quinta-feira, 30 de junho de 2011

Best Way To Learn English

Superbowl Party

Mixer 120 Best Way To Learn English

Agree or disagree, please let me know your opinion about it, I disagree with some points, what about you? Not necessarily you don't need to travel abroad, dedication and studying hard you can get the fluence. Comment, please. 
Source: www.elllo.org



Six native speakers of English share the best way to learn their language.


    quarta-feira, 29 de junho de 2011

    THE DEVIL AND THE LAWYER

    THE LAST LAUGH
     Source: www.speakup.com.br
    Speaker: Chuck Rolando
    Standard: American accent
    source of the picture: richardwiseman.wordpress.com





    The devil and the Lawyer

    The Devil visited a lawyer’s office and made him and offer: “I can arrange some things for you,” the Devil said. “I’ll increase your income fivefold. Your partners will love you. Your clients will respect you. You’ll have four months of vacation each year and live to be 100. All I require in return is that your wife’s soul, your children’s souls, and their children’s souls rot in hell for all eternity.” The lawyer thought for a moment and then asked, “So, what’s the catch?”

    The Wife and the Secretary

    Resolving to surprise her husband, an executive’s wife stopped by his office. When she opened the door, she found him with his secretary sitting in his lap. Without hesitate, he dictated,”…and in conclusion, gentlemen, budgets cuts or no budget cuts, I cannot continue operate this office with just one chair.” 

    A life-destroying drug

    Source: www.maganews.com.br



    Social problem

    A life-destroying drug

    Crack ruins the lives of addicts and their families, and also contributes to increased crime

    Crack is one of the most dangerous drugs there is. It has an effect a few seconds after first being inhaled. Initially the user feels euphoric, but the stimulating effect soon wears [1] off: it lasts from3 to 10 minutes. After this initial feeling of pleasure, users feel down and depressed. To feel good again users look for more of the drug, and the cycle begins. Users lose their self-control and become enslaved [2],  to the addiction.  Constant use of this drug damages people’s mental and physical health, affecting the brain, lungs [3], sleep and appetite. People get weaker [4],  and lose weight. Addicts run a much greater risk of suffering pulmonary and cardiac diseases. According to research, the drug’s power over users is such that only 10% of addicts who look for treatment manage to release themselves from its grasp [5],.

    Increased crime

    As crack causes very strong chemical dependency, addicts lose their jobs,girlfriends, boyfriends, friends and family. The police associate crack use with increased crime. This is because the addiction leads [6] users to commit criminal acts to get the money to buy the drug. In some cases, users even steal belongings [7] and money from their own families.  Besides ruining their own lives, crack users also ruin their families’ lives.


    Matéria publicada na edição de Junho / Julho da Revista Maganews (número 55).

    Áudio:  Haley Alcântara

    Foto 1 (Christian Tragni / Folhapress) –  Crack addicts on a street in the center of São Paulo city.

    Foto 2 – One of the posters in Brazil’s campaign against crack


    Vocabulary

    to wear off – exp. idiom. = desaparecer

    enslaved – escravizado

    lung – pulmão

    weaker – mais fraco

    5 grasp – aqui = vício / dependência / algo que nos acorrenta
    to lead – aqui = levar

    to steal belongings – furtar / roubar objetos (bens)

    terça-feira, 28 de junho de 2011

    Cinthia Lennon

    Standard: British accent
    Speaker: Rachel Roberts and Mark Worden





    Source of this picture: berikakhurtsidze.blogspot.com



     A special reading this month is from Cinthia Lennon’s book John. Which recounts her difficult marriage to the great lady Beatle. This is the book’s introduction written by the son Julian Lennon.

    Foreword by Julian Lennon

    Growing up as John Lennon’s on has been a rocky path. All my life I’ve had people coming up to me saying ‘I loved your Dad’. I always have every mixed feelings when I hear this. I know that Dad was an idol to millions who grew up loving his music and his ideals. But to me he wasn’t a musician or a peace icon, he was the father I loved and who let me down in so many ways. After the age of five, when my parents separated, I saw him only a handful of times, and when I did he was often remote and intimidating, I grew up longing for more contact with him but felt rejected and unimportant in his life.

    Dad was a great talent, a remarkable man who stood for peace and love in the world. But at the same time he found it very hard to show any peace and love to his first family – my mother and me. In many accounts of Dad’s life Mum and I are dismissed, or at best treated as insignificant bit players in his life, which sadly is something that continues to this day. Yet Mum was his first real love and she was with him for half his adult life, from art college, to the genesis of the Beatles, to their overwhelming worldwide success. That’s why I’m so happy that she’s decided to write her side of the story. For far too long now, Mum has put up with being relegated to a puff of smoke in Dad’s life and that simply is not the truth. Now it’s time to set the record straight. There’s so much that has never been said, so many tales that have never been told. If there is to be a balanced picture of Dad’s life, then Mum’s side of the story is long overdue.

    I’m immensely proud of her. She’s always been there for me; she was the one who kept it all together, taught me what matters in life and stayed strong when our world was crumbling. While Dad was fast becoming one of the wealthiest men in this field, Mum and I had very little and she was going out to work to support us. Mum has always acted with dignity and I have to thank her for who I am. I love her honestly and her courage and I know it’s taken a great deal of both for her to write her story. That’s why I offer her my full support and recommend this book to anyone who wants to know the truth, the real truth about Dad’s life.

    Chapter 16

    And now an excerpt from the book, in which Cynthia describes her painful divorce from John:

    Money was perhaps the toughest issue. My lawyers had told me that on no account should I make contact with John as that would be collusion. I was put in touch with a top lawyer, a QC, who told me I could take John to the cleaners and fight for half his fortune. But I was finding it hard to cope with to the cold legal process. I wanted to talk to John, to tell him how much Julian missed him, to sort things out amicable. So I phoned him. ‘What do you want?’ He snapped. ‘John, I can’t bear all the animosity. It’s as though we never loved each other. They want me to take half your money, but I’d rather we talked and sorted it out between us, without any of the legal jargon.’ ‘There’s nothing to talk about. My final offer is seventy five thousand pounds. That’s like winning the pools, so what are you moaning about? You’re not worth anymore.’ On that definition note, he hung up. I told my lawyer that I didn’t want to go for half John’s fortune: I just wanted a fair and reasonable settlement. I couldn’t bear the thought of a long-drawn out battle, or exposing our marriage to public scrutiny. I just longed to have the whole thing settled. I was asked to draw up an estimate of my weekly expenditure. It came to seventy-six pounds for clothes, food, entertainment and holidays for Julian and me – just under four thousand pounds a year. My assets included a thousand pounds in the bank, my clothes and Mercedes car. I had no jewellery of any more than sentimental value. John’s assets were submitted at £750.000, although he was undoubtedly worth far more. He raised his offer to £100.000. This was broken down into £ 25.000 pounds for a house£75.000 to support me and Julian until he was twenty-one. Allowing for inflation, it would not be enough to cover even the modest annual expenses I had listed. A further £100.000 was put into a trust fund for Julian. I would be allowed to draw on the interest from this to pay school fees, but with drawls would be approved by John and Yoko, who were the co-trustees with me of the fund. It was also agreed that should John have more children the fund would be shared equally with them. While I realised that I was lucky compared to most women divorcing at that time, it still hurt to be dismissed so lightly. John was being meaner that I’d ever known him, which baffled me: typically he was generous to those around him. Why not now, to his wife and son?

    Whatever his reasons, I had no energy for a fight. In so many ways he was no longer the kind-hearted, passionate and witty and I had fallen in love with. Worn down by the miserable business of negotiating through lawyers, and still smarting from John’s withering remark about winning the pools, I accepted his offer.

    Our decree nisi was granted on 8 November 1968. I was summoned to the divorce court and went alone, driven there by loyal Les Anthony who, although he was now working solely for John, was still a good friend to me. Walking into court beside my lawyer was terrifying. The place was packed with the press and I had to swear in front of them under oath that my marriage had broken down irretrievably, that my husband had publicly admitted adultery and that Yoko was pregnant by him.

    Throughout this awful, surreal experience I felt humiliated and painfully aware that I was alone. Afterwards I fled home and collapsed, sick with apprehension about the future. I had no idea how I would cope and still found it hard to believe that, after ten years together, I had been severed from John’s life with a few brief words from a judge in a public court. I should have hated John for what he had put me through. I was certainly angry with him and bitterly hurt. But I couldn’t hate him. Despite everything, I loved him still. 

    Chasing Pavements-Adele

    Source: http://www.englishexercises.org/makeagame/viewgame.asp?id=138


    Author of the Exercise: All credits for Maria Patricia Amaya from Argentina.


     
     
     
    1. Write the words you hear:
    I've made up my  
    Don’t need to  it over
    If I'm  I am right
    Don't need to  no further
    This ain't lust I  this is love
    2. Number the lines in the order you hear them:
    If I end up with you 
     ‘Cos it was not said to you 
    But if I tell the world 
    And that’s exactly what I need to do 
    I'll never say enough 

    3. Choose the correct words:

     myself up

    And fly  in circles
     as my heart drops
    And my back  to tingle
    Finally  this be it
    Or should I give up ...
     
     
    4. Websearch: (Use the right button of your mouse to follow the link)
     
     
     
      1. When was she born? May 3, 1988 May 5, 1988 May 6, 1988
      2. What nationality is she? American Irish English
      3. What kind of music does she sing? punk popsoul and jazz
      4. What was her first record's name? 19 Hometown glory Chasing pavements
      5. What  prize did she get? Grammy Awards Emmy Awards Brit Awards
      6. Who does she live with? her boyfriend her sister her mother
      7. She attended the same school as Paul Mc Cartney Amy Winehouse Björk
     
     
     
     
     
     

    Jokes, Teclasap, THE TRAINEE



    Source: http://www.teclasap.com.br/
    All credits for 
    Anônimo
    A man joins [é contratado pora big corporate empire [uma grande empresa; um conglomeradoas a [como; para exercer a função detrainee [trainee; estagiário].
    On his very first day of work, he dials [liga para] the pantry [copa] and shouts[grita] into  the phone – “Get me [Me traz] a cup of coffeequickly [rápido]!”
    The voice from the other side responded, “You fool [Seu idiota]you’ve dialed the wrong extension [você discou para o ramal errado]! Do you know who you’re talking to, dumbo [imbecil]?”
    “No,” replied [respondeu] the trainee.
    “It’s the CEO [Presidente] of the company, you fool [seu tonto]!”
    The trainee shouts back [também grita], “And do YOU know who YOU are talking to, you fool?!”
    “No.” replied the CEO indignantly [indignado].
    Good [Ainda bem]!” replied the trainee, and puts down [desliga] the phone.