So it’s another long pause since last time I wrote something here. And now it’s 2026.

I still not write as much as I planed to, and the purpose of this blog is changed again. I’ll write some English practice here which may not relate to programming at all. Just some random thoughts.

I had started my study of English on Cambly almost one month. Most comment from my tutors are like

Let’s focus on using articles (a, an, the) more consistently in your speech.

Or

Try writing short paragraphs about topics that interest you, focusing on using one new linking word in each sentence (such as “although,” “however,” “therefore,” or “meanwhile”).

It makes me think back when I was learning in middle school, seems like I never really practiced those things. (Well maybe my teachers made me do ,but I didn’t)

Anyway, a new phrase I learned today : new year’s resolution. This is my new year’s resolution : write English here and maybe share to my tutors.


FIX FROM AI

Below are the places that are grammatically incorrect or unnatural, with minimal fixes (not a full rewrite). I’ll also add short example sentences to help you reuse the patterns.


1) Tense / auxiliary verb (missing “do/does/did”)

Original

  • “I still not write as much as I planed to”

Issue

English needs an auxiliary verb: do / did / have etc.

Natural fixes (choose one)

  • “I still don’t write as much as I planned to.”
  • “I still haven’t written as much as I planned to.” (common and very natural here)

Examples

  • “I don’t go to the gym as much as I planned.”
  • “I haven’t studied as much as I wanted to.”
  • “I didn’t sleep well last night.”

2) Spelling: “planned”

Original

  • “planed”

Fix

  • “planned”

Examples

  • “I planned to write every week.”
  • “It didn’t go as planned.”

3) Passive voice: “is changed” → “has changed / changed”

Original

  • “the purpose of this blog is changed again.”

Issue

“is changed” sounds like someone else is changing it right now, and it’s not the usual phrasing.

Natural fixes

  • “the purpose of this blog has changed again.” (most suitable)
  • “the purpose of this blog changed again.”

Examples

  • “My plan has changed.”
  • “The schedule changed last minute.”
  • “My goals have changed since last year.”

4) Relative clause: “which may not relate” → “that may not be related”

Original

  • “I’ll write some English practice here which may not relate to programming at all.”

More natural options

  • “I’ll do some English practice here that may not be related to programming at all.”
  • “I’ll write some English practice here, and it may have nothing to do with programming.”

Examples

  • “This topic isn’t related to my job.”
  • “It has nothing to do with programming.”

5) “Random thoughts” sentence fragment (acceptable, but you can make it smoother)

Original

  • “Just some random thoughts.”

This is not “wrong”; it’s a fragment used for style. If you want a complete sentence:

Optional alternatives

  • “Just some random thoughts.”
  • “They’re just random thoughts.”

Examples

  • “Just a quick update.”
  • “Just some notes.”

6) Time expression: “almost one month” → “for almost a month / about a month”

Original

  • “I had started my study of English on Cambly almost one month.”

Issues

  • You need for with duration.
  • “had started” is usually used when describing an earlier past relative to another past event; here, present perfect is more natural.

Natural fixes

  • “I started studying English on Cambly about a month ago.”
  • “I have been studying English on Cambly for almost a month.” (best fit)

Examples

  • “I’ve been working here for two years.”
  • “I started learning Java three months ago.”
  • “I’ve been practicing every day for a week.”

7) Plural + article: “Most comment” → “Most comments / Most of the comments”

Original

  • “Most comment from my tutors are like”

Natural fixes

  • Most comments from my tutors are like…”
  • Most of the comments from my tutors are like…”

Examples

  • “Most comments are helpful.”
  • “Most of the feedback was about pronunciation.”

8) “Think back” + time clause (small adjustment)

Original

  • “It makes me think back when I was learning in middle school…”

More natural

  • “It makes me think back to when I was in middle school…”
  • “It makes me think back to middle school…”

Examples

  • “That song takes me back to when I was a kid.”
  • “This reminds me of my school days.”

9) Articles & spacing: “made me do ,but”

Original

  • “(Well maybe my teachers made me do ,but I didn’t)”

Fix (punctuation + clarity)

  • “(Well, maybe my teachers made me do them, but I didn’t.)”

Here “them” refers to “those things” (articles/linking words/practice).

Examples

  • “My teacher told me to practice, but I didn’t.”
  • “They made me do the homework, but I didn’t finish it.”

10) Colon spacing and phrasing

Original

  • “a new phrase I learned today : new year’s resolution.”
  • “This is my new year’s resolution : write English here and maybe share to my tutors.”

Fixes

  • No space before colon in English.
  • “share to” → usually “share with”
  • “write English here” → more natural: “write in English here” / “practice English here”

Natural options

  • “A new phrase I learned today: New Year’s resolution.”
  • “My New Year’s resolution: to write in English here and maybe share it with my tutors.”

Examples

  • “My goal: to read 10 books.”
  • “I shared my writing with my tutor.”
  • “I write in English every day.”

Small vocabulary note (not required, but helpful)

  • “English practice” is understandable, but “English practice posts” or “English writing practice” sounds a bit more native in blog context.

Examples:

  • “This blog is for English writing practice.”
  • “I’m posting short pieces for practice.”