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If you would like help with English for citizenship, this Part is made for you!
Here you practice listening, speaking, reading, and writing English for citizenship. You can practice with words, numbers and dates, questions and answers, and the sample sentences for testing by the USCIS.
There is plenty of material, so you can come back to this Part again and again if you want. You can make each activity easier or harder. For example, when you practice reading, you can set the length of time that you have to read the material.
In some activities, you match what you hear with what you see, and in others it is harder for example, you read a question and choose an answer that goes with the question.
This Part provides variety and can be used in different ways depending on the kind of practice you need. The goal is to help you become more familiar and comfortable with the English needed for citizenship.
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If dates make you hesitate while you translate from your native language, practice the dates. If you can read well but need help understanding spoken American English, practice the listening exercises.
If you can understand spoken English but need help with writing and reading, practice matching the written words with what you understand from listening.
The most important activities in this part are the 4 activities with sentences, because the sentences used are the ones provided by the USCIS as examples for the test of written English. The sentences are divided into easy and hard categories. The easy sentences are about everyday activities and the hard sentences are about U.S. history and government.
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