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Claude Code skill for learning English through real conversations, corrections, and micro-lessons.
A Claude Code skill that turns every conversation into an English practice session.
Quick links:
english-coach/SKILL.mdREADME.zh-CN.mdexamples/chat-scenarios.mdFAQ.mdREADME in other languages: 中文 | 日本語 | 한국어 | Español | Português | Tiếng Việt | ภาษาไทย | Русский | العربية
When activated, Claude will:
Designed for non-native English speakers who want to improve their English through real daily use rather than textbook exercises.
Option 1 — install directly from GitHub:
npx skills add 491034170/english-coach -a claude-code -g -y
Option 2 — install from a packaged release:
english-coach.skillIn Claude Code, type:
/english-coach
Then just chat normally in English. The skill will automatically correct and teach as you go.
You say:
dose this work for practice my english?
Claude responds:
(answers your question)
English Corrections:
dose this work for practice my english?→ Does this work for practicing my English?[Spelling] "dose" → "does" [Grammar] "for practice" → "for practicing" — after "for", use the -ing form [Punctuation] "english" → "English" — language names are always capitalized
You say:
His has a great time yesterday.
Claude responds:
(answers your question)
English Corrections:
His has a great time yesterday.→ He had a great time yesterday.[Grammar] "His" → "He" — "His" is possessive, "He" is a subject pronoun [Grammar] "has" → "had" — "yesterday" indicates past time, so the verb should be past tense
You say:
I look forward to meet you and making a discussion about the project.
Claude responds:
(answers your question)
English Corrections:
I look forward to meet you and making a discussion about the project.→ I look forward to meeting you and having a discussion about the project.[Grammar] "look forward to meet you" → "look forward to meeting you" — After "look forward to," use the -ing form (gerund). The "to" here is a preposition, not part of an infinitive.
[Word Choice] "making a discussion" → "having a discussion" (or simply discussing) — In English, we "have" a discussion or "hold" a discussion — we don't "make" one.
Phrase of the day: "get the hang of" — to become comfortable with something new. Example: "I'm starting to get the hang of English prepositions."
MIT
If this skill helps you practice English more consistently, consider starring the repo so more learners can find it.
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