A little while ago we added four A2 lessons on comparing and countingcheaper, the cheapest, some coffee, much time.

Those lessons help you describe the world. This time we move to the little words that help you talk about yourself and your day — what's yours, what you did yourself, how much time you have, and what you're going to do next.


🆕 Four New A2 Lessons

We've added four new lessons to the A2 level, in three everyday families:

  • Pointing with pronounsmine, yours, myself, yourself.
  • Small amountsa few friends, a little time.
  • Plans for laterI'm going to call you tonight.

👉 You'll find them all on the English A2 learning path.


👥 Two Pronoun Lessons

Pronouns are the small words that save you from repeating yourself. Two new lessons cover the ones learners reach for every day.

The first lets you say who owns what without naming the thing twice. Instead of "That is my coffee, and this is your coffee," you just say "This one is mine, that one is yours."

👉 Possessive pronouns lines up mine, yours, his, hers, ours, theirs next to the my / your / his… you already know, and clears up the single most common mix-up — ❌ That book is my → ✅ That book is mine.

The second is for when the person doing the action and the person receiving it are the same: I taught myself to cook, Be careful — don't hurt yourself.

👉 Reflexive pronouns walks through myself, yourself, himself… themselves, the by myself = "alone" pattern, and the verbs that don't take a reflexive in English even though many languages expect one — ✅ I feel good, never ❌ I feel myself good.


🔢 Talking About Small Amounts

How much is a few? Is little the same as a little? This one looks tiny but trips up almost everyone, because one small word — a — flips the meaning.

I have a few friends here sounds warm and positive; I have few friends here sounds a little lonely. The same goes for uncountable nouns: a little time means some, while little time means hardly any.

👉 Quantifiers: few, a few, little, a little sorts out which word goes with countable and uncountable nouns, and how that little a shifts the feeling from "not enough" to "some". It pairs naturally with the earlier countable & uncountable nouns lesson.


📅 Talking About Plans

Once you can talk about today, the next question is always what about later? The easiest way into the future at A2 is be going to.

You use it for plans you've already decided — I'm going to study tonight — and for predictions you can see coming — Look at those clouds — it's going to rain.

👉 Be going to covers the am / is / are + going to + verb pattern, questions and negatives (Are you going to come?, I'm not going to wait), and the common slip of changing the verb — ✅ going to buy, never ❌ going to buys.


🆓 Still Free, Still Open

Like everything in the curriculum, all four lessons are free to read — no account, no login, no paywall. Each one ends with a short quick-check so you can test yourself on the spot.

Bookmark them, share them, come back whenever a mine / my or few / a few moment trips you up.


⭐ Take a Look

The curriculum keeps growing, one lesson at a time.

👉 Open the English A2 learning path, pick the lesson you need today, and take the next confident step in your English.