quarta-feira, 12 de janeiro de 2011

History of English part II

Source: www.voanews.com


Detail from the Bayeux Tapestry in France
Photo: Getty Images
Detail from the Bayeux Tapestry in France. The cloth, over 68 meters long, tells about the Norman conquest of England, the event marking the beginning of French influence on the English language

STEVE EMBER: This is Steve Ember.
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: And this is Shirley Griffith with the VOA Special English program, EXPLORATIONS. Today we present the second of our two programs about the history of the English Language.
(MOVIE)
STEVE EMBER: Last week, we told how the English language developed as a result of several invasions of Britain. The first involved three tribes called the Angles, the Jutes and the Saxons. A mix of their languages produced a language called Anglo-Saxon, or Old English. It sounded very much like German. Only a few words remained from the Celts who had lived in Britain
Two more invasions added words to Old English. The Vikings of Denmark, Norway and Sweden arrived in Britain more than one thousand years ago. The next invasion took place in the year ten sixty-six. French forces from Normandy were led by a man known as William the Conqueror.
The Norman rulers added many words to English. The words “parliament,” “jury,” “justice,” and others that deal with law come from the Norman rulers.
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: Over time, the different languages combined to result in what English experts call Middle English. While Middle English still sounds similar to German, it also begins to sound like Modern English.
Here Warren Scheer reads the very beginning of Geoffrey Chaucer’s great poem, “The Canterbury Tales” as it was written in Middle English.
WARREN SCHEER: Whan that aprill with his shoures soote
The droghte of march hath perced to the roote,
And bathed every veyne in swich licour
Of which vertu engendred is the flour;
Whan zephirus eek with his sweete breeth
Inspired hath in every holt and heath


STEVE EMBER: Chaucer wrote that poem in the late thirteen hundreds. It was written in the language of the people. The rulers of Britain at that time still spoke the Norman French they brought with them in ten sixty-six.
The kings of Britain did not speak the language of the people until the early fourteen hundreds. Slowly, Norman French was used less and less until it disappeared.
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: The English language was strongly influenced by an event that took place more than one thousand four hundred years ago. In the year five ninety-seven, the Roman Catholic Church began its attempt to make Christianity the religion of Britain.
The language of the Catholic Church was Latin. Latin was not spoken as a language in any country at that time. But it was still used by some people.
Latin made it possible for a church member from Rome to speak to a church member from Britain. Educated people from different countries could communicate using Latin.
Latin had a great effect on the English language. Here are a few examples. The Latin word “discus” became several words in English including “disk,” “dish,” and “desk.” The Latin word “quietus” became the English word “quiet.” Some English names of plants such as ginger and trees such as cedar come from Latin. So do some medical words such as cancer.
STEVE EMBER: English is a little like a living thing that continues to grow. English began to grow more quickly when William Caxton returned to Britain in the year fourteen seventy-six. He had been in Holland and other areas of Europe where he had learned printing. He returned to Britain with the first printing press.
The printing press made it possible for almost anyone to buy a book. It helped spread education and the English language.
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: Slowly, during the fifteen hundreds, English became the modern language we would recognize. English speakers today would be able to communicate with English speakers in the last part of the sixteenth century.
William Shakespeare's portrait on the First Folio edition
Getty Images

William Shakespeare's portrait on the First Folio edition
It was during this time period that the greatest writer in English produced his work. His name was William Shakespeare. His plays continue to be printed, acted in theaters, and seen in motion pictures almost four hundred years after his death.
STEVE EMBER: Experts say that Shakespeare’s work was written to be performed on the stage, not to be read. Yet every sound of his words can produce word pictures, and provide feelings of anger, fear and laughter. Shakespeare’s famous play “Romeo and Juliet” is so sad that people cry when they see this famous story.
The story of the power-hungry King Richard the Third is another very popular play by Shakespeare. Listen as Shep O’Neal reads the beginning of “Richard the Third.”
SHEP O’NEAL: Now is the winter of our discontent
Made glorious summer by this sun of York;
And all the clouds that lour'd upon our house
In the deep bosom of the ocean buried.
Now are our brows bound with victorious wreaths; 
Our bruised arms hung up for monuments;
Our stern alarums changed to merry meetings,
Our dreadful marches to delightful measures


SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: The development of the English language took a giant step just nine years before the death of William Shakespeare. Three small British ships crossed the Atlantic Ocean in sixteen-oh-seven. They landed in an area that would later become the southern American state of Virginia. They began the first of several British colonies. The name of the first small colony was Jamestown.
In time, people in these new colonies began to call areas of their new land by words borrowed from the native people they found living there. For example, many of the great rivers in the United States are taken from American Indian words. The Mississippi, the Tennessee, the Missouri are examples. Other Native American words included “moccasin”, the kind of shoe made of animal skin that Indians wore on their feet.
This borrowing or adding of foreign words to English was a way of expanding the language. The names of three days of the week are good examples of this. The people from Northern Europe honored three gods with a special day each week. The gods were Odin, Thor and Freya. Odin’s-day became Wednesday in English, Thor’s-day became Thursday and Freya’s-day became Friday.
STEVE EMBER: Britain had other colonies in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, and India. The English language also became part of these colonies. These colonies are now independent, but English still is one of the languages spoken. And the English language grew as words from the native languages were added.
For example, the word “shampoo” for soap for the hair came from India. “Banana” is believed to be from Africa.
Experts cannot explain many English words. For hundreds of years, a dog was called a “hound.” The word is still used but not as commonly as the word “dog.” Experts do not know where the word “dog” came from or when. English speakers just started using it. Other words whose origins are unknown include “fun,” “bad,” and “big.”
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: English speakers also continue to invent new words by linking old words together. A good example is the words “motor” and “hotel.” Many years ago some one linked them together into the word “motel.” A motel is a small hotel near a road where people travelling in cars can stay for the night.
Other words come from the first letters of names of groups or devices. A device to find objects that cannot be seen called Radio Detecting and Ranging became “Radar.” The North Atlantic Treaty Organization is usually called NATO.
Experts say that English has more words that explain the same thing that any other language. For example, the words “large,” “huge,” “vast,” “massive,” and “enormous” all mean something really “big.”
STEVE EMBER: People often ask how many words there are in the English language. Well, no one really knows. The Oxford English Dictionary lists about six hundred fifteen thousand words. Yet the many scientific words not in the dictionary could increase the number to almost one million.
And experts are never really sure how to count English words. For example, the word “mouse.” A mouse is a small creature from the rodent family. But “mouse” has another very different meaning. A “mouse” is also a hand-held device used to help control a computer. If you are counting words do you count “mouse” two times?
(MUSIC)
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: Visitors to the Voice of America hear people speaking more than forty different languages. Most broadcasters at VOA come from countries where these languages are spoken. International organizations such as VOA would find it impossible to operate without a second language all the people speak.
The language that permits VOA to work is English. It is not unusual to see someone from the Mandarin Service talking to someone from the Urdu Service, both speaking English. English is becoming the common language of millions of people worldwide, helping speakers of many different languages communicate.
(MUSIC)
STEVE EMBER: This Special English program was written and produced by Paul Thompson. This is Steve Ember.
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH: And this is Shirley Griffith. Join us again next week for another EXPLORATIONS program, on the Voice of America
.

Technologies and English, part I


Good morning dear readers,

Today I decided to write about English tips, and how much it can be used for English learners and people interested to keep in touch with the Language. Speak English is not difficult; it depends on your willpower and dedication. This days I talked about how much the technologies could be useful approach each other and make friends around the world is easier due this technology.

As matter as fact, this technology have been used and continues used in order to improve and practice a language, in particular English. Thanks to this language communication became easily after the Babel Tower Fell down a long time ago. You cannot figure out, if we don’t have English for communicate how much difficult would be?

Anyways, change a bit of subject I’m so glad when I receive comments thankful for sharing my tips, articles, videos and websites and blogs’s tips. Teach by yourself known as Self-taught today is not difficult. You can use MP3, iPods, Notebooks using podcasts in order to improve your English, as well as access websites and blogs in English.

This blog receive a lot of visitors from Asia, mostly are friends, bloggers and teachers, of course students worldwide. I always encourage them to continue practice English overcome his/her difficult.

Finally, I have no words to describe how much happy is when you come, share, comment or suggest me, thank you so much Insya Allah (For God willing) we’re meeting tomorrow and the day after tomorrow until the day I dying. Next topic I’m going to talk about and share why did I decide to practice English and how I did that, what methodology I used for. See you tomorrow. 

The Genesis Band




Source: Speak Up
Language level: Basic
Standard: British accent




The Genesis Reunion

Genesis are back. The 1970s rock heroes have reunited for the first time in many years and, after successfully touring Europe in the summer, Tony Banks, Phil Collins and Mike Rutherford are now bringing their “Turn It On Again” tour to North America.

The band haven’t released a new album since 1991, and they last toured in 1992. Now, these are set to be Genesis’ final US, concerts: as Collins says, “Basically, it’s the last time we are doing it.”

PROGRESSIVE

Genesis were a progressive rock band in the 1970s, when they enjoyed cult success with albums like Selling England by the Pound. Vocalist Peter Gabriel was a spectacular performer who wore bizarre costumes during their live shows. Yet they had their had their greatest success in the 1980s after drummer Phil Collins replaced Gabriel as vocalist. The band revoluntionised their live shows by introducing hypnotic drums machine and incredible lighting. Although fans acused Genesis of selling out, the group became a worldwide success with the 1983 album Genesis and songs like “Mama.”

OUR FANS

Why have Genesis reunited now? Phill Collins says, “Well, we certainly don’t need the money. It’s rewarding to know that so many people still like us.” Initially, they wanted to re-form the 1970s line-up, with Gabriel and guitarist Steve Hackett, and perform their legendary concept album The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway. Unfortunately, Gabriel had other commitments and Hackett refused. In the end, they decided to tour with Phil Collins as vocalist.

The Old School (no audio)

Genesis were formed in 1967 by Peter Gabriel and keyboard player Tony Banks when they were still schoolboys at the exclusive boarding school, Charterhouse, in Surrey, England. They were discovered by record producer Jonathan King, another former Charterhouse student, who gave the band their name. Phil Collins who came from a more modest background, joined the group in 1970 as their drummer. Gabriel left the group in 1975 because the other member felt insistence on bizarre costumes made it impossible to perform serious music. Ironically, the band then became a commercial success, while Peter Gabriel continued as a cult solo artist. In 1966 phil Collins left Genesis: Tony Banks and Mike Rutherford tried to replace him with new vocalist Roy Wilson, but the band finally broke up in 1998;

Mr. Collins

Phil Collins is the most famous former member of the band, thanks to his solo career and hits like “In the Air Tonight” and “Another day in Paradise.” He worked as an actor. He appeared in the American TV series Miami Vice and played a gangster in the British movie, Buster.today he’s an award-writing songs for Disney films like Tarzan, which he has recently adapted as a Broadway musical.  The other band members admit their envy of Collins’s success, but Tony Banks says, “we joke about how short he is: he’s a very short man, you know?” The band still hope to reunite with Peter Gabriel next year. 

Family Album, 27



Source: Family Album

Marcos Pontes, the first Brazilian Astronaut

Source: www.maganews.com.br

Special Interview
Marcos Pontes, the first Brazilian astronaut

In this interview with Maganews he reveals what he thinks about a variety of subjects


Maganews – What was the most unforgettable [1] moment during your stay at the ISS?
Marcos Pontes – It was when I saw the Earth down there. The view of the planet from space is incredible. 
Maganews – Has the experience of having spent eight days in space changed the way you are or the way you think?
Marcos Pontes – Yes. Up there [2] we can se how small man is and how short our life is. We cannot waste [3] time on the small stuff [4].
Maganews – You have always loved music and even learned to play the guitar and piano. Is there a guitar up there on the ISS?
Marcos Pontes – I like the guitar a lot and I wish I had more time to practice. Up there on the ISS there isn’t a guitar. But even if there were, there would be no time to play it. There was a lot of work to be done there. I had just 6 hours to sleep and even then I only slept three hours. For the rest I was watching the Earth from up there.
Maganews – In 1993 you had guitar classes at CTA. You had a very old guitar. Do you still remember it?
Marcos Pontes – I do (laughs) [5] and I miss [6] it. Today I have a new guitar here, but a new guitar is never the same as an old one (more laughs).
Maganews – What is your life in Houston like, the city that is home to NASA?
Marcos Pontes – I have lived in Houston since 1998. It is a city of over 4million people. From time to time my family and I go to a Brazilian restaurant.
Maganews – What should Brazil do to become a force in the scientific area?
Marcos Pontes – Brazil should invest much more in education. This investment would result in a lot of benefits for the development of our science and technology. The government and private companies must also strike partnerships in scientific projects.
Maganews – Do you cook [7]? What is your favorite dish [8]? Do you like sweets?
Marcos Pontes - Yes. Like all military men, we have to learn to get by [9]. I like simple things likefried breast of chicken [10]. I loved it when my mom made it in the skillet [11]. As for sweet, I’m not a big fan.
Maganews – What do you like to listen to?
Marcos Pontes - I listen to everything, from classical to metal.
Maganews – What religion are you?  Do you pray [12] before you sleep?

Marcos Pontes – I’m Catholic, and I pray. I put my life in God’s hands all the time.
Maganews – If you had to choose another profession, what would it be?
Marcos Pontes – I would do anything involving design, music, or literature.

Neste dia 09 de Janeiro, Dia do Astronauta, reproduzimos aqui esta entrevista feita com o primeiro astronauta brasileiro (matéria publicada na edição de número 32 da revista Maganews).

Vocabulary
unforgettable – inesquecível
up there – lá em cima
to waste - desperdiçar
small stuff – coisa pequena
laughs – risos
to miss – aqui = sentir falta
to cook – cozinhar
dish – prato
to get by – se virar
10 fried breast of chicken – peito de frango frito
11 skillet. – panela
12 to pray - rezar

terça-feira, 11 de janeiro de 2011

Brixton: Multi-Cultural London



Welcome to Brixton

Source: www.speakup.combr
Language Level: Intermediate
Standard: British Accent


Jay Brown, a 38-year-old Black Londoner, set up a tour company and gave the British media a big surprise. Her company, Brixton Tours, offers tourists the chance to see an area that no one previously thought of putting on the tourist map, even if as she told me, everyone has heard about it:

Jay Brown:

(Standard British accent)

I got the idea for Brixton tours from travelling: I’ve been to Bali, I’ve been to Rio de Janeiro, I’ve been to India, I’ve been to Copenhagen, I’ve been…travelled quite extensively round Europe. And from travelling and meeting people and they ask you where you’re from, I was really surprised that most people had heard of Brixton from one way or another. So, from knowing that, I thought, “Oh, my God, people are so interested in where…” wherever you go, people are always interested in where you’re from and, with Brixton, I realised that I live in a place which is quite unique and quite special and has so much to offer.

THOSE RIOTS…

Jay Brown found that people around the world know two facts about Brixton. One is that it is a black area, a long-established Afro-Caribbean neighbourhood and a national symbol of minority culture, but Brixton is still a highly unusual tourist destination. The other characteristic of Brixton that everyone members is rioting. In 1981, and again in 1985 and 1995, local youths, fought battles who the police destroying building and cars and creating an enduring reputation for lawlessness. Not to disappoint expectations, Jay Brown takes her tours along the roads where these riots took place, although she says the area is now greatly changed:

Jay Brown:

On my tours I take people down the street where the riots actually happened to show them, and now you’ve got cafes, you’ve got internet store(s), you’ve got restaurants, you’ve got a shoe store called Elephant Foot for people who can’t find shoes in a particular size, but there’s so much. They’ve really invested in the area. And there’s lots of people starting business, because there’s lots of young people in this area as well. You know, it’s attracted musicians, artists, Brixton’s a very creative are and it’s very good for business, because people come here and set up, you know, little shops within the market of bigger stalls on the street. So it’s good: it’s entrepreneurial, it encourages people to be creative and Brixton’s a very creative area.

GENTRIFICATION

Investment, along with Brixton’s central locations and its convenient Underground station, have also attracted many entirely conventional uncreative middle-class residents, but it remains a great place for exploring more exotic cultures. Jay Brown’s tours also go pas the stalls of Brixton market, where an extraordinary selection of international produce caters for a remarkable cultural diversity. As well as Afro-Caribbean fruits like ackee, plantain and callaloo, there are Columbian specialities and African produce like giant land snails.

A NEW EXPERIENCE

Of course, not all these cultures welcome curious visitors. The athletic young drug dealers hanging out on street corners with their mountain bikes certainly do not welcome the attention of strangers, unless they are potential customers. Nor is this an ideal to take photographs with an expensive camera. But, having lived here for 15 years, Jay Brown, is sure that anymore touring the area with her has nothing to fear. In fact, in her company, she says Brixton is an essential part of any visit to London:

Jay Brown:

People should come on Brixton tour because it would get them out of the West End, which is really boring, and it’ll bring them to a place which offers them culture, music, food, entertainment, bars. There’s just so much here that people need to just leave the West End behind and head to south London and do a Brixton tour.

A troubled Neighbourood 

Brixton's streets reflect 200 years of London History. Over the last century it has been famous both as a community of actors and artists, and as an important retailing centre where the first British department store was built and where a shopping arcade was lit with eletricity for the first time. Today, however, Brixton is known for its Afro-Caribbean community. Since the 1950s - when immigrants from the West Indies were invited to Britain to help rebuild the economy shattered in the Second World War - Brixton has become a symbol of Britain' most colourful cultural minority. 

The new lives of early West Indian immigrants were often hard. Painful encounters with racism were almost inevitable and until 1976 there was no legal protection against discrimination.

The Riots

At times the hostility of London's white working classes became violent. Opposition to Britain's first wave of "mass immigration" come to ahead in August 1958, when mobs armed with knives and iron bars appeared on the streets in search of what they insultingly called "niggers." After several black men were beaten unconscious, armed gangs of West Indians retaliated with similar violence. Brixton has been devastated by riots on several occasions, in 1981 thousands of young Afro-Caribbean men reacted to aggressive policing by destroying buildings and burning cars. In 1985 similar scenes of destruction occured after a policeman searching for a robber broke into his house and shot his mother, leaving her permanently disable. Again in 1995 Brixton's street witnessed violent confrontations after the death of a black suspect in police custody.

LONDON'S MELTING POT

Today, despite problems with guns and crack cocaine, Brixton is calmer. Like the Notting Hill riots, which inspired the Notting Hill Carnival, Brixton's riots had positive long-term effects. By drawing attention to local problems, they inspired official efforts to combat racism and diminish poverty. In the years since the riots the West Indians community has also established itself as a valued element of national life. Black fashion now shapes all of Britain's culture, with Afro-Caribbean men and women making a prominent contribution in music, fashion, sport and entertainment. 

In recent years Brixton's association with the West Indies has also began to weaken. As the area lost its reputation for lawlessness, it began to attract a growing number of white professionals. Some locals resent their arrival, but they are just part of a growing diversity - a mix of cultures now being enhanced by an influx of French, Spanish and Portuguese-speaking immigrants from Africa.

BRIXTON GUIDES

For those of you wishing to discover Brixton's past, the Brixton Society visit http:www.brixtonsociety.org.uk publishes guidebooks and provides guides for walking tours. And if you want an insight into the lifestyle of Brixton's black community today, contact Jay Brown of Brixton Tours. Website: http://www.brixtontours.co.uk E-mail: jaybrixton@hotmail.com 

Tel:      +44 (0) 1843 840737
Mobile +44 (0) 7951 676 015



Expedition: Serrote do Capim and Fundoes

As you know I'm a Regional tour guide and also we develop projects for example plant trees and preserve the Archaeological Site's Heritage, and this is an off-topic on my blog about the tourism highlights check out, friends. You can also visit my second blog www.aventureirosdacaatinga.blogspot.com 

Both are located at Sitío do Bráz, in Carnauba dos Dantas town far from 8 kilometres away from the downtown. There we climbed up the river, passed by water falls, archaeological's site (engravings, and rock art painting untill to arrive one of the biggest shelter with painting of Northiest tradition, Serido sub tradition. afterwards we visited the Serrote do Capim beautiful landscape. The Caatinga Adventure fullfilled their promise in the evening , Dean Carvalho, Julio César and me returned to the town.


                                          Belvedere of Cabeço do Capim 

                                 Me, Carlos tour guide on top of belvedere
                                  Pedra do Chapéu (Hat's rock)
                                    Petroglyph located in Water-eye's river

                                  Mirror formed by water's shadow

                                                                           Sunset on top of Falcon's mountain  

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