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cover of episode Learn the English Phrases ON PURPOSE and BY ACCIDENT

Learn the English Phrases ON PURPOSE and BY ACCIDENT

2021/11/17
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Bob's Short English Lessons

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Read along to practice your English and to learn the English phrases ON PURPOSE and BY ACCIDENT

In this English lesson, I wanted to help you learn the English phrase "on purpose." When you do something on purpose, it means that you meant to do it. It means that you planned to do it. You might have noticed that there was no short English lesson a couple of days ago. This past Monday, there was no lesson and you might have thought I forgot, but I did it on purpose. I've actually decided that the same weekend where I don't do a live stream on Saturday on my bigger channel, I'm going to also not do a video for that Monday. Instead of taking part of the weekend off, I'm taking the whole weekend off. So there was no video yet a couple of days ago, and I did it on purpose. I hope you don't mind. You'll still get one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, 10, 11, about 11 videos a month, sometimes 12, but once a month on a Monday, there'll be no video. I did it on purpose.WANT FREE ENGLISH LESSONS? GO TO YOUTUBE AND SEARCH, "BOB THE CANADIANIf you enjoy these lessons please consider supporting me at: http://www.patreon.com/bobthecanadian)

The opposite of on purpose is a phrase that we use "by accident." When something happens by accident, it means that something occurred, something happened, and you didn't plan for that to happen. It was just an accident. Like you could say this. "I went to the store the other day and I ran into my sister by accident." That doesn't mean you drove your car into your sister's car. It could just simply mean you didn't plan to run into your sister. You didn't plan to see her, but you met her by accident. It was just a happy coincidence.So to review, when something happens on purpose, when you do something on purpose, it means that you planned to do it. You were like, you know what? In a few days, I'm gonna take a day off and not do a short English lesson. That's something I did on purpose. And when something happens by accident, it means that you didn't plan for it to happen. It just kind of happened. It just happened out of the blue. It happened by accident. It wasn't something that you were planning to do.But hey, let's look at a comment from a previous video. This comment is from Valéria. "Hi, teacher Bob. Thanks for the lesson. Have you ever tried to eat pancakes with jelly made of fruit like plum cherry or apricot? It tastes really good." And my response, "Yes, I have. In fact, I like eating leftover pancakes the next day, cold with butter and jam on them. Delicious."So yes, Valéria, I definitely like eating pancakes with fruit and those types of things on it, jam and everything else, jelly, but I do like them cold when I do that. So I like hot pancakes with butter and syrup and I like cold pancakes the next day with butter and jam of some kind, usually quite yummy.Hey, so we are finally starting. I know the bikes aren't put away yet. A few of you have commented that winter is coming. I should be cleaning up. We have started to slowly clean up this past week. We started putting bikes away. There's a couple out here yet, but we put about three or four bikes away in the barn. I'll spin around here so you can see. We put a lot of things in the barn in the winter. It's not a spot that doesn't freeze. It does freeze in the barn, but it is a good place to store a lot of things.

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