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"How are you?" is the most common English greeting — and also the most boring. Native speakers almost never say it to each other. Instead, they use a wide variety of casual openers that signal friendliness, familiarity, and personality. This episode teaches learners the real greetings Americans use, what responses are natural, and how to match your greeting to the relationship.
In this episode, Alex and Jamie break it all down — with real examples, natural phrasing, and the cultural context behind it.
🎯 What you'll learn:
• Slammed = extremely busy (informal)
• Catch up = talk to someone you haven't seen in a while to get up to date
• Bounce it back = return the question to the other person
• Performative = done for social purposes rather than literal truth
This is English Out Loud — where real conversations happen. No textbooks. Just natural English the way it's actually spoken.
💬 Which phrase will you try first? Leave a review and let us know!
🎧 Follow English Out Loud for new episodes every week.
By The English Podcast Series"How are you?" is the most common English greeting — and also the most boring. Native speakers almost never say it to each other. Instead, they use a wide variety of casual openers that signal friendliness, familiarity, and personality. This episode teaches learners the real greetings Americans use, what responses are natural, and how to match your greeting to the relationship.
In this episode, Alex and Jamie break it all down — with real examples, natural phrasing, and the cultural context behind it.
🎯 What you'll learn:
• Slammed = extremely busy (informal)
• Catch up = talk to someone you haven't seen in a while to get up to date
• Bounce it back = return the question to the other person
• Performative = done for social purposes rather than literal truth
This is English Out Loud — where real conversations happen. No textbooks. Just natural English the way it's actually spoken.
💬 Which phrase will you try first? Leave a review and let us know!
🎧 Follow English Out Loud for new episodes every week.