49. Preposition Mastery - To and At. Navigating Meetings and Communication (Part 1 of 5)

49. Preposition Mastery - To and At. Navigating Meetings and Communication (Part 1 of 5)

You know what you want to say. The grammar is fine. Your vocabulary is strong. But then you write "I'll send this report at John" or "I'm attending to the meeting," and something feels off. People understand you, but the sentence doesn't sound right. These small preposition mistakes don't usually cause confusion, but they do make you sound less polished than you actually are.

This episode launches a five-part series on the prepositions that trip up working professionals most often. We start with two of the most common: to and at. These tiny words carry specific meanings in English, and using the wrong one creates friction in your communication. The difference matters more in professional settings where clarity and precision build credibility.

We work through real workplace scenarios where these prepositions show up constantly. Forwarding documents to colleagues. Scheduling calls at specific times. Explaining processes to new team members. Meeting clients at their offices. Each example gets practice time built in so you can repeat the phrases out loud and train your mouth to produce them automatically.

The bigger challenge isn't understanding the rules. It's breaking old habits that feel natural in your first language but don't transfer to English. Many professionals have been using the wrong preposition for years without realizing it creates that subtle "something's not quite right" feeling in listeners. This episode gives you the pattern recognition you need to catch those mistakes before they happen.

Resources:

Download this episode's worksheet with all the examples and practice exercises: lvlinguistics.be/episode49

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If you're serious about getting confident with English, keep doing what you're doing right now (studying, listening to podcasts, doing exercises), but don't forget the critical piece: actually speaking. The more you speak, the more confident and comfortable you'll be with the English language.

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Episoder(57)

57. Talking About Your Job: How to Describe Your Role and Responsibilities Clearly

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Someone at a networking event asks what you do for work. Simple question. Your mind goes blank. You start explaining your department structure, your reporting lines, all the internal systems you work ...

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56. How to Sound Polite but Direct: Balancing Clarity and Courtesy in Business English

56. How to Sound Polite but Direct: Balancing Clarity and Courtesy in Business English

You hit send on an email asking a colleague to finish something by Friday, then immediately reread what you wrote. Was that too harsh? Should there have been more softening language? Or maybe you went...

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55. Handling Last-Minute Changes Without Losing Your Cool

55. Handling Last-Minute Changes Without Losing Your Cool

The email arrives at 4pm on Friday. Your client wants the project scope changed, the presentation moved up by a week, or the entire deliverable restructured. Your first instinct is panic. Your second ...

2 Apr 11min

54. Motivating Your Team: Phrases for Encouragement and Positive Feedback

54. Motivating Your Team: Phrases for Encouragement and Positive Feedback

Your colleague just handled a difficult client call brilliantly. You want to acknowledge it, but "good job" feels inadequate and anything longer feels awkward or over the top. So you say nothing. Late...

19 Mar 7min

53. Preposition Mastery: In, Into, With, To, and On. Managing Projects and Team Collaboration (Part 5 of 5)

53. Preposition Mastery: In, Into, With, To, and On. Managing Projects and Team Collaboration (Part 5 of 5)

You're drafting an email to clarify project responsibilities and you write "Sarah is responsible of the client updates." It sounds wrong, but you're not sure why. Later in a meeting, you need to repre...

5 Mar 10min

52. Preposition Mastery: How to Use "With," "Without," "Over," and "Under" in Business English (Part 4 of 5)

52. Preposition Mastery: How to Use "With," "Without," "Over," and "Under" in Business English (Part 4 of 5)

You write "I'll meet the client tomorrow" in an email and hit send. A native English speaker would have written "I'll meet with the client tomorrow." The difference seems minor until you realize that ...

19 Feb 12min

51. Preposition Mastery - About and Of. Discussing Ideas and Ownership in Professional Contexts (Part 3 of 5)

51. Preposition Mastery - About and Of. Discussing Ideas and Ownership in Professional Contexts (Part 3 of 5)

Two tiny words. Massive difference in meaning. You write "the director of marketing" without thinking twice, but then pause when describing a presentation topic. Is it "presentation of leadership stra...

5 Feb 10min

50. Preposition Mastery - About, For, Of, and After. Handling Tasks, Responsibilities, and Follow-Ups (Part 2 of 5)

50. Preposition Mastery - About, For, Of, and After. Handling Tasks, Responsibilities, and Follow-Ups (Part 2 of 5)

Your team member sends you an update saying they'll handle the budget "after the meeting in Friday." You understand what they mean, but something feels off. Or you're drafting an email to leadership a...

22 Jan 8min

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