Session format
- Platform: Zoom or Google Meet
- Duration: 45–60 minutes
- Every day, 7 PM – 9 PM Bangladesh Standard Time
- Level: Beginner, intermediate, or advanced — each session is personalised
- Practice notes shared by email after each session
- No textbook required
Sessions with minors
Any learner under 18 years of age must have a parent or guardian present for the full session. No exceptions.