You’ve been learning English for years. Your grammar is solid. You can hold a conversation, write an email, and understand films without subtitles. But something still doesn’t feel quite right. Your English sounds a little formal, a little stiff — or you’re still running a mental translation process before you speak.
Sound familiar? This is one of the most common plateaus for intermediate and advanced learners. And it’s completely solvable — with the right approach.
Why Your English Might Sound Unnatural
Most language learners are taught grammar rules and vocabulary in isolation. You learn that “I am going to the shop” is correct — but you don’t hear that native speakers usually say “I’m popping to the shop” or “I’m just heading out.”
Natural English is full of contractions, reduced sounds, idiomatic expressions, and patterns that textbooks rarely teach. The gap between textbook English and real English is wide — and crossing it requires deliberate exposure and practice.
1. Stop Translating — Start Thinking in English
The single biggest barrier to natural-sounding English is the translation step. When you think in your native language and then translate, two things happen: you’re slower (because of the processing time), and your English sounds like a translation — because it is one.
The goal is to think in English. This doesn’t happen overnight, but you can accelerate it with practice:
- Narrate your day in English — internally describe what you’re doing as you do it. “I’m making coffee. I need to reply to that email. It’s colder today than yesterday.”
- Keep a journal in English — write your thoughts in English, not as a translation exercise but as direct expression.
- Set your phone and devices to English — the more you interact with English throughout your day, the more natural it becomes.
2. Learn Chunks, Not Just Words
Natural English speakers don’t build sentences word by word. They use ready-made chunks — fixed or semi-fixed phrases that come out automatically. These are called lexical chunks, and they’re how native speakers actually communicate.
Instead of learning the word “agree,” learn the chunks:
- “I couldn’t agree more.”
- “That’s a fair point.”
- “I see where you’re coming from, but…”
- “I’m not entirely convinced that…”
When you learn and practise these chunks as whole units, they become automatic — and automatic equals natural.
3. Use Contractions and Reductions
One of the clearest signs of formal or unnatural English is the absence of contractions. In real spoken English, contractions are almost always used in informal and semi-formal contexts:
- “I am” → “I’m”
- “I do not know” → “I don’t know”
- “What are you doing?” → sounds natural. “What are you doing?” with fully pronounced “are” sounds slightly formal.
Practise speaking with contractions consciously until they come automatically. It makes a significant difference to how natural you sound.
4. Master English Intonation and Rhythm
English has a distinctive rhythm — it’s a stress-timed language, which means the stressed syllables come at roughly regular intervals, regardless of how many unstressed syllables are in between. Many other languages are syllable-timed (every syllable takes the same time), which can make English speakers sound very different.
To sound more natural, practise stressing the right words in a sentence. In English, we stress content words (nouns, main verbs, adjectives, adverbs) and reduce function words (articles, prepositions, auxiliary verbs):
“I’ve been working on this project for three weeks and I’m finally happy with it.”
Listen to native speakers and try to mimic the music of the language, not just the words.
5. Expand Your Idiomatic Range
Idioms and common expressions are what give English its colour and personality. You don’t need to learn hundreds of them — but building a working repertoire of 30–50 natural expressions that you actually use will transform how you sound.
Some highly useful everyday expressions:
- “It’s up in the air” (not decided yet)
- “I’ll keep you posted” (I’ll give you updates)
- “Can you give me a heads up?” (let me know in advance)
- “That rings a bell” (I think I’ve heard that before)
- “Let’s touch base next week” (let’s reconnect)
- “It’s not my cup of tea” (I don’t particularly like it)
The key is to practise using them in context until they feel natural — not forced.
6. Expose Yourself to Authentic English
Textbooks and language apps are useful for structure — but they don’t reflect how people actually speak. To develop natural English, you need massive exposure to authentic English in use:
- Podcasts — especially unscripted ones. Listen for how people structure sentences informally, how they interrupt, how they express uncertainty.
- TV series and films — without subtitles if possible. Pay attention to how characters respond to each other.
- YouTube — vloggers, interviews, discussions in your areas of interest.
- Real conversations — with a teacher, language partner, or in natural social situations.
7. Get Feedback From a Teacher
Self-study will take you a long way — but to truly identify the specific patterns holding you back, feedback from an experienced teacher is invaluable. A good teacher will spot the fossilised errors you’ve stopped noticing, the pronunciation habits rooted in your first language, and the vocabulary gaps that are limiting your expression.
The goal isn’t perfection — it’s fluency. And fluency comes from guided practice, real conversations, and a teacher who understands where you are and where you want to go.
Ready to Sound More Natural in English?
Joanne’s conversational fluency lessons are designed to help intermediate and advanced speakers move beyond correct English to natural, confident English. Book a session and start speaking like yourself — just in English.
Work 1-to-1 with Joanne
Reading about better English is a great start. But real progress happens when you practise with an expert who understands your industry, your goals, and your gaps. Joanne works with professionals across the world to help them communicate with confidence — in emails, meetings, presentations, and interviews.
"Joanne understood exactly what I needed. After just a few sessions, I was contributing in meetings I used to stay silent in."
— International professional, tech sector
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