quarta-feira, 10 de agosto de 2011

YOU NEEDED ME


Listen to the song:

This is a great song and this is a great teacher, all credits for Victoria Ladybug from Israel. Here you can explore the regular and irregular verbs and try to memorize them, also  you should visit the link 
http://www.englishexercises.org/makeagame/viewgame.asp?id=5483
Write the verbs in the Past Tense:
 ( cry) a tear
You  ( wipe) it dry
 (be) confused
You  (clear) my mind
 (sell) my soul
You  (buy) it back for me
And  (hold) me up and  (give) me dignity
Somehow you  (need) me.

ChorusYou  (give) me strength
To stand alone again
To face the world
Out on my own again
You   (put) me high upon a pedestal
So high that I  (can) almost see eternity
You  (need) me
You  (need)me


And I can't believe it's you I can't believe it's true
 (need) you and you   (be) there
And I'll never leave, why should I leave
I'd be a fool
'Cause I've finally  (find) someone who really cares

You  (hold) my hand
When it   (be) cold
When I   (be) lost
You  (take) me home
You  (give)me hope
When I   (be) at the end
And  (turn) my lies
Back into truth again
You even  (call) me friend

Repeat Chorus
You  (need) me
You  (need)me
Write the past form and match the verbs:
 
           Example:  writewrote   
think-
go-
tell-
meet-
give-
take-
see-
know-
look-
start-
climb-
dance-
do-
run-
come-
sit-
say-
pay-
begin-
sing-
jump-
shout-
study-
fall-
help-
live-
make-
sell-
 
    by Victoria                                                      
       our school site  

HELLO CHANNEL

This is a useful YouTube Channel Hello Channel you find a Staff of teachers which they provide a Self-Studying for you and also you find a lot of Video-Class keep focusing and listen to the videos. You find Hello Channel website on my favorite Useful Sites on the main menu and also on The Best Video.

STAND BY ME.


Definitely incredibly she is a great English teacher, many thanks and credits for Judith Jékél from Hungary for more info keep in touch through 
 http://www.englishexercises.org/makeagame/viewgame.asp?id=403

                                                                    
Watch the video and fill in the missing words. The images may help.
When the  has 
And the  is dark
And the  is the only light we'll 
No I won't be ,
Oh I won't be afraid
Just as  as you stand, stand by me

So darlin', darlin',
Stand  me,
Oh stand by me
Oh stand, stand by me, stand by me

If the  that we  upon
Should tumble and 
Or the   should crumble to the 
I won't , I won't cry,
No, I won't shed a 
Just as long as you stand,  by me

And darlin', darlin',
Stand by me, oh stand by me
Oh stand now, stand by me, stand by me
And darlin', darlin',
Stand by me, oh stand by me
Oh stand now, stand by me, stand by me

Whenever you're in 
Won't  stand by me,
Oh stand by me
Oh stand by  ….
 
Choose the correct forms of the verbs to complete the text about “Stand By Me”, then decide whether the statements are True or False.

"Stand by Me" is the title of a song  by Ben E. King. The song  by a traditional gospel song of the same name, originally  by Charles A. Tindley in 1905, and by numerous artists. Since its release, there  many cover versions of the song, though none  the fame of the original.
According to the documentary History of Rock 'n' Roll, King  no intention of recording the song himself when he  it. King  the song for The Drifters, who  on the chance to record it. It was not until after the Spanish Harlem recording session that he had some studio time left over. The session's producers  if he  any more songs and King  "Stand by Me" on the piano for them. They  it and  all the studio musicians back in to record it. If King  recording his other songs early, "Stand by Me" may never .


1 There is a gospel which has the same title as this song. 
2 ‘Stand By Me’ has been recorded by lots of singers.   
3 The cover versions have been more famous than the original one. 
4 Ben E. King wrote the song for himself.  
5 The Drifters used to be a band.          
6 When the producers heard the song for the first time, they thought it was bad. 
7 King recorded the song because it was the only song for him to record.

Words and Their Stories: Nicknames for Cleveland and Detroit


The sun sets along the Detroit skyline
Photo: AP
The sun sets along the Detroit skyline

Now, the VOA Special English program WORDS AND THEIR STORIES.
Many American cities have interesting nicknames. Nicknames can help establish the identity of a city. They can also spread pride among its citizens. But nicknames sometimes can make fun of something.
Cleveland, Ohio is a city in America’s Midwest. One of its earliest nicknames was Forest City. No one knows for sure who gave it this name in the eighteen thirties. But Cleveland probably had a lot of trees. This nickname became popular among local businesses in the eighteen fifties. Today, some businesses in the Cleveland area still use Forest City in their names.
A view of Lake Erie with the Cleveland skyline in the background at Edgewater Beach in Cleveland
AP
A view of Lake Erie with the Cleveland skyline in the background at Edgewater Beach in Cleveland
Cleveland sits next to Lake Erie, one of North America’s Great Lakes. It was once a major manufacturing city. Ships used the lake for transporting goods. In the nineteen fifties, businesses called Cleveland, theBest Location in the Nation.
However, many factories closed or moved away. Cleveland had severe financial problems in the nineteen sixties and seventies. In nineteen sixty-nine, the city became famous, but not in a good way. Cleveland’s Cuyahoga River caught on fire because of industrial wastes on the surface of the river. So in the nineteen seventies, the national media began calling the city The Mistake on the Lake.
Since then, Cleveland has sought to improve its image. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum opened in Cleveland in nineteen ninety-five. So the city is proud of its latest nickname, The Rock and Roll Capital of the World.
Another city in the Midwest is Detroit, Michigan. Henry Ford started the Ford Motor Company in Detroit in nineteen hundred three. Five years later, he made the first “Model T” automobile. Within ten years, Detroit was being called The Motor City. It is still the center of the automobile industry in America.
Another popular nickname for Detroit is Motown. Berry Gordy, Junior started the Motown Record Corporation in Detroit in nineteen fifty-nine. African-American singers recording for the company were extremely popular in the nineteen sixties and nineteen seventies. Their records were so successful that Detroit was also called Hitsville, USA.
(MUSIC)
This program was written by Shelley Gollust. I'm Faith Lapidus. You can find more WORDS AND THEIR STORIES at our website, voaspecialenglish.com
.

terça-feira, 9 de agosto de 2011

PROJECT LIVING AND LEARNING


                          Children of PETI (Eradication of Labor's Children Project) taking a free-training conversation in the project Living and Learning. 


As I talked previously one of the blog entries about the Project “Living and Learning” it comes to old saying originally means “Live and Learn.” It’s very simple project, I just follow up an English material (Inglês Curso) English course, of course I’m a volunteer there and the real intention is providing a free-training conversation for Children. Actually I teach in the Brazilian project PETI (Projeto de Erradicação do Trabalho Infantil) It’s a Eradication of Labor’s Children Project. Both are low income children, not in risk of vulnerability yet, but the project also prevent them against the Children’s Labor.

You may help the project, in particular my dear friends, teachers, please send me Worksheets for carlosrn36@gmail.com and we also accept small donations just keep in touch through the e-mail address. As well you also can help me telling for friends about English tips’ blog. Thank you for your audience, and sorry for the bad quality of the pictures. 

FLUENCY IN ENGLISH


FLUENCY IN ENGLISH

Frequently it’s a simple question...what’s happening? I’ve been studying hard for long years, my English teacher is excellent and I’m not able to start a dialogue…I also travelled abroad to a native country but I didn’t get the fluency needing to communicate. Is it possible? Unfortunately, yes!

This is happen ‘cause the shameless block your ability and you think you are not able to speak fluent, even you have a good vocabulary but something else block your ability to communicate.

Difficult to understanding is another problem, specially due the diversity of accents and dialectics, particularly I recommend you keep in touch through different accents, listen to broadcast radios, you should contact with American, Australian, Irish, or British ones, even you have decided to speak one Standard, this way your listening adapt itself for different accents.

Developing the ability of listening, it’s very simple way to understanding. Do you feel comfortable, or have some problems? I also recommend about the usage of Skype, after download the programme sign up for free and getting in touch with people worldwide http://www.speaking24.com . That’s all for today, remember practise makes perfect! Keep Practising, keep studying, and never give up. 

The Cask of Amontillado





source: www.manythings.org/voa/stories



Our story today is called "The Cask of Amontillado." It was written by Edgar Allan Poe.  Here is Larry West with the story.

(MUSIC)
Storyteller:  Fortunato and I both were members of very old and important Italian families. We used to play together when we were children.
Fortunato was bigger, richer and more handsome than I was. And he enjoyed making me look like a fool. He hurt my feelings a thousand times during the years of my childhood. I never showed my anger, however. So, he thought we were good friends. But I promised myself that one day I would punish Fortunato for his insults to me.
Many years passed. Fortunato married a rich and beautiful woman who gave him sons. Deep in my heart I hated him, but I never said or did anything that showed him how I really felt. When I smiled at him, he thought it was because we were friends.
He did not know it was the thought of his death that made me smile.
Everyone in our town respected Fortunato. Some men were afraid of him because he was so rich and powerful. He had a weak spot, however. He thought he was an excellent judge of wine. I also was an expert on wine. I spent a lot of money buying rare and costly wines. I stored the wines in the dark rooms under my familys palace.
Our palace was one of the oldest buildings in the town. The Montresor family had lived in it for hundreds of years. We had buried our dead in the rooms under the palace. These tombs were quiet, dark places that no one but myself ever visited.
Late one evening during carnival season, I happened to meet Fortunato on the street. He was going home alone from a party. Fortunato was beautiful in his silk suit made of many colors: yellow, green, purple and red. On his head he wore an orange cap, covered with little silver bells. I could see he had been drinking too much wine. He threw his arms around me. He said he was glad to see me.
I said I was glad to see him, too because I had a little problem.

"What is it?" he asked, putting his large hand on my shoulder.
"My dear Fortunato," I said, "Im afraid I have been very stupid. The man who sells me wine said he had a rare barrel of Amontillado wine. I believed him and I bought it from him. But now, I am not so sure that the wine is really Amontillado."

"What!" he said, "A cask of Amontillado at this time of year.  An entire barrel? Impossible!"
"Yes, I was very stupid. I paid the wine man the full price he wanted without asking you to taste the wine first. But I couldnt find you and I was afraid he would sell the cask of Amontillado to someone else. So I bought it."
"A cask of Amontillado!" Fortunato repeated. "Where is it?"
I pretended I didnt hear his question. Instead I told him I was going to visit our friend Lucresi. "He will be able to tell me if the wine is really Amontillado," I said.
Fortunato laughed in my face. "Lucresi cannot tell Amontillado from vinegar."

I smiled to myself and said "But some people say that he is as good a judge of wine as you are."

Fortunato grabbed my arm. "Take me to it," he said. "Ill taste the Amontillado for you."

"But my friend," I protested, "it is late. The wine is in my wine cellar, underneath the palace. Those rooms are very damp and cold and the walls drip with water."

"I dont care," he said. "I am the only person who can tell you if your wine man has cheated you. Lucresi cannot!"
Fortunato turned, and still holding me by the arm, pulled me down the street to my home. The building was empty. My servants were enjoying carnival. I knew they would be gone all night.
I took two large candles, lit them and gave one to Fortunato. I started down the dark, twisting stairway with Fortunato close behind me. At the bottom of the stairs, the damp air wrapped itself around our bodies.

"Where are we?" Fortunato asked. "I thought you said the cask of Amontillado was in your wine cellar."
"It is," I said. "The wine cellar is just beyond these tombs where the dead of my family are kept. Surely, you are not afraid of walking through the tombs.
He turned and looked into my eyes. "Tombs?" he said. He began to cough. The silver bells on his cap jingled.
"My poor friend," I said, "how long have you had that cough?"

"Its nothing," he said, but he couldnt stop coughing.

"Come," I said firmly, "we will go back upstairs. Your health is important.You are rich, respected, admired, and loved. You have a wife and children. Many people would miss you if you died. We will go back before you get seriously ill. I can go to Lucresi for help with the wine."
"No!" he cried. "This cough is nothing. It will not kill me. I wont die from a cough."

"That is true," I said, "but you must be careful." He took my arm and we began to walk through the cold, dark rooms. We went deeper and deeper into the cellar.

Finally, we arrived in a small room. Bones were pushed high against one wall. A doorway in another wall opened to an even smaller room, about one meter wide and two meters high. Its walls were solid rock.
"Here we are," I said. "I hid the cask of Amontillado in there." I pointed to the smaller room. Fortunato lifted his candle and stepped into the tiny room. I immediately followed him. He stood stupidly staring at two iron handcuffs chained to a wall of the tiny room. I grabbed his arms and locked them into the metal handcuffs. It took only a moment. He was too surprised to fight me.
I stepped outside the small room.
"Where is the Amontillado?" he cried.
"Ah yes," I said, "the cask of Amontillado." I leaned over and began pushing aside the pile of bones against the wall. Under the bones was a basket of stone blocks, some cement and a small shovel. I had hidden the materials there earlier. I began to fill the doorway of the tiny room with stones and cement.
By the time I laid the first row of stones Fortunato was no longer drunk. I heard him moaning inside the tiny room for ten minutes. Then there was a long silence.

I finished the second and third rows of stone blocks. As I began the fourth row, I heard Fortunato begin to shake the chains that held him to the wall. He was trying to pull them out of the granite wall.
I smiled to myself and stopped working so that I could better enjoy listening to the noise. After a few minutes, he stopped. I finished the fifth, the sixth and the seventh rows of stones. The wall I was building in the doorway was now almost up to my shoulders.

Suddenly, loud screams burst from the throat of the chained man. For a moment I worried. What if someone heard him? Then I placed my hand on the solid rock of the walls and felt safe. I looked into the tiny room, where he was still screaming. And I began to scream, too. My screams grew louder than his and he stopped.
It was now almost midnight. I finished the eighth, the ninth and the tenth rows. All that was left was a stone for the last hole in the wall. I was about to push it in when I heard a low laugh from behind the stones.

The laugh made the hair on my head stand up. Then Fortunato spoke, in a sad voice that no longer sounded like him.
He said, "Well, you have played a good joke on me. We will laugh about it soon over a glass of that Amontillado. But isnt it getting late. My wife and my friends will be waiting for us. Let us go."
"Yes," I replied, "let us go."
I waited for him to say something else. I heard only my own breathing. "Fortunato!" I called. No answer. I called again. "Fortunato!"  Still no answer.
I hurried to put the last stone into the wall and put the cement around it. Then I pushed the pile of bones in front of the new wall I had built.
That was fifty years ago. For half a century now, no one has touched those bones. "May he rest in peace!"
(MUSIC)
Announcer: You have just heard the story "The Cask of Amontillado. " It was written by Edgar Allan Poe and adapted for Special English by Dona de Sanctis. Your storyteller was Larry West. For VOA Special English, this is Shep ONeal. 
(MUSIC)