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Why Puerto Rico Is Not a State: US Territories Explained in English (B1โB2 Listening Practice)
Description
๐This episode of the Learn English Podcast teaches American English vocabulary through the real story of U.S. territories and the ongoing debate around statehood. English learners at the B1โB2 level will discover why Puerto Rico, Washington D.C., Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa are not U.S. states โ and why that may or may not change in the future. Every topic is explained clearly in natural American English with vocabulary taught in context.
Learning English through real American politics and current events is one of the most effective methods for intermediate learners to build advanced vocabulary naturally. This episode covers essential terms including territory, commonwealth, statehood, federal district, electoral college, naturalization, and self-governance โ all explained clearly so B1โB2 ESL and EFL learners can understand and use this vocabulary confidently in everyday conversation.
This episode is especially relevant right now, with ongoing news coverage of Puerto Rico, the 51st state debate, and U.S. territorial politics making these topics actively searched and widely discussed. The Learn English Podcast teaches English in context โ through real stories and real topics that matter โ so intermediate learners can build fluency naturally while staying informed about American culture and current events.
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๐ Vocabulary list:
1) Territory โ An area of land that belongs to a country but is not a state.
2) Citizenship โ The legal status of belonging to a country.
3) District โ A specific area that is officially recognized for government purposes.
4) Constitution โ The main set of laws that guides a countryโs government.
5) Amendment โ A change or addition to a legal document, especially the Constitution.
6) Overwhelming โ Very strong or very large in amount.
7) Representatives โ People elected to speak or vote for others in government.
8) Public debt โ The amount of money a government owes.
9) Autonomy โ The power to govern yourself or make your own decisions.
10) Naturalization โ The legal process of becoming a citizen of a country.