EPISODE · Oct 3, 2025 · 10 MIN
Why Rich and Poor Live Differently | Best Podcast for English Learners | Slow English | Best for Beginners
from English Podcast · host Maria Spencer
Please support my Podcast :https://buymeacoffee.com/mariaspencerWelcome my dear friends to Podcast in English For You. My name is Maria and in this episode we will explore the important question of why rich and poor live differently. Around us we see people living very different lives. Some live in big houses with comfort, others live in small homes with many struggles. Some eat healthy food every day, others may skip meals because they cannot afford them. Some go to the best schools, others cannot continue education because they must work early in life. These differences between rich and poor shape health, education, housing, opportunities, and even the way people dream about the future. In this long episode I will speak slowly and clearly so that English learners at beginner and intermediate levels can follow step by step. I will explain why resources, privilege, sanitation, leisure, and opportunities make life very different for rich and poor families. I will also give examples to make these ideas clear. You will learn five tough words with easy explanations so that you can grow your vocabulary while listening to a real life topic. Please stay with me until the end and do not forget to follow Podcast in English For You so you can continue learning English in slow and simple language while also learning about life.In this slow English podcast Maria explains why rich and poor live differently and how resources and opportunities shape daily life.Clear and slow English with five vocabulary explanations for learnersA real life topic that helps you practice English while reflecting on society and fairnessDisclaimer: Narration in this episode is performed by an AI-generated voice. This helps deliver slow, clear English for language learners worldwide. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
What this episode covers
Please support my Podcast :https://buymeacoffee.com/mariaspencerWelcome my dear friends to Podcast in English For You. My name is Maria and in this episode we will explore the important question of why rich and poor live differently. Around us we see people living very different lives. Some live in big houses with comfort, others live in small homes with many struggles. Some eat healthy food every day, others may skip meals because they cannot afford them. Some go to the best schools, others cannot continue education because they must work early in life. These differences between rich and poor shape health, education, housing, opportunities, and even the way people dream about the future. In this long episode I will speak slowly and clearly so that English learners at beginner and intermediate levels can follow step by step. I will explain why resources, privilege, sanitation, leisure, and opportunities make life very different for rich and poor families. I will also give examples to make these ideas clear. You will learn five tough words with easy explanations so that you can grow your vocabulary while listening to a real life topic. Please stay with me until the end and do not forget to follow Podcast in English For You so you can continue learning English in slow and simple language while also learning about life.In this slow English podcast Maria explains why rich and poor live differently and how resources and opportunities shape daily life.Clear and slow English with five vocabulary explanations for learnersA real life topic that helps you practice English while reflecting on society and fairnessDisclaimer: Narration in this episode is performed by an AI-generated voice. This helps deliver slow, clear English for language learners worldwide. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
NOW PLAYING
Why Rich and Poor Live Differently | Best Podcast for English Learners | Slow English | Best for Beginners
No transcript for this episode yet
Similar Episodes
Mar 26, 2026 ·1m
Jan 2, 2026 ·47m
Dec 21, 2025 ·46m