quinta-feira, 16 de dezembro de 2010

Idioms and phrasal verbs with keep

Source: http://www.englishpractice.com/vocabulary/idioms-phrasal-verbs-2/
Keep hold of something: don’t let it go
Keep something in mind: remember it
Keep one’s temper: remain calm
Ann was really upset with Joe, but she kept her temper.
Keep one’s family in clothes: support; provide what is necessary for
He earns enough to keep his family in clothes. (= He earns enough to keep his family in comfort.)
Keep at: (cause to) work persistently at
Keep from: abstain from; refrain from
You should keep from drinking and smoking.
Keep in: restrain one’s feelings etc.
Keep in with somebody: remain on good terms with somebody
Keep one’s hand in something: practise in order to retain one’s skill in something
Keep off: stay at a distance
Keep on: continue
He kept on working although he was tired.
Don’t keep on asking silly questions.
Keep under: control; hold down
Keep it up: go on without slackening
Keep up appearances: behave as usual in spite of a change in circumstances
As they always keep up appearances you will never know if they have any problems.
Keep up with: go on at the same rate as
Keep (oneself) to oneself: avoid the society of others
Nobody knows anything about her; she always keeps herself to herself.
Keep something to oneself: refuse to share it
Keep pace with: go at the same rate as
Keep track of: keep in touch with the progress of
I’ve never been very good at keeping track of what I do with my money.
For keeps: permanently (colloquial)
In keeping with something: in harmony or agreement with something

American History: Warren Harding Wins Election of 1920


Source: www.voanews.com
Warren Harding had owned a newspaper in Ohio. People advised him to enter politics, because he was such a good public speaker.
Warren Harding had owned a newspaper in Ohio. People advised him to enter politics, because he was such a good public speaker.























STEVE EMBER: Welcome to THE MAKING OF A NATION -- American history in VOA Special English.
This week in our series, Doug Johnson and Shirley Griffith discuss the presidential election of nineteen twenty and the man who won, Warren Harding.
DOUG JOHNSON: The presidential election of nineteen twenty was a turning point in American politics. It ended a period of social reforms at home and an active foreign policy. It began a period of conservative thinking in both the political and social life of the nation.
American reporter H. L. Mencken described the national feeling this way: "The majority of Americans are tired of idealism. They want capitalism -- openly and without apology."
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: President Woodrow Wilson had suffered a stroke during his second term. He was very sick. No one expected him to be a candidate again. Yet he refused to announce that he would not run for a third term.
Woodrow Wilson had done much during his administration. He helped pass important laws dealing with trade, banking, and the rights of workers. He led the nation through the bloody world war in Europe. He tried, but failed, to have the United States join the new international organization -- the League of Nations.
The American people honored Wilson for his intelligence and ideas. But they were tired of his policies of social change. And they did not want to be involved in international problems anymore.
DOUG JOHNSON: The leaders of President Wilson's Democratic Party understood the feelings of the people. They knew they had little chance of winning the presidential election if they nominated a candidate of change.
Delegates to the democratic nominating convention voted forty-four times before agreeing on a candidate. They chose the governor of the state of Ohio, James Cox.
The Republican Party also had a difficult time at its nominating convention. Four men wanted to be president. The delegates voted six times. None of the men gained enough support. So, several party leaders met in private. They agreed that only one man -- a compromise candidate -- could win the support of the convention. He was a senator from the state of Ohio, Warren Harding.
The delegates voted ten more times before choosing Harding as their candidate for president. For vice president, they chose Calvin Coolidge of Massachusetts.
Visitors waiting to see President Harding, around 1921Visitors waiting to see President Harding, around 1921
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: Warren Harding had owned a newspaper in Ohio. People advised him to enter politics, because he was such a good public speaker.
During the campaign, he promised lower taxes, less immigration, and more aid to farmers. He called for "normalcy" -- a new period of peace and quiet, with few changes. That is what the voters wanted to hear in nineteen twenty. Warren Harding won the election with sixty-eight percent of the popular vote.
In his first act as president, he invited people to visit the White House. He permitted them to walk in the garden. The act was a sign. The government seemed to be returning to the people.
DOUG JOHNSON: Warren Harding is remembered mostly for two events. One was a successful international conference. The other was a shameful national incident.
After World War One, Britain, Japan, and the United States expanded their navies. They built bigger and better ships. Many members of the United States Congress worried about the cost. They also worried about increased political tension in Asia. They asked President Harding to organize a conference to discuss these issues.
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: The conference was held in Washington in November, nineteen twenty-one. President Harding invited representatives from the major naval powers of the time: Britain, Japan, France, and Italy. He also invited representatives from countries with interests in Asia: China, Portugal, Belgium and the Netherlands. He did not invite the new Soviet leaders in Russia.
Mr. Harding's secretary of state, Charles Evans Hughes, spoke. He offered the conference a detailed plan to reduce the size of the world's major navies.
He proposed that the world's strongest nations should stop building warships for ten years. He also proposed that Britain, Japan, and the United States should destroy some ships to make their navies smaller immediately.
DOUG JOHNSON: Delegates to the conference debated the plan for three months. Japan demanded, and won, the right to have more ships. But the final agreement was very close to the one proposed by Secretary Hughes.
The conference was not a complete success.
For example, it did not prevent countries from building some kinds of ships. These ships would prove important in the second world war. Also, it did not create ways to protect China and the islands in the South Pacific Ocean from Japanese expansion. Yet the naval treaty of nineteen twenty-one was the first in which the world's strongest countries agreed to reduce the size of their armed forces. Most people thought it was a good treaty.
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: The second thing for which President Harding is remembered is the Teapot Dome scandal. It involved the misuse of underground oil owned by the federal government.
Warren Harding was an honest man. But he did not have a strong mind of his own. He was easily influenced. And he often accepted bad advice. He explained the problem with these words:
"I listen to one side, and they seem right. Then I listen to the other side, and they seem just as right. I know that somewhere there is a man who knows the truth. But I do not know where to find him."
DOUG JOHNSON: President Harding appointed several men of great ability to his cabinet. They included Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes, Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon, and Commerce Secretary Herbert Hoover.  However, some of his appointments were dishonest men. One was Interior Secretary Albert Fall. He was responsible for the Teapot Dome scandal.
Secretary Fall gave a private company the right to take oil from land owned by the federal government. In return, the company gave him money and cattle.
The oil was not supposed to be taken from the ground. It was supposed to be saved for the United States navy to use in an emergency. Private oil companies and many politicians opposed this policy. They said saving the oil was unnecessary.
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: Albert Fall opposed the policy when he was a member of the Senate. When he became Interior Secretary, his department took control of the lands containing the underground oil. Then he permitted private companies to use the land for a period of time. During that time, the companies could take out the oil.
Some of the oil was in the western state of Wyoming. The rock mass on the surface looked like a container for making tea. So, the area was called Teapot Dome. When the Senate uncovered Secretary Fall's wrong-doing, the press quickly called the incident the Teapot Dome scandal.
The Senate investigation led to several court cases which lasted throughout the nineteen twenties. Secretary Fall was found guilty of misusing his government position. He was sentenced to prison for one year.
DOUG JOHNSON: President Harding did not live to see the end of the Teapot Dome incident. In the summer of nineteen twenty-three, he made a political trip to Alaska and western states. On the way home, he became sick while in San Francisco. He died of a heart attack.
Vice President Calvin Coolidge was in the northeastern state of Vermont when he heard that President Harding had died. Coolidge's father was a local court official there. He gave the oath of office to his son. That is how Calvin Coolidge became the thirtieth president of the United States.
The story of his administration will be the subject of our program next week.
(MUSIC)
STEVE EMBER: Our program was written by David Jarmul. The narrators were Doug Johnson and Shirley Griffith. You can find our series online with transcripts, MP3s, podcasts and historical images at voaspecialenglish.com. You can also follow us on Facebook and Twitter at VOA Learning English. Join us again next week for THE MAKING OF A NATION -- an American history series in VOA Special English.
___
This is program #16
7

quarta-feira, 15 de dezembro de 2010

Statute of Liberty, part III

Author: Frenchfrog
PART THREE
 
    
 
Q.12  True or False?
 
        New York City is the biggest city in the United States.    True.      False.
 
Q.13  How many inhabitants are there in New York City?
 
             over 5 million.     over 8 million.     over 10 million.     over 12 million.
 
Q.14  How many foreign and American tourists visit New York City each year?
 
             about 20 million.     about 30 million.    about 40 million.     about 50 million.
 
Q.15  Fill in the blanks in the description of New York City.
 
        The city's  centres for  are among the nation's most influential, and
            for more than a century, it's been one of the world's major centres of  and
            .

Origin of the expression OK




CREDITS FOR VOA SPECIAL ENGLISH

WORDS AND THEIR STORIES: WHERE DID 'OK' COME FROM?

A look at what may be the most commonly used word in the world.

Millions of people all over the world use the word OK. In fact, some people say the word is used more often than any other word in the world. OK means all right or acceptable. It expresses agreement or approval. You might ask your brother, "Is it okay if I borrow your car?” Or if someone asks you to do something, you might say, “Okay, I will.” Still, language experts do not agree about where the word came from.Now, the VOA Special English program WORDS AND THEIR STORIES.

Some people say it came from the Native American Indian tribe known as the Choctaw. The Choctaw word okeh means the same as the American word okay. Experts say early explorers in the American West spoke the Choctaw language in the nineteenth century. The language spread across the country.
But many people dispute this. Language expert Allen Walker Read wrote about the word OK in reports published in the nineteen sixties. He said the word began being used in the eighteen thirties. It was a short way of writing a different spelling of the words “all correct.” Some foreign-born people wrote “all correct” as “o-l-l k-o-r-r-e-c-t,” and used the letters O.K. Other people say a railroad worker named Obadiah Kelly invented the word long ago. They said he put the first letters of his names -- O and K -- on each object people gave him to send on the train.
Still others say a political organization invented the word. The organization supported Martin Van Buren for president in eighteen forty. They called their group, the O.K. Club. The letters were taken from the name of the town where Martin Van Buren was born — Old Kinderhook, New York.
Not everyone agrees with this explanation, either. But experts do agree that the word is purely American. And it has spread to almost every country on Earth. 
Then there is the expression A-OK. This means everything is fine. A-OK is a space-age expression. It was used in nineteen sixty-one during the flight of astronaut Alan Shepard. He was the first American to be launched into space. His flight ended when his spacecraft landed in the ocean, as planned. Shepard reported: "Everything is A-OK.”
However, some experts say the expression did not begin with the space age. One story says it was first used during the early days of the telephone to tell an operator that a message had been received. 
There are also funny ways to say okay. Some people say okey-dokeyor okey-doke. These expressions were first used in the nineteen thirties. Today, a character on the American television series, “The Simpsons,” says it another way. He says okely-dokely.
(MUSIC)
This program was written by Shelley Gollust. I'm Faith Lapidus. You can find more WORDS AND THEIR STORIES at our Web site, voaspecialenglish.com.

Family Album part VII



Source: Family Album, USA, part VII

A wonderful Tonight

Listen to the song and put the pictures in the right order according to the lyrics. Type the correct number in the box below each picture.


Source: http://www.englishexercises.org/makeagame/viewgame.asp?id=4420


Author: Teacher Serene
                                              
. Listen to the song again and fill in the blanks with the correct words from the table below.
love
 helps
 around
car 
see 
tell 
puts 
light 
party
home 
evening 
aching 
wear 
beautiful 
blonde 
realize 
      
It's late in the ; she's wondering what clothes to .
She  on her make-up and brushes her long  hair.
And then she asks me, "Do I look all right?"
And I say, "Yes, you look wonderful tonight."

We go to a  and everyone turns to 
This  lady that's walking  with me.
And then she asks me, "Do you feel all right?"
And I say, "Yes, I feel wonderful tonight."

I feel wonderful because I see
The  light in your eyes.
And the wonder of it all
Is that you just don't  how much I love you.

It's time to go  now and I've got an  head,
So I give her the  keys and she  me to bed.
And then I  her, as I turn out the ,
I say, "My darling, you were wonderful tonight.
Oh my darling, you were wonderful tonight."

Statue of Liberty, Part II


PART TWO
Source:www.englishexercises.org

 
    
 
Q.8   Complete the following description of the Statue of Liberty.
 
           The statue is of a  figure standing upright, dressed in a  with a
            point spiked rays representing a , holding a stone  close to her
           body in her  hand and a flaming  high in her  hand. The tablet
           bears the date   , commemorating the date of the United
           States  of .
 
Q.9   What is the Statue of Liberty composed of?
 
            The statue is made of a sheeting of pure  hung on a framework of 
            with the exception of the flame of the torch, which is coated in  leaf.
 
Q.10  What are the characteristics of the pedestal on which the Statue of Liberty
        stands?
 
            The statue stands atop a rectangular stonework pedestal with a foundation in the
            shape of an irregular -pointed .
 
Q.11  How tall is the Statue of Liberty?
 
            The statue is  feet  inch tall.