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Last time, we talked about false friends—words that look similar in English and your native language, but mean something very different.
Get the text on my website: https://speakenglishpodcast.com/351-false-friends
Example 1: Actual
This one’s a classic false friend.
In Spanish, “actual” or in Portuguese “atual” means “current” or “present.”
But in English, “actual” means real or true — not “current.”
So if you say: 👉 “My actual job is very interesting,” you probably mean: “My current job.”
4.6
499499 ratings
Last time, we talked about false friends—words that look similar in English and your native language, but mean something very different.
Get the text on my website: https://speakenglishpodcast.com/351-false-friends
Example 1: Actual
This one’s a classic false friend.
In Spanish, “actual” or in Portuguese “atual” means “current” or “present.”
But in English, “actual” means real or true — not “current.”
So if you say: 👉 “My actual job is very interesting,” you probably mean: “My current job.”
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