segunda-feira, 4 de julho de 2011

The Man of the House

Source: TECLASAP http://www.teclasap.com.br/blog/tag/piadas-em-ingles/
for more information keep in touch through the best English content I've seen 
Mark G. Nash e Willians Ramos Ferreira
The Man of the House
MAN: I’ve been thinking… I’m the MAN of this house, so starting tomorrow I want you tohave a hot, delicious meal ready for me the second I walk thru that door… Afterwards, while watching ESPN and relaxing in my chair, you’ll bring me my slippersand then run my bathguess who’s going to dress me and comb my hair?
WOMAN: The funeral director.
  • have a hot, delicious meal ready > preparar uma refeição deliciosa e quentinha
  • the second I walk thru that door > assim que eu entar por aquela porta
  • afterwards > depois
  • slippers > chinelos
  • run my bath > preparar o meu banho
  • guess who’s going to dress me and comb my hair > adivinha quem vai me vestir e pentear o meu cabelo
  • the funeral director > o agente funerário
Referência: “Sorria, você está praticando inglês!“, de Mark G. Nash e Willians Ramos Ferreira, Disal Editora, 2010. Leia a sinopse.

CONFESSIONS OF A LATIN TEACHER Part 1

CONFESSIONS OF A LATIN TEACHER Part 1


I've been received a lot of e-mails asking me for post again about this article, tomorrow I'm going to post Confessions of Latin Teacher part II


Source: Speak Up
Standard: British accent
Language level:  Upper intermediate

CONFESSIONS OF A LATIN TEACHER Part 1

I have a confession to make. As well as being a writer, I am a teacher of Latin (and Ancient Greek).

Do the British study Latin? 50 years ago, a large percentage of school children did. Now it is mainly taught in private schools. Many teachers retire schools. Many teachers retire every years; only two universities train new teachers. Many students classical works only in translation. Surely this means the end of Latin – and, some will say, good riddance.

PROPHETS OF DOOM

Journalists and other prophets of doom constantly predict the end of Latin. To me it seems comical to predict the death of an extinct language.

When I admit I am a Latin teacher, people look at me as if I were a dodo. They often send me news paper articles about:

      How useless Latin is.
      How important Latin is.
      How Latin is making a comeback.
      Why do people get so worked up about it? Somehow  Latin provides a focus for all our fears about education: vocational against no-vocational, privileged against under- privileged.

      WHO AND WHY?

Why do we study Latin? It’s not the basis of our language, as it is for Italian, Spanish and Portuguese speakers. Yet, despite the Germanic structure of English perhaps 45 per cent of our vocabulary is Romance-derived. Significantly, intellectual vocabulary is often Latinate the language of science, art and technology.

Who learns Latin today? One definition of the typical English gentleman is: “Someone who once knew the classics but has forgotten them: “We think of aristocratic Oxbridge comics showing off on clever TV shows: actor/writer Stephen Fry: John Cleese and his Monty Python gang: Boris Johson, mayor of London.

This elitism elicits anger as well as admiration. The Campaign for Plain English has fought a war against unnecessary Latin layers no longer use Latin phrases where there are English alternative. Yet we love the scene in Monty Python’s Life of Brian where the centurion correct Brian’s graffiti. To get the joke properly, you need to know Latin. “Romanes eunt domus” is nonsense; he means “Romani, ite domum” (Romans, go home).

EVERYDAY LANGUAGE

Everyday English is full of Latin words. Many are borrowed directly; many more are derivations.

Science (from Latin) and technology (Greek) have filled English with classical vocabulary: galaxy, protons, electric, democracy and telephone (Greek): universe, circuit, election and Prime Minister (Latin): Bones are Latin, from patella to clavicle. Organs and diseases are often Greek: stomach, leukemia. Botanists and zoologists give plants and animals classical names. Other school subjects have Greek names: geography, history, maths, psychology, philosophy.

WHERE NEXT?

It’s all Greek to me is a phrase from Shakespeare used to dismiss anything we can’t understand. Yet we still admire those who have Latin on their curriculum vitae: George Bush Senior’s notoriously ignorant vice president, Dan Quayle, regretted not studying Latin harder in school when he visited Latin America!

People pay me to translate club mottos, degree certificates and tattoos. They buy furniture, stationery and T-shirts with Latin on them. David Beckham has Latin tattoos (and the Roman numeral VII). Why? Because it seems important. Latin has dignity, grandeour, gravitas, so, even if you think it is useless, remember: quod latine, dictum est altum vdetur, or What ever you say in Latin seems deep.

PRONUNCIATION AND SPELLING

English speakers pronouncing Latin are confused. When a word is normal English, it is unashamedly anglicised: alias, alibi, audio, doctor, exit, flux, memorandum, status. Quasi in English has long and I sound. The second c in cancer is soft, the g in agenda is also soft, and there is a j in de jure.

When the English adopt a whole phrase, their pronunciation is a little more Latinate: sine qua non, me culpa, modus vivendi, quid pro quo. When the English sing Latin in church, they use Latinale style. But in school they follow stand and European Erasmus pronunciation –and is amusing when the English  read phrases like arma virumque cano…”

When British English adopts Greek words like encyclopaedia, it keeps the ae after the “p”. Whereas the American use a simple “e,” as in encyclopedia. This causes confusion with names. Aeschylus usually can either be written with an oe, or a simple eat the beginning, while Oedipus can either be written with anoe, or a simple e at the beginning: Edipus. And Daedalus can either be written with an ae – Daedalus – or with an –Dedalus. And we love Latin abbreviations, even if we rarely know what they stand for, but here are some example.

AD Anno Domini
Am ant meridiem
Exempli gratia – by way of example
Ie id est: that is, to explain
Viz videlicet: namely
QED quod erat demonstrandium.

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ISAAC NEWTON PART I

Source: INGVIP
You can keep in touch through Ingvip, I recommend specially for Brazilian English learners Isaac Newton Biography     www.ingvip.com

 

1.This is Shirley Griffith. And this is Steve Ember with the VOA Special English program EXPLORATIONS. Today we tell about(1) one of the world's greatest scientists, Isaac Newton.
Much of today's science of physics is based on Newton's discovery of the three laws of motion(3) and his theory of gravity. Newton also developed(4) one of the most powerful(5) tools(6) of mathematics. It is the method we call calculus.

2. Late in his life, Newton said of his work: "If I saw(7)further than(8) other men, it was because I stood(9) on the shoulders(10) of giants. "  One of those giants was the great Italian scientist, Galileo. Galileo died(11) the same year Newton was born(12). Another of the giants was the Polish(13) scientist Nicholas Copernicus. He lived a hundred years before Newton.

3. Copernicus had begun(14) a scientific revolution. It led to(15) a completely new understanding(16) of how the universe worked. Galileo continued and expanded the work of Copernicus. Isaac Newton built(17) on the ideas of these two scientists and others. He found(18) and proved the answers for which(19) they searched(20). Isaac Newton was born in Woolsthorpe, England, on December twenty-fifth, sixteen forty-two.

4. He was born early(21). He was a small baby and very weak(22). No one expected him to survive(23). But he surprised everyone. He had one of the most powerfulminds(24) in history. And he lived until(25) he was eighty-four.
Newton's father died before he was born. His mother married again(26) a few years later. She left(27) Isaac with his grandmother.

5. The boy was not a good student. Yet(28) he liked to make things, such as (29) kites(30) and clocks and simple machines.
 Newton also enjoyed(31) finding new ways(32) to answer questions(33) or solve(34) problems. As a boy, for example, he decided to find a way to measure(35) thespeed of the wind(36).

6. On a windy(37) day, he measured how far(38) he could jump(39) with the wind at his back(40). Then he measured how far he could jump with the wind in his face. From the difference between the two jumps, he made his own(41) measure of the strength(42) of the wind.

7. Strangely(43), Newton became(44) a much better student after a boy kicked(45) him in the stomach.
The boy was one of the best students in the school. Newton decided to get even(46) by getting higher marks(47) than the boy who kicked him. In a short time, Newton became the top student at the school.
 Newton left school to help on the family farm.

8.It soon became clear(48), however, that the boy was not a good farmer. He spent(49) his time solving(50) mathematical problems, instead of taking care of(51) thecrops(52). He spent hours visiting a bookstore(53) in town, instead of selling his vegetables in the market. An uncle decided that Newton would do better as a student than as a farmer. So he helped the young man enter Cambridge University to study mathematics.

9. Newton completed his university studies five years later, in sixteen sixty-five. He was twenty-two years old.
At that time, a deadly plague(54) was spreading across(55) England. To escape the disease(56), Newton returned to the family farm. He did more thinking than farming. In doing so(57), he found the answers to some of the greatest mysteries of science.

10. Newton used his great skill(58) in mathematics to form a better understanding(59) of the world and the universe. He used methods he had learned as a boy in making things. He experimented. Then he studied the results and used what he had learned to design new experiments.

11. Newton's work led(60) him to create a new method in mathematics for measuring areas curved in shape(61). He also used it to find how much material was contained in solid objects. The method he created became known as(62) integral calculus.
12. One day, sitting in the garden, Newton watched(63) an apple fall from a tree. He began to wonder(64) if the same force that pulled(65) the apple down also kept(66)the moon circling the Earth. Newton believed it was. And he believed it could be measured.

13. He called the force "gravity." He began to examine it carefully(67). He decided that the strength(68) of the force keeping a planet in orbit around the sun depended on two things. One was the amount of mass(69) in the planet and the sun. The other was how far apart(70) they were.
                                                   Vocabulary


Vocabulary:

1. tell about = falar sobre
2. physics = física
3. laws of motion = leis do movimento
4. developed = desenvolveu
5. powerful = poderoso
6. tools = ferramentas
7. saw  = viu
8. further than = mais longe do que
9. stood = fiquei
10. shoulders = ombros
11. died = morreu
12. was born = nasceu
13. Polish  = Polonês
14. had begun = tinha começado
15. led to = conduziu a
16. understanding = compreensão
17. built = construiu
18. found = encontrou
19. for which = pelas quais
20. searched = procuraram
21. early = prematuro
22. weak = fraco
23. survive = sobreviver
24. minds = mentes
25. until = até
26. again = novamente
27. left = deixou
28. Yet = porém
29. such as = tais como
30. kites = papagaios
31. enjoyed = adorava
32. ways = formas, maneiras
33. answer questions = responder perguntas
34. solve = solucionar
35. measure = medir
36. speed of the wind = velocidade do vento
37. windy = com vento
38. how far = o quão longe
39. could jump = conseguia saltar
40. at his back = às suas costas
41. own = próprio(a)
42. strength = força
43. Strangely = estranhamente
44. became = tornou-se
45. kicked = chutou
46. get even = ficar quites
47. getting higher marks = conseguindo notas mais altas
48. It soon became clear = logo ficou claro
49. spent = passava
50. solving = solucionando
51. instead of taking care of = Ao inves de cuidar de
52. crops = plantações
53. Bookstore = livraria
54. deadly plague = praga mortal
55. spreading across = espalhando-se por
56. disease = doença
57. In doing so = ao fazer isso
58. skill = habilidade
59. understanding = compreensão
60. led = conduziu, levou
61. shape = forma
62. became known as = tornou-se conhecido como
63. Watched = observou
64. wonder = perguntar-se
65. Pulled = puxou
66. kept = mantinha
67. carefully = cuidadosamente
68. strength = força
69. amount of mass = quantidade de massa
70. how far apart = O quão distantes

domingo, 3 de julho de 2011

The centenary of the first 14-Bis flight

Source: www.maganews.com.br
The centenary of the first 14-Bis flight
The conquest of the skies

On October 23rd 1906, a crowd in Paris witnessed the first flight of a heavier-than-air aircraft. The pilot was Brazilian Santos Dumont, who had built the plane he called 14-Bis

   The world experienced one of the most creative periods in its history in the last decades of the 19th Century and the beginning of the 20th Century. It was in this period than man invented electric light, cinema and the automobile, amongst other inventions (read more about them on page 12). At that time man had flown in hot-air balloons, but no one had managed to fly in a motorized machine that was heavier than air and that could be controlled – that is, that could be directed wherever the pilot wanted it to go. Brazilian Santos Dumont was the first man to achieve this feat.  On October 23rd 1906, a crowd gathered in Paris and saw an aircraft fly for the first time without the aid of a catapult or any other external boost. Santos Dumont was piloting 14-Bis, as had called the plane he had made himself. This made the headlines the world over and the Brazilian became a worldwide celebrity.

A brief biography
Dumont: love for machines and aviation
He had a few accidents during test flights, but never gave up fighting for his dreams

   Alberto Santos Dumont was born on July 20, 1873 in a small city in Minas Gerais called Palmira (it is today called Santos Dumont, in honor of its illustrious son). When still a child, little Alberto used to like watching birds fly and asked how they could do it if they were heavier than air.  Dumont left Brazil when he was just 19 years old and went to live in France. In Paris he studied physics, mechanics and electricity. From 1898 he began planning, building and flying different hot-air balloons and dirigibles. Dumont had a few accidents during test flights, but he never gave up on his dreams. Besides becoming a famous aviator all over the world, Dumont was also well-known for other inventions of his, such as the wristwatch, for example. The Brazilian was considered to be a simple and generous man. In the last years of his life, Dumont suffered from two serious diseases: multiple sclerosis, and depression. On July 23rd 1932 Santos Dumont committed suicide in Guarujá (SP) andBrazil lost one of the greatest geniuses it has ever had. 

The aeronautical industry in Brazil
The Aeronautical Technology Center (CTA) was opened in the 1950s, in São José dos Campos-SP. It was the first step towards Brazil’s building of top quality airplanes and its advances in varied scientific and technological fields. Specialized schools were set up in CTA to train professionals to work in the aerospace industry and to fly planes. The following decade the government decided to build a large aeronautical company. Embraer (the Brazilian Aeronautical Company) was opened in 1969, also in São José dos Campos, being privatized in 1994. Today this company sells its airplanes to countries all over the world. 


Vocabulary

1 crowd – multidão
2 to witness – presenciar / testemumhar
3 heavier-than-air aircraft – aeronave mais pesada do que o ar
4 plane (= aircraft) – aeronave / avião
5 to flew – voar
6 hot-air ballon – balão movido a ar quente
7 wherever – na direção / por onde
8 feat – feito / proeza
9 catapult – catapulta
10 external boost – impulso externo
11 to make headlines – virar manchete
12 to give up – desistir13 to fight – lutar14 bird – pássaro
15 dirigibles – dirível
16 wristwatch – relógio de pulso
17 to be set up – ser criado

Matéria publicada na edição de número 33 da Revista Maganews.

Life the Shaker Village

INTERVIEW


Source: www.speakup.com.br
Language level: Upper intermediate
Speaker Chuck Rolando
Standard: American accent



Source:  mainememory.net



THE QUIT LIFE

The Sabbath day Lake Shaker Village in Cumberland County, Maine, is the last active Shaker Village in the United States. Speak Up went there in order to find out more about this unusual religious community, which today has only four members. We were shown around by Leonard L Brooks, who is the Director of the Shaker Library and Museum:

Leonard Brooks
(Standard American accent):

The meeting house is still used for worship. They brothers still enter through that door, and male guests, and the sisters and female guests enter and sit on this side. The reason for that is an outward expression, if you will, of the celibate life of the Shakers. The Shakers live what they call the “Christ life” and, to them, it means a celibate life, a communal life, one where they practice confession life one where they practice confession of sin, and they’re pacifists. To reduce Shakerism to its most elemental terms: Christ did not marry, so the Shakers do not marry: Christ had no private wealth, he lived in common with the Apostles and that’s the way the Shakers live.  No individual Shaker has any individual riches6: the 17 buildings, the 1700 acres of land, are all held in common.

NOT FOR ME

Although he lives and works in Sabbath day Lake, Leonard Brooks is not himself a Shaker. We asked him whether the idea of joining the community had ever appealed to him:

Leonard Brooks:

Oh, it has in the past, but I think the sticking point for me –like it is for a lot of others –is…well, you have to give up your independence. You cannot just do whatever you want to do, and be a Shaker, or any religious community member. If you want to get out for the day and do A, but the community needs to have you do B, you do B. so that kind of tension becomes the stick in the mud for a lot of people. They do come here and try the life, but they leave. And I think – I don’t know, I can’t speak for other communities, and I’m not really speaking for the Shaker community –but I think that, if you talk to people, particularly who enter the religious life as adults, the change from independence to community member is tough.

ONLY IN AMERICA (No audio available)


LIFE IN THE Shake Village

The members of the world’s only active Shaker community live and work in 17 beautiful white clapboard buildings. Constructed from 1760 to 1950, they are typical of New England. Here, far off the tourist trail, the last Shakers pray and sing. They keep cows and sheep, grow apple trees, plant herbs, make beautiful oval boxes and welcome curious visitors.

The “United Society of Believers” was founded in 1747 in Manchester, England. The name “Shake Quakers” or “Shakers” came from their ecstatic worship. At meetings, Shakers danced and entered into a trance. A young dynamic woman called Ann Lee became their leader. Ann Lee was imprisoned for her religious convictions in 1770.  In prison, she had visions and decided to take the faith to America. In 1774 “Mother Ann” and eight other Shakers crossed the Atlantic. One of the communities they founded wa Sabbath day Lake Maine.

BELIEFS

So what do Shakes believe? The basic Shakers principles are Purity of Life, Peace, Justice and Love. Shakers want to reveal God to the World through their life. The Shaker God is pure spirit and has masculine and feminine attributes: strength, power, compassion and mercy.

Like most religious communities, Shakers live and work together and shar their possessions. Shakers are pacifists and live a celibate life. All are equal. The Shaker motto is. “Put our Hands to Work and Hearts to God.”

LOCAL COMMUNITY

Mother Ann died in 1784 at the age of 48, but the movement attracted a number of followers. In the mid-19th century there were still about 5.000 Shakers living in 18 communities, mainly in the Eastern states. Today, there are only four Shakes left.

As Leonard Brooks explains in the interview, Shaker life is not for everybody. Yet the Shakers share with the local community. There are concerts of American and Shaker music. Workshops show how to make the oval Shaker boxes or to grow herbs. Apple fairs sell apple pies and local speciality apple butter. Visitors can see the complex and the museum with Shaker furniture and costume. They can also participate in a Sunday meeting or just buy some aromatic Shaker herbs –a fragrant souvenir from this remarkable place. 

sábado, 2 de julho de 2011

The addiction of the modern era Part 1 and 2

Source: http://www.maganews.com.br/ Atenção diretores, professores, alunos este é uma revista genuinamente Brasileira, adiquira já a sua assinatura visitem o site e pratique o idioma divulga para amigos. 

Man and machine (Part 1)
The addiction [1] of the modern era

If you cannot live without the Internet and spend hours and hours in front of the computer and sometimes even forget to eat, then you had better[21] take care. You could be a “cyberaddict”[3]

   When we hear the word “addiction,” we soon think about cigarettes, alcohol or gambling [4]. These are addictions that humanity has been living with for centuries. In the XXI Century a new compulsion has arisen: “web-dependence”. The Internet is used at work, in communications between people, in surveys, entertainment, information and so on and so forth [5]. However, there are many people who spend much more time surfing the Internet than they spend with their relatives [6] or friends. According to an article published by the American Journal of Psychiatry, the virtual dependent spends hours in a row [7] on the Internet. They spend way too long [8] visiting sites, playing games, chatting in chat rooms and they check their e-mails compulsively and are always download something. Often, they even forget to eat and sleep properly [9].

Virtual dependency affects children in Korea
In recent years cases of Internet compulsion have been on the rise [10] in many countries, includingBrazil. In the USA, the number of Internet addicts could reach 10% of all Internet users, according to estimates made by American studies. In the US there are about 190 million Internet users. In South Korea the government estimates there are over 200,000 children who are addicted to the Internet. Authorities in Korea consider virtual addiction to be a public health problem in the country. Many of these children have had to have [11] treatment using psychotropic drugs. 

Vocabulary
addiction – vício / dependência
then you had better – então é melhor você…cyberaddict – viciado em internet gambling – jogoand so on and so forth – exp. idiom = e assim por diante (etc e tal)
relatives - parentes
in a row – em seguida
to spend way too long – gastar muito tempo
properly – adequadamente10 on the rise – crescendo / crescimento / em alta
11 have had to have – tiveram que ter (ou se submeter)

The consequences of virtual addiction (Part 2)
Dependency on the Internet can affect our emotional, personal and professional lives. Many specialists say this kind of addiction should be treated as if it were a psychological illness [1]

   The American Journal of Psychiatry says excessive use of the Internet can be thought of [2] as[3] a mental disturbance that should be treated like a psychological illness. In many cases virtual addiction can interfere with a person’s private, emotional and professional life. It may also even cause physical harm [4]. An article on the site brasilescola says there are cases of cyberaddicts having died because they have spent too long in front of the computer. There are certain diseases caused by spending too long in the same position. Deep Vein Thrombosis [5] (which can develop [6] into a Pulmonary Embolism) is one such example.

The Internet offers a lot of temptations
In recent years the Internet has offered us many new options. The main attractions are MSN (instant messaging), Orkut (relationship site), YouTube (with hundreds of thousands of videos for you to watch) and MySpace, where surfers can listen to thousands of songs. And there are also millions of sites to visit and keep up to date [7] on a range [8] of subjects. The Internet can help you solve[9] a lot of problems, but if you get carried [10] away, the Internet stops being a solution and turns into a problem.

Vocabulary
illness – doença
can be thought of  – pode ser considerado as – como
physical harm – dano físico
5 Deep Vein Thrombosis – Trombose Venal Profunda
which can develop into – que pode evoluir para
to keep up to date – manter-se atualizadoon a range – nos mais diversosto solve – resolver
10 if you get carried away – exp. idiom - se você exagerar

Matéria publicada na edição de número 42 da Revista Maganews
Ilustração - Calberto