#orelstan
1 messages · Page 1 of 1 (latest)
Our volunteers look into many questions every day; sometimes it takes them a little while to answer.
Make it descriptive, including relevant context, but also to the point. This way you improve your chances of getting a more relevant and specific answer.
for B2? I doubt there's a real vocab list, you're basically expected to be able to manage most types of conversation, and understand most common words you can encounter at least with context
if there was such a list it would be something like over 5k anyway
nah like key words that news articles use a lot
I’m taking classes for B1/B2 preparation and I don’t think it’s a thing. It’s more like you need to know enough to handle most daily life interactions. Start from scenarios and come up with with what to write/speak, rather than the other way around.
Only thing my teacher kept recommending is to put effort into connecting words (prepositions, adverbs, etc).