daily routine use english words
Pick the right verbs
Start each habit with an action word that tells your brain what to do. “Write,” “walk,” “read” are clearer than “engage in writing.” When you open the Trider habit tracker, I type “Read English article — 25 min” as a timer habit. The built‑in Pomodoro timer forces me to stay on task, and the check‑off shows up as a green tick at the end of the day.
Chunk your day
Break the morning into three blocks: wake‑up, work, and wind‑down. In the “wake‑up” block I add a quick habit called “Say three English words out loud.” I set a reminder for 7 am, and Trider nudges me with a push notification. The habit stays on the dashboard until I tap it, protecting the streak.
Use a journal for context
After each block, open the journal icon on the Tracker header and jot a sentence about how the words felt. I choose a happy emoji when the flow is smooth, a neutral one when I stumble. Those mood tags later help me spot patterns in the analytics tab. The journal automatically tags entries with “vocabulary” and “pronunciation,” so a quick search pulls up every day I practiced.
Leverage squads for accountability
I invited a friend to a two‑person squad in the Social tab. We both add the habit “Learn 5 new English words.” The squad view shows each of our daily completion percentages. A quick chat in the squad chat lets us share a word that surprised us. The simple social pressure keeps the habit alive longer than going solo.
Turn crisis days into micro‑wins
Some mornings I’m too tired to read a whole article. I hit the brain icon on the dashboard and switch to Crisis Mode. It replaces the full habit list with three tiny actions: a 30‑second breathing exercise, a vent‑journal entry, and a “Tiny Win” – in this case, writing a single English sentence. No streak penalty, just a small step forward.
Track progress with reading
The Reading tab doubles as a book tracker. I add “English News Daily” and set the progress to 0 %. Each time I finish a paragraph, I slide the bar a few points. The app records the chapter and percentage, so later I can see how many minutes I spent on English each week.