sexta-feira, 19 de agosto de 2011

Simple past, Affirmative form


THE BEATLES:  YESTERDAY

Source: http://www.englishexercises.org/makeagame/viewgame.asp?id=5634

All credits for this exercises Teacher Sanatyron from Spain. 
 
 
1. Listen to this song and complete the lyrics with the past simple of the verbs in the box.
 
                 
                                     use       come      seem        be       have      say       
 
 
Yesterday, 
All my troubles  so far away, 
Now it looks as though they're here to stay, 
Oh, I believe in yesterday. 

Suddenly, 
I'm not half the man I  to be, 
There's a shadow hanging over me, 
Oh, yesterday  suddenly. 

Why she 
 to go I don't know, she wouldn't say. 
Something wrong, now I long for yesterday. 

Yesterday, 
Love  such an easy game to play, 
Now I need a place to hide away, 
Oh, I believe in yesterday. 

Why she 
 to go I don't know, she wouldn't say. 
I   
Something wrong, now I long for yesterday. 

Yesterday, 
Love    such an easy game to play, 
Now I need a place to hide away, 
Oh, I believe in yesterday. 

Mm-mm-mm-mm-mm-mm-mm.
      
2. Write the past simple form of the following verbs.


         go -              play -             
 win -            feed -               see - 

         study-      leave -              live -         
 eat-                  bring - 

         feel -           dance -          die -            
read -             know - 

         buy -          drive -            love -         
write -           shine - 

         give -            hate -             do -               
catch -          become - 

American History: Truman Wins the Election of 1948

President Harry Truman holds up a newspaper that, based on early results, mistakenly announced "Dewey Defeats Truman"
Photo: AP
President Harry Truman holds up a newspaper that, based on early results, mistakenly announced "Dewey Defeats Truman"



Source: www.voanews.com
STEVE EMBER: Welcome to THE MAKING OF A NATION – American history in VOA Special English. I’m Steve Ember
HARRY TRUMAN: “I want to say to you, for the next four years, there’ll be a Democrat in the White House, and you’re looking at him.”
(MUSIC)
Presidential elections are exciting events in American politics. Few elections for the White House have been as exciting as the one in nineteen forty-eight. And few have had such surprising results.

ANNOUNCER: "This is NBC Television."
SENATOR J. HOWARD McGRATH: “We have obtained the results from the state of Ohio which assures victory for President Truman and Senator Barkley. With Ohio’s twenty-five electoral votes, President Truman and Senator Barkley will have a total of two hundred and sixty-six votes in the Electoral College.  This is the minimum figure necessary for victory.”
(MUSIC)
Four candidates were nominated for president in the nineteen forty-eight election. One was the man already in the White House, the candidate of the Democratic Party, President Harry S. Truman.
Truman had been the party's vice presidential candidate with Franklin Roosevelt in nineteen forty-four. When Roosevelt died a year later, Truman became president. He was the one who made the decision to drop atomic bombs on Japan to end World War Two.
But Truman did not do well during his first few months in office. He made several serious mistakes. He had trouble with the economy and organized labor. His party lost control of the Senate and the House of Representatives in the congressional elections of nineteen forty-six.
Most Americans had little faith in Truman's ability as a leader. They expected that he would lose the presidential election in nineteen forty-eight if he chose to be a candidate.
President Truman did choose to run. He took several strong steps to show his leadership in the months following the Democratic defeat in the congressional elections.
Truman called on Congress to pass a number of laws to help black people. He took firm actions in his foreign policy toward the Soviet Union. These included the Marshall Plan and the Berlin Airlift, as we discussed in our last two programs. And he began to speak out with much more strength to the American people.
(MUSIC)
Truman succeeded in winning the presidential nomination of the Democratic Party. He chose Alben Barkley, a senator from Alabama, for vice president. "Senator Barkley and I will win this election and make these Republicans like it -- don't you forget that!" Truman declared in accepting the nomination.
Thomas Dewey, center, at a campaign event in 1948
loc.gov
Thomas Dewey, center, at a campaign event in 1948
The Republicans nominated New York State Governor Thomas Dewey.
Dewey was a wise and courageous man. He was also very serious. Truman campaigned by telling the voters that Dewey did not understand the needs of the average American. He called Dewey a candidate of rich people.
One day, Dewey got angry at a railroad engineer because his campaign train was late for a speech. Truman said this proved that Dewey did not understand the problems of railroad engineers and other working Americans. He tried to make the election a choice between hard-working Democrats and rich Republicans.
Two other men also were candidates for the presidency. Both were from newly created parties.
One was Strom Thurmond from South Carolina. He was the candidate of the States Rights Democratic Party, also known as the Dixiecrat Party. Most of his supporters were white people from the southeastern part of the country. They opposed giving full rights to black people.
The other candidate was Henry Wallace of the Progressive Party. His supporters believed that Truman had turned away from the progressive ideas of Franklin Roosevelt.
Both Thurmond and Wallace had broken away from the Democratic Party. Most political experts believed these two candidates would take votes away from President Truman. They believed the Republican Dewey would surely win the election. President Truman did not have strong public support.
But Harry Truman was a fighter. He did not believe the election was lost. He took his campaign to the American people.
HARRY TRUMAN: “On Election Day, the president, the Congress, the governor, the mayor all cease as the government. You are the government, because then you decide what sort of government you want. And when you do like you did in nineteen forty-six, when two-thirds of you stayed at home, you get just what you deserve -- you got that good for nothing Eightieth Congress.”
He said he had always campaigned by going around talking to people and meeting them. Running for president was no different, he said.  He just got on a train and started across the country to tell people what was going on. He wanted to talk to them face to face. When you stand there in front of them and talk to them, he said, the people can tell whether you are telling them the facts or not.
HARRY TRUMAN: “If you give the Republicans complete control of this government, you might just as well turn it over to the special interests, and we’ll start on a boom-and-bust cycle and try to go through just what we did in the twenties and end up with a crash, which in the long run will do nobody any good but the communists.”
Truman campaigned with great energy.
(SOUND: Truman’s campaign train)
He made hundreds of speeches as his train crossed the country. It became known as the "whistle stop" campaign, because it stopped at some of the smallest towns and villages in the country. Truman gave speeches from the back of his campaign train, the Ferdinand Magellan. He spoke to farmers in Iowa. He visited a children's home in Texas. And he discussed issues with small groups of people who came to visit his train when it stopped in rural areas of Montana and Idaho.
Dewey and the Republicans laughed at Truman's campaign. They said it showed that Truman needed votes so badly that he had to spend his time looking for them in small villages. Truman said the criticism proved that Republicans did not care for the average American.
Dewey also campaigned across the country by train. But he showed little of the fire and emotion in his speeches that made Truman's campaign so exciting. Dewey’s speeches were “safe.” One reporter wrote that Dewey was acting like a man who had already been elected and was only passing time, waiting to take office.
Dewey had good reasons to feel so sure of being elected. Almost every political expert in the country said Truman had no chance to win. The Wall Street Journal, for example, printed a story about what Dewey would do in the White House after the election. And the New York Times said that Dewey would win the election by a large majority.
Truman refused to accept these views. Instead, he spoke with more and more emotion against Dewey. Most Americans still believed that Truman would lose. But they liked his courage in fighting until the end. One supporter shouted "Give 'em hell, Harry!" -- "them" being the Republicans. Soon supporters across the country were shouting "Give 'em hell, Harry!"
Truman made special appeals to working people, Jews, blacks, Catholics and other traditional supporters of the Democratic Party. In his final radio speech before the election, he promised to work for peace and a government that would help all people. Then he went to his home in the state of Missouri to wait with the rest of the country for the election results.
Republicans across the country greeted Election Day happily. They were sure that this was the day that the people would choose to send a Republican back to the White House after sixteen years.
Some of the early voting results from the northeastern states showed Truman winning. But few Republicans worried. They were sure Dewey would be the winner when all the votes were counted.
The Chicago Tribune was also sure who the next president would be, declaring in a huge headline "Dewey Defeats Truman."
But the newspaper was wrong. Everyone was wrong. Everyone, that is, except Harry Truman and the Americans who gave him their votes. Truman went to bed on election night before all the votes were counted. He told his assistant that he would win.
He awoke early the next morning to learn that he was right. Not only did he defeat Dewey, as he thought he would, but he won by a good number of votes. And he helped many Democratic congressional candidates win as well. The Democrats captured both houses of Congress.
After the results were announced, as heard in this old recording Truman showed his sense of humor by joking about the predictions of his defeat.
HARRY TRUMAN: "I had on the National Broadcasting Company and [commentator HV] Kaltenborn was saying ‘While the president is a million votes ahead in the popular vote, we have yet to hear from [words drowned out by applause], and we are very sure that when the country votes come in, Mr. Truman will be defeated by an overwhelming majority.’ And I went back to bed and went to sleep.”
(MUSIC)
Harry Truman would make many difficult decisions as America moved into the second half of the twentieth century.
Truman would send American troops to help the United Nations defend South Korea against aggression from the North. He would join other Western leaders in establishing a new alliance, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. They established NATO to provide for the joint defense of Europe and North America.
Truman and later presidents would make decisions to send large amounts of economic and military aid to countries around the world.
Many of these decisions were necessary because of America's new responsibilities after World War Two as leader of the Western world.
(MUSIC)
You can find our series online with transcripts, MP3s, podcasts and pictures at voaspecialenglish.com. And you can follow us on Facebook and Twitter at VOA Learning English. I’m Steve Ember, inviting you to join us again next week for THE MAKING OF A NATION -- American history in VOA Special English.
___
Contributing: David Jarmul

This was program #202. For earlier programs, type "Making of a Nation" in quotation marks in the search box at the top of the page
.

quinta-feira, 18 de agosto de 2011

What can I do ? by The corrs


Credits for teacher Mmdugazon from Belgium 

Source http://www.englishexercises.org/makeagame/viewgame.asp?id=3604 

1. Watch the following video and complete the lyrics of the song :
 
 (to sleep) at all in days
It  (to be) so long since we've talked
And I  (to be) here many times
I just don't know what I  (to do) wrong

What can I do to make you love me
What can I do to make you care
What can I say to make you feel this
What can I do to get you there

There's only so much I can 
And I just got to let it go
And who knows I might feel , yeah
If I  (to try) and I  (to hope)

What can I do to make you love me
What can I do to make you care
What can I say to make you feel this
What can I do to get you there

No more , no more, aching...
No more , no more, trying...

Maybe there's  more to say
And in a funny way I'm calm
Because the power is not mine
I'm just  to let it fly

What can I do to make you love me
(What can I do to make you love me)
What can I do to make you care
(What can I do to make you care)
What can I say to make you feel this
(What can I do to make you love me)
What can I do to get you there
(What can I do to make you care)
What can I do to make you love me
(What can I do to make you love me)
What can I do to make you care
(What can I do to make you care)
What can I change to make you feel this
(What can I do to make you love me)
What can I do to get you there
(What can I do to make you care)

And love me... love me...
 
2. Complete the following biography of the Corrs with the present perfect or the past simple :
 
The Corrs are an Irish quartet composed of three sisters and a brother, who  (to sell) over 40m albums. Jim, Andrea, Caroline and Sharon Corr  (to form) the band in 1990, fusing modern rock and traditional Irish music. John Hughes, their future manager,   (to discover) them while looking for musicians to take part in Alan Parker's film, The Commitments.
The band  (to sign) with Atlantic Records, and  (to release) their debut in 1995, ‘Forgiven Not Forgotten’. It  (to sell) more than eight million copies worldwide. Their second album, 1997's ‘Talk on Corners’  (to be) even more successful, that album  (to go) on to sell millions and  (to go) Gold or Platinum in 24 countries. At one point their first two albums  (to achieve) the Beatles-like feat of occupying the top two places in the UK chart. As the band  (to tour) tirelessly and the world  (to clamour) for a new record, they  (to satisfy) the demand by recording an "MTV Unplugged" album, it  (to sell) over two and a half million copies, and went Gold or Platinum in 21 countries.
In 2000 the band   (to release) ‘In Blue’, which  (to sell)  in excess of 2 million copies within 14 days of its European release, that album cemented the band as one of the most successful bands in the world. In 2002 they released their "Best of" album containing some of their biggest hits including ‘Only When I Sleep’, ‘Dreams’ and ‘What Can I do’.
While the height of their popularity  (to peak) their fourth studio album ‘Borrowed Heaven’ also sold well and the band continue to tour and record.



        

Speaking more than one language is good for the brain


Source: Practise a lot English on INGVIP a Brazilian website with a lot of useful English material http://www.ingvip.com/texto/speaking-more-than-one-language-is-good-for-the-brain.htm 

Click on the title and access ING VIP Website. Keep it up. A lot of Useful English material there on http://www.ingvip.com/curso-de-conversacao.htm



In the early(1) nineteen fifties, researchers(2) found(3) that people scored(4) lower(5) on intelligence tests if they spoke(6)more than one language. Research in the nineteen sixties found theopposite(7).

     So which is it? Researchers presented their newest(8) studies in February at a meeting(9) of the American Association for theAdvancement (10) of Science.

  The latest evidence shows(11) that being bilingual does not necessarily make people smarter(12). But researcher Ellen Bialystok says it probably(13) does make you better at certain skills(14). She says: "Imagine driving down the highway(15).There are(16) many things that could(17) capture your attention and you really need to be able to(18) monitor all of them.

  Why would bilingualism make you any better at that?"And the answer, she says, is that bilingual people are often(20) better at controlling their attention -- a function called the executive control system. She says it is possibly the most important cognitive system we have.

   It is where all of our decisions about what to attend to(21), what to ignore and what to process are made. Ms. Bialystok is a psychology professor at York University in Toronto, Canada. She says the best method to measure(22) the executive control system is called the Stroop(23) Test.

   A person is shown words in different colors. The person has to ignore the word(24) but say the color. The problem is that the words are all names of colors. She explains(25): "So you would have the word 'blue' written(26) in red, but you have to say 'red.' But blue is just lighting up(27) all these circuits in your brain(28), and you really want to say 'blue.'

  So you need a mechanism to override(29) that so that you can say 'red.' That's the executive control system."Her work shows that bilingual people continually practice this function. They have to, because both(30) languages are active in their brain at the same time(31).

   They need to suppress(32) one to be able to speak in the other. This mental exercise might(33) help in other ways(34), too. Researchers say bilingual children(35) are better able to separate a word from its meaning(36), and more likely(37) to have friends from different cultures.

   Bilingual adults are often four to five years later than others in developing dementia or Alzheimer's disease(39). Foreign language(40) study has increased(41) in the United States. But linguist Alison Mackey at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. points out(42) that English-speaking countries are still far behind(43) the rest of the world. For VOA Special English I'm Carolyn Presutti.

Vocabulário

     1.          Early = inicio
2.          Researchers = pesquisadores
3.          Found = descobriram
4.          Scored = registrar, marcar
5.          Lower = mais baixo, menos
6.          if they spoke = se eles falassem
7.          opposite = oposto
8.          newest = mais recente
9.          meeting = reunião
10. Advancement = avanço
11. Shows = mostra
12. Smarter = mais inteligentes
13. Probably = provavelmente
14. certain skills = certas habilidades
15. Highway = auto-estrada
16. There are = existem
17. could = poderia
18. to be able to = ser capaz de
19. Monitor = monitorar
20. Often = frequentemente
21. to attend to = prestar atenção a
22. Measure = medir
23. Stroop = Tempo de resposta a um estimulo visual
24. Word = palavra
25. Explains = explica
26. Written = escrito(a)
27. lighting up = iluminando, ativando
28. Brain = cérebro
29. Override = substituir
30. Both = ambos(as)
31. at the same time = ao mesmo tempo
32. Suppress = suprimir
33. Might = pode (possibilidade)
34. in other ways = de outras formas
35. Children = crianças
36. Meaning = significado
37. Likely = provável
38. Later = mais tarde, depois
39. Disease = doença
40. Foreign language = lingua estrangeira
41. Increased = aumentado
42. points out = ressaltar, salientar
43. far behind = muito para trás


UFO's, Circles and Lines Jonathan talks about the possibility of UFO's and other mysterious things in life

Source: ELLLO.ORG






image

  • Transcript
  • Audio Slide Show
  • Audio Notes






quarta-feira, 17 de agosto de 2011

Xique-Xique II

Hello there, how have you been? Well, today I just share with you what I've been doing this days, pretty busy, by the way. Today, for example, me and Jose a local guide we went to one of the most relevant rock art paintings, Xique-Xique II in order to clean up the insects, in particular wasps, not kill them, just collect because there is a tourism attractions and there are allergic tourists who visit there. Xique-Xique I also received the infra-structure from IPHAN (Historic, Artistic and National Institute), represented by Onesimo Santos, he is a Brazilian archaeologist and he has been done a great job in order to preserve and socialising the rock art paintings, not only here in Carnaúba dos Dantas (town) but in neighbours towns as Acari, for example, check out the pictures bellow. 

                                    I'm not an astronaut, lol, this is an accessory to protect against wasp bites. 

                                    Walkways of Xique-Xique II and me cleaning up and collecting the insects. 
                         Beautiful tourism attraction
                  Anthropomorphous (humans drawings) Northeast tradition, Serido Sub tradition, Indigenous people who settle down about 9.000 years Before Present. Rock art paintings in red colour. 
                         Sex scene Xique-xique II

                          Hunting Scene Xique-Xique I
                                  Me and José
                                    Petroglyphs  Fundoes 7, Carnaúba dos Dantas
                                  Petroglyphs or engravings in low relief are common in Brazil and in several parts of the world, the prehistoric groups carved on the rock, usually in rivers and natural tanks.