
April Fool's Day – On April 1st Practical jokes – jokes, usually physical, at the expense of someone else To fool someone [into something] – to trick someone [into something] A fool – an idiot, a moron British vs. American English Past participle – many in American English are formed with –ed In British English these are often formed with –t instead Example: “I have learned” vs. “I have learnt” Tipping Usually NOT included, except for large groups (typically 8 or more people) Average tip 15%, good tip around 20%, bad tip less than 15% 🔔 Remember to subscribe to the Je Parle Anglais Podcast to receive episodes in real time! 📬 Sign up for our Newsletter to get the inside scoop on our business :⬇️ https://mailchi.mp/94d15420360a/formulaire-du-podcast-jeparleangalis ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ And leave me a 5-star review on iTunes or Spotify 📩 Private message :⬇️ https://anchor.fm/twengembo-clive/message ✉️ to drop any feedback on this podcast drop us an email on : 👇🏾👇🏾 contact@jeparleanglais.info For more insights listen to our following episode.👋🏾