Welcome to another episode of Jack Chats.
Jack Chats are bonus episodes of the A to Z English podcast.
And this is a great opportunity for me to share your emails, your WhatsApp group chats, and just listen to your ideas and share your comments, your emails with other listeners of the program.
And I think it's just a great way for me to connect with you, the listener, and a great way for you, the listener, to connect with me, the host of the podcast.
And of course, our number one goal with this podcast is to help you improve your english ability.
And one of the ways you can do that is just by listening to the A to Z English podcast.
And our episodes are designed to challenge you, teach you new vocabulary and expressions, idioms, help you understand certain grammar points, and just make you an overall better, more proficient in English overall.
That's what we'd like to do.
And so if you're interested in speaking, you can always leave a voice note in our WhatsApp group.
Or if you're not comfortable doing that, you can just write a type A message.
And if you really want to connect with us, send us an email at a to zenglishpodcast@gmail.com a to zenglishpodcast@gmail.com and two, the a to z is a t o z, not the number two.
Atoz englishpodcast@gmail.com so today I'm going to read a bunch of listener emails, and the first one I'm going to start off with is one from Mei Feng Chi.
And May is from Malaysia, and she wrote a really interesting, a really nice email, and I'm going to read that email right now for you.
And so may says, dear Jack, Kevin, and Sochil, first of all, I hope the three of you are doing great in this email.
I would like to thank you for interpreting the phrase way to go and its uses.
It gave me a clear picture about this expression.
All the while, I was thinking that way to go is used to describe a situation that is unlikely to happen.
Additionally, I thought that the term was applied when we would like to define a destination which was far to reach.
Okay, so may, let me explain this a little bit here.
There are two idioms or two expressions that you're getting confused because they're very, very similar.