Showing posts with label Beginner's tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beginner's tips. Show all posts

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Full Beginner's Course Online for Free

If you want to review some of your basic skills or you are a new student, take a look at this link.  It has full courses online and from what I've seen, it works well.

Do ten minutes every day. 

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Stories Online with Audio and Text


Take a look at this link for Online Audio Stories.  Its easy to use and you can read along with the reader and practise your pronunciation. 

Monday, April 11, 2011

In My Opinion


Take a look at this link about different ways to express your opinion from esl-galaxy

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Audio English

This is a fantastic website with loads of English on-line!  Take some time to explore it. Use the search button.
Audio English 

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Greetings in English

From a Facebook conversation:

Tiffany: Native English Speakers, When you greet someone on a day to day basis, what words do you say? And what is the typical answer? Be honest, variety helps!

Laurie: Hello or Hi.......then i tell them that my Nan thinks i'm wonderful ;) hehehe

Angus: Howdy!

Tiffany: Laurie, you never use ''g'day"?

Laurie: maybe only sometimes.......Grandpa Bill says it & i also know a few others that use it all the time too :) another one I & other people i know say is "Hey"......Mum says Hello too....Oh & Nan says "G'day" too :)

Sevika: Hey, how's it going? Or simply the very South African, howzit!

Vance: For telephones I always use "Ahoy", as Alexander Graham Bell would have wanted. In real life, theres no telling what you'll get when you see me. Any thing from me pretending to tie my shoes to avoid talking to you, to a loud and disingenuous "HEY, HOW YOU DOIN' BUDDY!"

Joe: If I saw you this morning I would say "Hey Tiffany"

Sarah: hey, how are you/how was your day?
reply: good/quite good/ok/busy/the usual

Sarah: @Vance: what do you do if you bend down to tie your shoes, and you realise you have no laces, or velcro?

Vance:
I've many tactics for avoiding talking to insipid fools. shoelaces are just one.

Alicia: We always say "good morning" and reply "good morning" at work - everyone.

Barb: I say hiya which is very british

Lisa: If it is someone I know well, I usually say "Hey" or "Hey there!". If it is more an acquaintance (that I'd see on a day-to-day basis), I us "Hi" or "Hello". The reply is usually a repeat of the greeting I used. (Beyond this is the very typical but meaningless "How are you doing?" to which the reply is a very non-committal "Fine", "Good" or a plea-for-connection-through-shared-misery, "Tired", "Exhausted".)

Let's try to use these every day expressions the next time we meet.




Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Write Your Shopping List in English!

We're always looking for new ways to integrate English into our life and make it more 'natural'. Try writing your shopping list in English. Try writing in your diary in English.


Have you turned your mobile to 'English' yet?

Photo: Albert Vila (India, 2008)

Friday, September 17, 2010

Power English

Hi everyone,

I just stumbled across this Ted Power website with some great information for English learners. Take a look!

Remember, for all the links and information that one accumulates, it all means nothing if you don't apply it. Simply spoken: study for results!

Photo: Tiffany Jones (Lake Toba, Sumatra)

Friday, July 9, 2010

Body Parts




See if you can name all of the parts of the face.




See if you can name all of the parts of the body. Write them down. 

Here is a Spanish/English word game. Click on the 'new game' for news to appear. 

The following is a rather slow video, but you can use it for pronunciation practice.  Good luck!

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Some Common Errors in Direct Translation

We watch 'the news', or we read 'the news' in newspapers. They are not called notices.

(Do not question why, just use your remember button.)

We have parents. My mother and my father are my parents. They are not 'my fathers'. If I said 'My fathers' I would be referring to two or more men that filled the role of male parent.

In a similar vein, we have children. My son and my daughter are my children. They are not my 'sons'. If I said 'my sons', then I would be referring to my male children.

Catalan English - 'She doesn't wake up trust in me.'

English - 'She doesn't inspire trust in me.'

In general, even if you have been speaking English for several years, you need to make more effort in distinguishing between he/she and him/her.  He is not she, and she is not he. Its quite a typical mistake and needs your attention if you want to improve.

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Note book for new vocabulary


Go out and buy yourself a little notebook to write down new words in. Then, make sure you take time out, five minutes or so, to memorize the new words. You can keep the notepad with you, so you can have quick study moments any time of the day you suddenly have five minutes spare.

If you don't know one word, then write it down, and learn it. Its very simple.

Photo: Albert Vila

Friday, March 12, 2010

How Late is Too Late?


First of all, I know I live in Spain. Time is more flexible here than where I am used to, and outside of English class, I will not complain. However, in an English class, we are not only learning the English language, we're learning English customs.

I added this to my facebook status:

Native English Speakers: How do you personally feel about lateness? If you say 12, what is 'acceptable' lateness and what is not. (Would love as many opinions from as many countries as possible please)

This is what some of my friends had to say in response:

John C.: If it's a pre-arranged appointment with a friend for a coffee or something at a place that's familiar to you both I'd say 15 minutes is the maximum, but really I think if you're going to be more than 5 minutes late it's polite to call ahead and say.

If it's an informal function where there's going to be lots of people I'd say anything up to half an hour is acceptable (if not fashionable =O)"

Barb W.: I am with John and on the Isle of Man the time lines would be longer in Winter to allow for snow etc but in Summer 10 - 15 mins is ok

Sarah St.: Here is my North American perspective! If the appointment is for professional reasons (interview, meeting etc.) then being late is unacceptable, you should arrive at least 15 minutes early. As for pre-arranged/ informal function, I agree with John.

Joe O. Yes, exactly what Sarah said!

It's funny because in my wife's Buddhist group we have the honor of have a Lama from Tibet visit the group sometimes. When he is in town, we talk about American time and Tibet time. (because he always starts late) Tibeten culture is different :-)

Perry F. United States here ... and most of my professional friends follow the axim "If you're early, you're on time ... if you're on time, you're late ... and if you're late, don't bother showing up". Of course these days I work in Emergency Medical Services, so being on time is a tiny bit more crucial than when I was in Real Estate.

Sayed Z.: i think lateness is totally unacceptable.... u may come 15-20min earlier but dont even 5 min later.....

Sabrina S: Hmm...I have to think like my parents because my perspective has been "contaminated". For my parents, being on time means at least 5 minutes early (they usually arrive before then). Being late starts one minute after the arranged time. I think if five minutes have gone by, phone calls would start to be made but maybe not until 10 minutes....polite but annoyed phone calls.

Virginia L: 5 mins, or you better have a limb missing

Kim Beros: I suppose it depends on where you are going. If it is a formal or business appointment it is not really acceptable to be more than a few minutes late. If my students are more than ten minutes late for class, they are considered absent. However I personally think up to fifteen minutes for casual meetings is o.k. Anything after that warrants a call and an apology. People differ greatly in relation to what they deem is time appropriate. Because I am a 'super anal organised, personality type A' I am obsessively 'on the dot', but have a lot of friends who are never on time for anything and I make allowances for that. After all, it is our obsession with 'being on time' for everything that places so much stress on half the world.

Andrew: Occasionally with good excuse is unavoidable. Habitual lateness rhymes with bitchual; how's that 4 english? America bitches!

Little Wolf: and I am not late for professional engagements, but I used to work in international projects and would constantly be frustrated by "africa time" and most of the projects in the middle east would always be over schedule-vendors wouldn't feel a sense of urgency, construction crews would take days off...and we had to be careful not to offend our "partners" in country

Andrew: yeah, black time is the worst. I went to a thing on martin luther king day, and I didn't get to the free fried chicken afterwards until about four hours behind schedule, because everything just got dragged on and on, it was like a nightmare!

Mette M: I'm not native English speaker, but here is my opinion: My limit is MAX 15 min. before I leave (unless the person lets me know he/she is late). Later than that is not acceptable. If the person lets me know (before the 15 min limit) it can be longer depending on the situation.( Waiting on a street corner the limit is 5 min.) Am I strict?

Alicia K: Personally, I am a 15-min girl. Earlier than 15 mins is just rude (because they aren't ready for you), later than 15 minutes, you need to reschedule. Also, I call ahead if I'm going to be more than 5 minutes late and give them an ETA.

However, when I worked with a bunch of people from Latin countries, they operated on very different rules. You were supposed to tell them 10 AM if you meant 12 PM, and it was just "understood".

Susan N: Up to 15 minutes = fashionably late. More than 15 minutes without call / good excuse = rude

David B: It's a sliding double scale, depending on the situation, and my lack of ability to really define reasonable or acceptable. For instance, if I feel I've waited too long, it doesn't really matter if it's been fifteen minutes or an hour; I feel slighted and the ego is hurt. But depending on my internal excuse, I will feel fine being at least that late for someone else. :/

Laurie: Depends on where & what it is.....if your goin out somewhere say to dinner/movie 15-20min but if it's a bbq/party or something an hour is fine. Plus im worth it :D

Sevika S: Back home when you are told 11am, don't arrive before 11.30 as they are not ready for you, unless of course it is a meeting at a restaurant or the like...then 15 min max if they have not called to let you know they will be late.
I practice the 15 min rule, I hate people who waste my time. Though I must say I have not sat around waiting for anyone ever....maybe what you ought to be discussing is 'why don't people call to let you know they will be late for an appointment?'

Beáta S: I agree with Sevika! I'm not an English Native Speaker either but I think the rules of not being late and notifying others if late apply to most of the European countries (well, at least the Northern countries I happened to live in).
I think I could 'forgive' any kind of lateness, as long as I would be notified of it... there is no room in my life for people who cannot respect me... simple as that :))

Sevika S: And just to add, 'lateness' seems so much nicer than 'tardiness'...! On such a disagreeable issue I propose 'tardiness'! :-)

Little Wolf: I am late all the time-unless a friend absolutely needs to be somewhere on time. The army beat it out of me for a time, but it didn't last long. Romantic interests have said it's a matter of respect (lack of respect actually) so at least I give notice these days-although disrespect is never my intention. it's just that bizarre things always come up no matter how many contingency plans I have, and it-timeliness-is not one of my priorities just for the sake of meeting the clock. However-I do move with a sense or urgency when extreme situations call for it, and a delay could result in injury or death.

Little Wolf: oh and if I get tired of waiting I am not bitter, I just find something else to do and figure they got tied up.had a good reason...I almost never feel blown off, or ignored *shrugs* I'm very good at entertaining myself, and very rarely doubt anyone's expressed intentions, unless I have a pattern to go on. 


When coming to English class, I expect you to be on time. If you are more than ten minutes late, you will need to call or send an sms and let me know. If you do happen to be late, you must always begins with an apology. 'I'm sorry I'm late. I was caught in traffic.'


Photo: Tiffany Jones

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Overuse of the Word Beautiful

It's typical to hear Spanish/Catalan speakers overuse the word 'beautiful'. In English we use nice, pretty, attractive, lovely and cute rather than beautiful. Beautiful is often saved for top of the range gorgeousness, rather than something we may see every day. 

Also, we often use beautiful to describe something we can see, rather than something we have experienced. There are exceptions to this, but they are meaningful exceptions. 

Today, find more adjectives for the word ‘beautiful’.

The following is taken from Merriam-Webster Dictionary

Main Entry: beau·ti·ful 
Pronunciation: \ˈbyü-ti-fəl\
Function: adjective
Date: 15th century
1 : having qualities of beauty : exciting aesthetic pleasure
2 : generally pleasing : excellent
— beau·ti·ful·ly  \-f(ə-)lē\ adverb
— beau·ti·ful·ness  \-fəl-nəs\ noun
synonyms beautifullovelyhandsomeprettycomelyfair mean exciting sensuous or aesthetic pleasure. beautifulapplies to whatever excites the keenest of pleasure to the senses and stirs emotion through the senses <beautiful mountain scenery>lovely is close to beautiful but applies to a narrower range of emotional excitation in suggesting the graceful, delicate, or exquisite lovely melody>handsome suggests aesthetic pleasure due to proportion, symmetry, or elegance handsome Georgian mansion>pretty often applies to superficial or insubstantial attractiveness pretty scenes>comely is like handsome in suggesting what is coolly approved rather than emotionally responded to comely grace of a dancer>fair suggests beauty because of purity, flawlessness, or freshness <fair of face>.

What adjectives could you use for the following photographs, instead of beautiful?