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This week the ‘Thinking in English’ Community is talking about our New Year’s Resolutions for 2025.

What are your plans for this year? What do you want to achieve? What do you want to learn? What are you excited for?


Let’s discuss all of these questions and more in the conversation club!

Here are 10 conversation questions to get you talking about your New Year’s Resolutions for 2025!

The Thinking in English Conversation Club takes place every TUESDAY and THURSDAY at 12pm, 6pm, and 11pm UK time!

You can find more details on how to participate here – Patreon!

Conversation Questions: New Year’s Resolutions!

  • 1. What is your New Year’s resolution?
  • 2. What are some New Year’s resolutions you have made in the past? Did you keep them?
  • 3. How can New Year’s resolutions help you in the coming year?
  • 4. What new skill would you like to learn in 2025?
  • 5. Where would you like to travel in 2025?
  • 6. What part of your life would you like to change this coming year?
  • 7. What is something that you want to start doing more often in 2025?
  • 8. What is something you want to stop doing in 2025?
  • 9. What are your English learning goals for the coming year? How will you achieve them?
  • 10. “Every year you make a resolution to change yourself. This year, make a resolution to be yourself.” What do you think of this quote?
Vocabulary
  • Resolution: a promise to yourself to do or to not do something
  • Skill: an ability to do an activity or job well, especially because you have practised it
  • Travel: to make a journey, usually over a long distance
  • Often: a lot or many times; frequently
  • Achieve: to succeed in finishing something or reaching an aim, especially after a lot of work or effort

Model Answers & Vocabulary

To help you prepare for the Thinking in English conversation club this week, I have created vocabulary lists and some model answers.

The model answers are split into intermediate, upper-intermediate, and advanced level responses. Hopefully this will give you an idea on the differences in quality between intermediate and advanced response, and perhaps inspire your own answers to these questions!

B1 (Intermediate)

Model Answers

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Vocabulary

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B2 (Upper Intermediate)

Model Answers

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Vocabulary

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C1 (Advanced Level)

Model Answers

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Vocabulary

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See you all at this week’s conversation club!

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By Tom Wilkinson

Host and founder of Thinking in English, Tom is committed to providing quality and interesting content to all English learners. Previously a research student at a top Japanese university and with a background in English teaching, political research, and Asian languages, Tom is now working fulltime on bettering Thinking in English!

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