Daily English Pod
Daily English Pod is a space for learning English beyond grammar and textbooks.
During the week, you’ll learn practical vocabulary, expressions, idioms, and real-life English, the language people actually use in everyday conversations, emotions, and work.
On weekends, we slow down. Through ideas from psychology, philosophy, and real human experience, we explore language as a way to better understand life, emotions, identity, and growth.
This podcast is created by Jale, an English teacher with 13 years of teaching experience and a Master’s degree in Applied Linguistics from Canada, who teaches with patience, clarity, and care, and believes learning works best when students feel seen, respected, and safe to think aloud.
The goal is simple but meaningful: to help you understand English deeply, use it confidently, and connect it to your real life. English here is not just a skill. It’s a gentle companion for clearer thinking, honest expression, and deeper human connection.
Daily English Pod
Bare minimum
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Bare minimum
means the smallest amount of effort, work, or responsibility needed to meet a basic requirement — nothing extra. It’s what you do when you’re tired, overwhelmed, or just trying to survive the moment.
Examples
1- During a really stressful week, he wasn’t aiming to be perfect. He focused on the bare minimum — showing up, replying, and getting through the day.
2- She used to go above and beyond at work, but after months of burnout, she decided to do the bare minimum to protect her energy.
Hi everyone, and welcome to Daily English. Today’s expression is modern, honest, and extremely relatable. It’s “bare minimum.” One more time: “bare minimum.”
Listen to this: She showed up to work, answered a few emails, finished the tasks she absolutely had to do… and nothing more. She wasn’t lazy. She was exhausted. She was doing the bare minimum just to get through the day.
So what does “bare minimum” mean?
The “bare minimum” means the smallest amount of effort, work, or responsibility needed to meet a basic requirement — nothing extra. It’s what you do when you’re tired, overwhelmed, or just trying to survive the moment.
Let’s listen to some examples:
During a really stressful week, he wasn’t aiming to be perfect. He focused on the bare minimum — showing up, replying, and getting through the day.
She used to go above and beyond at work, but after months of burnout, she decided to do the bare minimum to protect her energy.
Some days, self-care looks like big changes. Other days, it’s just the bare minimum —
getting out of bed, eating something, and breathing.
In relationships, people often feel hurt when one person only does the bare minimum,
instead of showing care, effort, and presence.
Doing the bare minimum isn’t always a bad thing. Sometimes it’s a boundary. Sometimes it’s recovery. Sometimes it’s how you survive before you can thrive again.
The key is knowing the difference between resting — and giving up.
Now it’s your turn: When was the last time you did the bare minimum — and what did you need most in that moment?
And remember — making your own example sentences helps new expressions become part of your natural English.
Thanks for listening to Daily English. Have a lovely day — a great one. See you tomorrow.