segunda-feira, 18 de julho de 2011

English Tips: RAmerica English





Recently I found out a very informative blog, helpful, by the way. I found out on Facebook and it's all about Essay, Slang, Idioms, useful videos among others. The purpose of this blog is providing a self-studying for Students as well as Teachers have been accessed my blog, and researchers through Google, bloggers and friends around the cybernetic's world. This is the blog's address, keep in touch and improve your English there http://ramericanenglish.blogspot.com . Do not forget to bookmark using the social networking after all Educative blogs is really helpful. Thank you all for your kind words, commenting, suggestions, I love you all. Keep practising and do not worry about your mistakes, practise makes perfect, never give up. Your Sincere friend, Carlos. 

domingo, 17 de julho de 2011

Imagine, food for tought


By John Lennon

Source: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3_yumV4nbKs&feature=player_embedded#at=114



Please spread this message out around the world, there is so much people starving, there is no peace around the world, there is war, promoting for those stupid world leaders, there is no freedom...But there is a hope, someone struggling for human rights, activists spread around the world, there are people interested to help people to live in a safe place, and there is a GOD (Allah) who protects everyone. Thank you for everything, for your sharing, visiting reading and commenting. I dedicate this song for you, my friends, in particular Gato Vadio http://minhagalerasabeviverfeliz.blogspot.com/ Sofia http://rzorpaesofia.blogspot.com and Toinho a friend of mine from Apodi http://toinhoffilho.blogspot.com 

IRREGULAR VERBS



Source: http://www.youtube.com/user/learnamericanenglish

VILLAGE PEOPLE, ENGLAND


Recomendo esta excelent revista para professores e alunos, preços acessíveis. Para mais informações entre em contato com o site e comece a praticar o idioma hoje mesmo. 

I recommend this awesome magazine for teachers and students, affordable prices. For more info keep in touch through http://www.maganews.com.br/ and take out a subscription and getting started to practise the language right now.
Source: MAGANEWS


When people think of England, many automatically think of London. Here Andrew Fox takes a look at life in a typical English village



   There are many times when people ask me, an Englishman, why I came to Brazil. It is a reasonable question, but normally the way it is asked gives the impression that I did something either very adventurous, or just weird. The real question seems to be, “Why on earth did you want to leaveEngland?”


   I cannot answer that question here, but I can tell you that I did not leave a life of high-energy excitement in the center of London. Many people equate England with London, but this is like thinking that Brazil and the Amazon are one and the same.
    Last April I went back to England for the first time in over seven years. I stayed in Clarborough, a very small village a few miles outside a very small market town called Retford, in the north ofNottinghamshire County.  Let me tell you a bit about life in a place like this.



Things to do

Not much. Activities are limited to walking the dog, running around fields, or going to either the pub or church (or one, then the other). Churches and pubs are the main focal points of village life, often being found near to each other. Clarborough has the Chesterfield canal running through it, so you can sit next to that and feed the ducks and swans, and take in the air. Relaxation is an art that has to be practiced.

Traffic and Transport

Not a problem. Villages do not have very large populations – Clarborough is home to 1,100 people – so even in the rush hour, it does not get very busy. Having said that, cars are almost indispensable, as bus services tend to be irregular.  

Housing

You will not find any apartments in Clarborough, or any villages like it. England in general is not part of the apartment culture, and people live predominantly in houses of varying sizes and descriptions. A typical house will have 3 bedrooms and is 76 square meters in area. Of course, there are large variations.

 People

All village people are the same: cautiously friendly. Crime is not a huge problem, but it certainly does exist and the days of leaving front doors open and people being happily carefree about personal security are long-gone. There are “Neighborhood Watch” areas in which neighbors are constantly keeping their eyes open for strangers. This is the result of sparse police numbers in rural areas, making neighbors more reliant on each other for early signs of possible problems. One thing is for sure, if you are new in a village, it does not take long for the local residents to hear about you.
Article and Pictures – by *Andrew Fox -
www.maganews.com.br
(*Andrew nasceu na Inglaterra e vive no Brasil há mais de 12 anos, onde trabalha como professor, tradutor e também como redator, revisor e colaborador da Revista Maganews)


Vocabulary

1 reasonable - razoável
2 weird - estranho
3 to equate – aqui = igualar uma coisa com outra coisa
4 a few miles – a algumas milhas
5 county – região
6 pub – típico bar inglês
7 church – igreja
Chesterfield canal – rio
9 duck – pato
10 swan – cisne
11 to take in the air - respirar
12 housing – habitação / moradia
13 bedroom – quarto
14 square meter – metro quadro
15 cautiously friendly – cautelosamente amigável
16 front door – porta da frente
17 carefree – tranquilo / despreocupado
18 long-gone – exp.idiom. – há muito tempo (já é passado)
19 neighborhood watch – vigilância do bairro
20 sparse – escasso / pouca (o)
21 reliant - confiante

sábado, 16 de julho de 2011

MOVIE...WE WANT MAKE SEX

MOVIES WE WANT SEX

Source of the picture: http://www.trailershut.com

 
Source of the entry: www.speakup.com.br

BY JONATHAN CAMERON

They say that feminism is dead. This may be true, but the film Made in Dagenham is a reminder of the battle in the past for women’s rights. It tells the true story of a strike by female employees at the Ford Motor Works in Dagenham in 1968.

The film in Brazil is titled a A Revolução em Dagenham, different from the blunt little it received in countries like Germany and Italy: We want Sex. This is a reference to a scene in the film. In their campaign for equal pay, the women have a banner which says “We Want Sex Equality.”  When they unfurl it, the last word, “equality,” is missing and the message is different!

BIG NAMES

The film stars Sally Hawkins as Rita O’Grady, the leader of the strike. She became a star Mike Leigh’s 2008 film, Happy-Go-Lucky. At 34, she is considered a rising star of British cinema. The cast also features great actors from older generations: Bob Hoskins, 68, and Miranda Richardson, 52. Hoskins plays Albert Passingham, a shop steward, and Richardson, plays Barbara Castle. Barbara castle was a Labour government minister in the 1960s: she was only the fourth woman in British history to become a minister. Not surprisingly, she gave her support to the striking women of Dagenham. As Sally Hawkins explains, the strike was important. Two years later parliament passed “The Equal Pay Act.”

And what about Dagenham, the film’s other character? It is an industrial town in Essex, near London. Tourists rarely go there, but maybe that will change!

Words and Their Stories: Fireworks

The Queen Mary 2 cruise ship and a fireworks display in New York City in January
Photo: Getty Images/AFP
The Queen Mary 2 cruise ship and a fireworks display in New York City in January

Source: www.voanews.com
Now the VOA Special English program WORDS AND THEIR STORIES. I’m Rich Kleinfeldt. Today we tell about the word fireworks.

The expression fireworks gets its meaning from the fireworks that people shoot into the sky when they are celebrating a great event. Rockets explode to fill the dark, night sky with bright reds and blues, with yellows and greens and whites.The expression also means a great show of noisy anger, or something exciting. For example, a defense lawyer in a court trial may become very emotional in arguing with the government lawyer about evidence affecting the accused. The judge finally stops the loud argument and calls the two lawyers forward. He tells them, “I want no more of these fireworks in my courtroom.”Another kind of fireworks can be any event or activity that is especially exciting. One such event is falling in love. If anything can produce fireworks, it is a sweetheart’s kiss or the touch of a lover’s hand. Often movie or television cartoons show fireworks to represent the excitement of a kiss.People use the expression fireworks throughout the year. But if you live in the United States and want to see real fireworks, the best time of the year is about now. The Fourth of July is Independence Day in the United States. Americans traditionally celebrate their nation’s freedom with giant public parties and fireworks at night.In Washington, for example, large crowds gather near the Washington Monument to listen to music and watch a huge fireworks show. In other cities and smaller towns, local people listen to band concerts and watch fireworks explode in a dark sky.Many other countries around the world also enjoy the tradition of exploding fireworks on special days. In Australia, the city of Sydney begins each new year with a fireworks show at midnight. China is the birthplace of fireworks. Large fireworks shows were held often during earlier times in China. Now, people use small fireworks to help celebrate weddings and birthdays.France also has a great fireworks tradition. A large fireworks show always takes place on Bastille day which celebrates the beginning of the French Revolution. The French city of Cannes holds an international fireworks competition each year in July and August.In India, people have been using fireworks for more than five hundred years. A great Indian fireworks show takes place during the religious celebration of Diwali, every autumn.Fireworks shows are popular around the world. But if I do not end this program right now, there will be fireworks from my producer.(MUSIC)This VOA Special English program, WORDS AND THEIR STORIES, was written by David Jarmul. I’m Rich Kleinfeldt.

sexta-feira, 15 de julho de 2011

EEL PIE ISLAND, THE ISLAND THAT ROCKED


source of the picture

www.rightmove.co.uk


Source of this entry: www.speakup.com.br

THE ISLAND THAT ROCKED

Before the famous Woodstock Festival of 1969, a tiny island in some of the biggest names in the rock world. The Who, David Bowie, Pink Floyd and Rolling Stones were just some of the musical giants to perform on Eel Pie Island in the 1960s. yet even during the 1950s this remarkable place had offered a post-war generation its first taste of youthful freedom.

THE KING AND I

Eel Pie Island, the only inhabited island in London’s River Thames, is just 600 yards (584 metros) long and 150 yards (137 metres) at its widest. It is said to have got its name from the time of King Henry VII, who allegedly liked to stop off there to buy his eel pies. In those days, eel pies were a popular snack. And Eel Pie Island, also gets a mention in Charles Dickens’ famous novel Nicholas Nickleby (1839).

The island, which today has about 50 homes and 120 inhabitants, can only be reached by a footbridge. No cars are allowed on the island and before 1957, when the bridge was completed, people had to access Eel Pie Island by boat. Swimming across was another alternative, but dangerous currents and cold, dirty water did not make it a very attractive one.

THANK YOU ARTHUR

It was in the mid1950s that a man called Arthur Chisnall took over the island’s now legendary Eel Pie Island Hotel and turned it into a jazz club. Its focus changed in the 1960s with the booking of groups like The Rolling Stones, who were just starting out. Chisnall had a mission. He wanted to help young people achieve their full potential, especially those who did not quite fit into mainstream society. Post war Britain was a conventional place –the swinging ‘60’s were also still in their infancy. According to Trevor Baylis. The inventor of the wind-up radio, who now lives on the island, the concerts were not just about music and creativity. They also provided the ideal opportunity to meet members of the opposites sex!

Sadly, by 1967, the hotel was in bad condition and the owner could not afford the large repair cost. It was closed down and in 1971, a mysterious fire led to the remaining hotel being demolished and houses being built on the site.

It seemed like the end of an era, although today the island is enjoying something or a revival: recently the pop singer Mika named eel Pie Island as the most romantic place in London.

A MODERN HERO

To find out more about this intriguing place, we met with Michele Whitby, co-author of the book, Eel Pie Island. As she explains, Arthur Chisnall was something of a visionary:

Michele Whitby:

There was a guy called Michael Snapper, he bought the hotel on Eel Pie Island in 1952. He was an antique dealer and he had a shopin Kingston, and Arthur Chisnall worked there. Arthur was a social researcher and he was really interested in the sort of problem teenagers that seemed to be emerging in the ‘50s.

It was quite a new phenomenon. As Arthur once said, “Before the war, people just seemed to go from short pants to long,” meaning that they basically turned into their parents. As long as they grew up, they just did what their dad did or their mum did, and this was the first generation of people that were actually rebelling, and he was just really interested in why they were rebelling. Obviously they didn’t want to fit into the prevailing society, and Arthur wondered “Well, what do they want?” And Arthur noticed, through working in Michael Snapper’s junk shop, that there were all these art students were coming in and bringing in all these records and buying up other records. He thought that they were a “trend-forming group” and he thought that, if you could tap into their way of thinking, and see what they felt, and what they needed, then you would be able to provide resources for them.

This was better than just saying, “These are terrible people, let’s just brush them under the carpet.” Arthur’s approach was very, very different, so he had came to an agreement for a ballroom on the side of the hotel. So he started the Eel Pie Jazz Club in 1956.

SEX & DRUGS & ROCK’N’ROLL

In the “Swinging ‘60s’ eel Pie Island was considered a wild place, but Michele Whitby says that this reputation wasn’t deserved.

Michele Whitby:

Obviously, there were people smoking dope and whatever there, but so many of the people I spoke to said drugs just weren’t on the menu, they couldn’t afford them! OK, it had a bad reputation, every girl in the area was forbidden from ever going across that bridge, but ironically a lot of women I’ve spoken to just talk about how safe they felt there. Arthur basically kept an eye on everyone, and he had people in the crowd, psychologists and policemen, people that were just go and chat about birth control, for example, which, in the ‘50s and ‘60s, was a big deal, there was a network of people who could help you. I think a lot of the negative stories about Eel Pie Island were perpetuated in the press, who saw it as “ the den of iniquity,” “the devil is playground etc. Ok, there must have been an element of truth in it, but, from what I can gather, talking to people, generally, it wasn’t like that, and it was just people going there, letting their hair down, having a good time, by today’s standards, it was just absolutely no big deal. But “the establishment and the conservative public in general were just horrified!

For more information about dates when Eel Pie Island can be visited, please visit: http://www.richmond.gov.uk/arts .

Liked this blog? Thank you for visiting, please recommend it for friends using the social networking sites.Eel