Unit 1: One-minute English
Select a unit
- 1 One-minute English
- 2 Unit 2
- 3 Unit 3
- 4 Unit 4
- 5 Unit 5
- 6 Unit 6
- 7 Unit 7
- 8 Unit 8
- 9 Unit 9
- 10 Unit 10
- 11 Unit 11
- 12 Unit 12
- 13 Unit 13
- 14 Unit 14
- 15 Unit 15
- 16 Unit 16
- 17 Unit 17
- 18 Unit 18
- 19 Unit 19
- 20 Unit 20
- 21 Unit 21
- 22 Unit 22
- 23 Unit 23
- 24 Unit 24
- 25 Unit 25
- 26 Unit 26
- 27 Unit 27
- 28 Unit 28
- 29 Unit 29
- 30 Unit 30
- 31 Unit 31
- 32 Unit 32
- 33 Unit 33
- 34 Unit 34
- 35 Unit 35
- 36 Unit 36
- 37 Unit 37
- 38 Unit 38
- 39 Unit 39
- 40 Unit 40
Session 28
British people love to EXAGGERATE! Clare and Sian are going to tell you four ways we do this!
Sessions in this unit
Session 28 score
0 / 3
- 0 / 3Activity 1
Activity 1
4 Ways to exaggerate like a Brit
Let Sian teach you 4 ways to exaggerate like a Brit in this English In A Minute.
Watch the video and complete the activity

Sian
British people love to exaggerate.
We say things aren't literally true in order to make an impact.
We use forever to say that something takes a very, very long time.
Sorry I'm late. I was stuck in traffic forever.
We use the phrase dying for to say that we really, really need something. Obviously, we're not literally dying.
I'm dying for a cup of coffee.
If something is hurting a lot, we can exaggerate using the phrase it's killing me or it's killing. Again, we are not literally being killed.
My tooth is killing me.
We exaggerate by using very, very large numbers like thousands and millions.
Again, this is not literal - it's just a way to say a lot.
I'm so busy. I've got thousands of emails to reply to.
I bet you are dying to watch more of these videos.
There are thousands more on our website.
4 ways to exaggerate like a Brit
We use forever to say that something takes a long time.
- It takes forever to explain anything to him.
- He never seems to stop talking and every story he tells feels like it goes on forever.
We use dying for to say that we really need or want something.
- I'm dying for a cup of tea.
- She said she's dying for a pizza.
We use the expressions it's killing me or it's killing to say that something is very painful.
- I fell over and my back is killing me.
- My ears are killing me.
We use large numbers like thousands and millions to exaggerate amounts.
- I've told you the same thing millions of times.
- He's always got thousands of meetings.
_________________________________________________________________________________________
To do
Try our quiz to see how well you've learned today's language.
One Minute English Quiz
3 Questions
Test your understanding of this lesson with our quiz!
Help
Activity
Test your understanding of this lesson with our quiz!
Hint
Which means something 'takes a long time'?Question 1 of 3
Help
Activity
Test your understanding of this lesson with our quiz!
Hint
Which means 'you really want something'?Question 2 of 3
Help
Activity
Test your understanding of this lesson with our quiz!
Hint
Which means 'something is very painful'?Question 3 of 3
Excellent! Great job! Bad luck! You scored: