Further Versus Farther- Stop the Confusion

进一步与更远——终结混淆

All Ears English Podcast

2026-03-07

19 分钟
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单集简介 ...

Want to know your English level? Take our free English-level quiz here to find out what your current English level is.  Do you love All Ears English?  Try our other podcasts here: Business English Podcast: Improve your Business English with 3 episodes per week, featuring Lindsay, Michelle, and Aubrey IELTS Energy Podcast: Learn IELTS from a former Examiner and achieve your Band 7 or higher, featuring Lindsay McMahon and Aubrey Carter with Jessica Beck in previous episodes Visit our website here or https://lnk.to/website-sn If you love this podcast, hit the follow button now so that you don't miss five fresh and fun episodes every single week.  Don’t forget to leave us a review wherever you listen to the show. Send your English question or episode topic idea to support@allearsenglish.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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单集文稿 ...

  • This is the All Ears English podcast.

  • Further versus farther.

  • Stop the confusion.

  • Welcome to the all ears English podcast downloaded more than 200 million times.

  • Are you feeling stuck with your English?

  • We'll show you how to become fearless and fluent by focusing on connection,

  • not perfection with your American hosts.

  • Lindsay McMahon, the English adventurer and Michelle Kaplan,

  • the New York radio girl coming to you from Colorado and New York city.

  • To get real time transcripts right on your phone and create your personalized vocabulary list,

  • try the All Ears English app for iOS and Android.

  • Start your seven day free trial at allearsenglish.com forward slash app.

  • In today's episode, we dive into the common question, even from native speakers.

  • Should I use further or farther?

  • And how can I know the difference?

  • Find out today.

  • Have you ever walked out of a meeting thinking, I could have said that better?

  • You understood everything, but your response came out short.

  • or unclear or not quite like you.

  • Maybe your ideas are strong, but your English doesn't show it yet.