
In business communication, it is not only about accuracy — it is about sounding natural. Subtle elements such as word order can quietly weaken your credibility, even when your grammar is technically correct.
For example, native speakers consistently use fixed combinations like:
pros and cons (not cons and pros)
profit and loss (not loss and profit)
terms and conditions (not conditions and terms)
These are known as binomial pairs — standardised expressions that appear repeatedly in professional communication.
When you use them correctly, your English sounds fluent, precise, and aligned with professional expectations. When you do not, it immediately signals non-native usage.
I have created a focused lesson that breaks this down into practical, real-world applications you can use immediately in meetings, emails, and negotiations.
If you operate in an international business environment, this is a small adjustment that delivers a measurable impact on how you are perceived.
If you’d like a practical breakdown with real examples you can apply immediately:
▶️ Watch the full video here:https://youtu.be/IqLcSYFdx0I?si=gwWSLJQYxnVvR3uT