quinta-feira, 25 de agosto de 2011

Leonardo da Vinci: One of the Greatest Thinkers in History

Leonardo da Vinci's "Last Supper"
Leonardo da Vinci's "Last Supper"


STEVE EMBER:  I’m Steve Ember.
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH:  And I’m Shirley Griffith with EXPLORATIONS in VOA Special English. Today, we tell about one of the greatest thinkers in the world, Leonardo da Vinci. He began his career as an artist. But his interest in the world around him drove him to study music, math, science, engineering and building design. Many of his ideas and inventions were centuries ahead of his time.
(MUSIC)
STEVE EMBER:  We start with one of Leonardo da Vinci’s most famous drawings, called “Vitruvian Man.” This work is a good example of his ever questioning mind, and his effort to bring together art, math and science.
“Vitruvian Man” is a detailed sketch of a man’s body, which is drawn at the center of a square and circle. The man’s stretched arms and legs are in two positions, showing the range of his motion. His arms and legs touch the edges of the square and circle.
Detail from the drawing "Vitruvian Man"Detail from the drawing "Vitruvian Man"
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH:  With this drawing Leonardo was considering the size of the human body and its relationship to geometry and the writings of the ancient Roman building designer Vitruvius.
Leonardo wrote this about how to develop a complete mind: “Study the science of art. Study the art of science. Develop your senses- especially learn how to see. Realize that everything connects to everything else.”
STEVE EMBER:  Leonardo da Vinci spent his life studying and observing in order to develop a scientific understanding of the world. He wrote down his thoughts and project ideas in a series of small notebooks. He made drawings and explained them with detailed notes. In these notebooks, he would write the words backwards.  Some experts say he wrote this way because he wished to be secretive about his findings. But others say he wrote this way because he was left-handed and writing backwards was easier and helped keep the ink from smearing.
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH:  The notebooks show many very modern ideas. Leonardo designed weapons, machines, engines, robots, and many other kinds of engineering devices.   When disease spread in Milan, Leonardo designed a city that would help resist the spread of infection. He designed devices to help people climb walls, and devices to help people fly. He designed early versions of modern machines such as the tank and helicopter. Few of these designs were built during his lifetime. But they show his extraordinarily forward- thinking mind.
The notebooks also contain details about his daily life. These have helped historians learn more about the personal side of this great thinker.
(MUSIC)
STEVE EMBER:  Very little is known about Leonardo’s early life. He was born in fourteen fifty-two in the town of Vinci.  His father, Ser Piero da Vinci, was a legal expert. Experts do not know for sure about his mother, Caterina. But they do know that Leonardo’s parents were never married to each other. As a boy, Leonardo showed a great interest in drawing, sculpting and observing nature.
However, because Leonardo was born to parents who were not married to each other, he was barred from some studies and professions. He trained as an artist after moving to Florence with his father in the fourteen sixties.
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH:  It was an exciting time to be in Florence, one of the cultural capitals of Europe. Leonardo trained with one of the city’s very successful artists, Andrea del Verrocchio. He was a painter, sculptor and gold worker. Verrocchio told his students that they needed to understand the body’s bones and muscles when drawing people.
Leonardo took his teacher’s advice very seriously. He spent several periods of his life studying the human body by taking apart and examining dead bodies. Experts say his later drawings of the organs and systems of the human body are still unequalled to this day.
(MUSIC)
STEVE EMBER:  While training as an artist, Leonardo also learned about and improved on relatively new painting methods at the time. One was the use of perspective to show depth.  A method called “sfumato” helped to create a cloudy effect to suggest distance. “Chiaroscuro” is a method using light and shade as a painterly effect. The artist also used oil paints instead of the traditional tempura paints used in Italy during this period.
Leonardo's first known portrait "Ginevra de’Benci"
nga.gov
Leonardo's first known portrait "Ginevra de’Benci"
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH:  Leonardo’s first known portrait now hangs in the National Gallery in Washington, D.C. He made this painting of a young woman named Ginevra de’Benci around fourteen seventy-four. The woman has a pale face with dark hair. In the distance, Leonardo painted the Italian countryside.
He soon received attention for his extraordinary artistic skills. Around fourteen seventy-five he was asked to draw an angel in Verrocchio’s painting “Baptism of Christ.” One story says that when Verrocchio saw Leonardo’s addition to the painting, he was so amazed by his student’s skill, that he said he would never paint again.
(MUSIC)
STEVE EMBER:  Leonardo once said the following about actively using one’s mental abilities: “Iron rusts from disuse, stagnant water loses its purity and in cold weather becomes frozen; even so does inaction sap the vigor of the mind.” His mind was so active that he did not often finish his many projects.
One religious painting he never finished was called “Adoration of the Magi”. He was hired to make the painting for a religious center. The complex drawing he made to prepare for the painting is very special. It shows how carefully he planned his art works. It shows his deep knowledge of geometry, volume and depth. He drew the many people in the painting without clothes so that he could make sure that their bodies would be physically correct once covered.
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH:  Around fourteen eighty-two, Leonardo moved to Milan. There, he worked for the city’s ruler, Ludovico Sforza. This ruler invited Leonardo to Milan not as an artist, but as a musician. Historians say Leonardo was one of the most skillful lyre players in all of Italy. But he also continued his work as a painter. He also designed everything from festivals to weapons and a sculpture for Ludovico Sforza.
STEVE EMBER:  One famous work from Leonardo’s Milan period is called “Virgin of the Rocks.”  It shows Jesus as a baby along with his mother, Mary, and John the Baptist also as a baby. They are sitting outside in an unusual environment. Leonardo used his careful observations of nature to paint many kinds of plants. In the background are a series of severe rock formations. This painting helped Leonardo make it clear to the ruler and people of Milan that he was a very inventive and skillful artist.
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH:  Leonardo later made his famous painting “The Last Supper” for the dining room of a religious center in Milan. He combined his studies in light, math, psychology, geometry and anatomy for this special work. He designed the painting to look like it was part of the room. The painting shows a story from the Bible in which Jesus eats a meal with his followers for the last time. Jesus announces that one of them will betray him.
The work received wide praise and many artists tried to copy its beauty. One modern art expert described Leonardo’s “Last Supper” as the foundation of western art. Unfortunately, Leonardo experimented with a new painting method for this work. The paint has suffered extreme damage over the centuries.
(MUSIC)
STEVE EMBER:  In addition to the portrait of Ginevra de’Benci that we talked about earlier, Leonardo also painted several other non-religious paintings of women. One painting of Cecilia Gallerani has come to be known as “Lady with an Ermine” because of the small white animal she is holding. This woman was the lover of Milan’s ruler, Ludovico Sforza.
However, Leonardo’s most famous portrait of a woman is called the “Mona Lisa.” It is now in the collection of the Louvre museum in Paris. He painted this image of Lisa Gherardini starting around fifteen-oh-three. She was the wife of a wealthy businessman from Florence named Francesco del Giocondo. It is from him that the painting takes its Italian name, “La Gioconda.”
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH:  Lisa Gherardini is sitting down with her hands crossed in her lap. She looks directly at the painter. She seems to be smiling ever so slightly. A great deal of mystery surrounds the painting. Experts are not sure about how or why Leonardo came to paint the work. But they do know that he never gave it to the Giocondo family. He kept the painting with him for the rest of his life, during his travels through France and Italy.
Leonardo da Vinci died in France in fifteen nineteen. A friend who was with him at his death said this of the great man’s life: “May God Almighty grant him eternal peace. Every one laments the loss of a man, whose like Nature cannot produce a second time.”
STEVE EMBER:  This program was written and produced by Dana Demange.  I’m Steve Ember.
SHIRLEY GRIFFITH:  And I’m Shirley Griffith. You can see some of Leonardo da Vinci’s work at our website voaspecialenglish.com. Join us again next week for EXPLORATIONS in VOA Special English.

quarta-feira, 24 de agosto de 2011

VOA Special English The best Idea to improve your English

blank


Have you ever heard about The VOA Website and Fan page? Not yet? Undoubtedly is the best English website, in other words it's a resourceful English material available for free for English Students and teachers, also you can make friends on the VOA's group, that is why people from all over the world  keep in touch and exchange idea about English. You also can surf through LEARN ENGLISH, and keep in touch through U.S HISTORY and download the transcript audio http://www.voanews.com/learningenglish/home/us-history/ Words and Their Stories http://www.voanews.com/learningenglish/home/words-stories/ English Activities http://www.voanews.com/learningenglish/theclassroom/activities/ where you can learn English and getting more vocabularies, also visit to ww.voanews.com/learningenglish/home/wordmaster/ http://www.voanews.com/learningenglish/theclassroom/home/ explore VOA and getting in touch the best English content. There are two Brazilian blogs who post entries from Voa Special English, also recommend you visit INGVIP http://www.ingvip.com/ weekly entries about VOA's website, this one, English Tips and also Manythings.org, I also promoting this one on English tips. In conclusion, I'd like to thank you all, friends on Facebook for your kind support promoting my blog for friends. Let's keep in touch and hope this could help you to improve your English. Thanks for your help in advance, Carlos. 

Song - I´m like a bird - Nelly Furtado - SIMPLE PRESENT


I'm like a bird - Nelly Furtado - PRESENT TENSE

 

All credits of this exercise for Teacher Luiza from Brazil (ESL)
Source: It's recommendable for English Students and Teacher keep in touch throught English Exercise, the best way to improve your English for more info and correct the exercise dropping by on http://www.englishexercises.org/exercise.asp?id=6680  

Listen to the song and choose the correct word
You're , that's for sure
You'll never ever 
You're  but it's not for sure
I won't ever 
And though my love is 
Though my love is 

chorus 2x
I'm like a bird, I'll only  away
I don't know where my  is, I don't know where my  is
(and baby, all I  for you to know is)
Your  in me brings me to 
Even after all these years
And it  me so much to tell
That you don't know me that 
And  my love is rare
And though my love is true

chorus 2x- I'm like a bird, I'll only....
It's not that I wanna  goodbye
It's just that everytime you  to tell me, me that you love me
Each and every single day I 
I'm going to have to eventually  you away
And though my love is rare
And though my love is true
Hey, I'm just 
That we may  through
Yeahhh

chorus (6X) I'm like a bird, I'll only...

English Course FAMILY ALBUM, USA

Source: Family Album USA 


Find out more useful video on http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vZGqyCT4WtY 

The Lady in Black (By Eleanor H. Porter)


Source: www.manythings.org/voa/stories

The Lady in Black (By Eleanor H. Porter)

Source of the picture: Wikipedia


Our story today is called "The Lady in Black."  It was written by Eleanor H. Porter.  Here is Faith Lapidus with the story.
The house was very still.  In the little room over the porch, the Lady in Black sat alone.  Near her, a child's white dress lay across a chair.  On the floor at her feet lay a tiny pair of shoes.  A doll hung over a chair and a toy soldier occupied the little stand by the bed.
And everywhere was silence—the strange silence that comes only to a room where the clock has stopped ticking.
The clock stood on the shelf near the end of the bed.  The Lady in Black looked at it.  She remembered the wave of anger that had come over her when she had reached out her hand and silenced the clock that night three months before.
It had been silent ever since and it should remain silent, too.  Of what possible use were the hours it would tick away now?  As if anything mattered, with little Kathleen lying out there white and still under the black earth!
"Muvver!"
The Lady in Black moved restlessly and looked toward the closed door.  Behind it, she knew, was a little boy with wide blue eyes who wanted her.  But she wished he would not call her by that name.  It only reminded her of those other little lips--silent now.
"Muvver!"  The voice was more demanding.
The Lady in Black did not answer. He might go away, she thought, if she did not answer.
There was a short silence, and then the door opened slowly.
"Pe-eek!" It was a cry of joyful discovery, but it was followed almost immediately by silence.  The unsmiling woman did not invite him to come near.  The boy was unsteady at his first step.  He paused, then spoke carefully, "I's--here."
It was maybe the worst thing he could have said.  To the Lady in Black it was a yet more painful reminder of that other one who was not there. She gave a sharp cry and covered her face with her hands.
"Bobby, Bobby" she cried out, in a release of unreasoning sadness.  "Go away!  Go away!  I want to be alone--alone!"
All the brightness fled from the boy's face.  His eyes showed a feeling of deep hurt.  He waited, but she did not move.  Then, with a half-quieted cry, he left the room.
(MUSIC)
Long minutes afterward, the Lady in Black raised her head and saw him through the window.  He was in the yard with his father, playing under the apple tree.
Playing!
The Lady in Black looked at them with serious eyes, and her mouth hardened at the corners.
Bobby had someone to play with him, someone to love him and care for him, while out there on the hillside Kathleen was alone--all alone.
With a little cry the Lady in Black sprang to her feet and hurried into her own room. Her hands shook as she pinned on her hat and covered herself with her black veil.  But her step was firm as she walked downstairs and out through the hall.
The man under the apple tree rose hurriedly and came forward.
"Helen, dearest,--not again, today!" he begged.  "Darling, it can't do any good!"
"But she's alone--all alone.  You don't seem to think!  No one thinks--no one knows how I feel.  You don't understand.  If you did, you'd come with me.  You wouldn't ask me to stay--here!" choked the woman.
"I have been with you, dear," said the man gently.  "I've been with you today, and every day, almost, since--since she left us.  But it can't do any good--this continuous mourning over her grave.  It only makes more sadness for you, for me, and for Bobby.  Bobby is--here, you know, dear!"
"No, no, don't say it," cried the woman wildly.  "You don't understand!  You don't understand!" And she turned and hurried away, followed by the worried eyes of the man, and the sad eyes of the boy.
(MUSIC)
It was not a long walk to the burial place.  The Lady in Black knew the way.  Yet, she stumbled and reached out blindly.  She fell before a little stone marked "Kathleen."  Near her a gray-haired woman, with her hands full of pink and white roses, watched her sympathetically.  The gray-haired woman paused and opened her lips as if she would speak.  Then she turned slowly and began to arrange her flowers on a grave nearby.
The Lady in Black raised her head.  For a time she watched in silence.  Then she threw back her veil and spoke.
"You care, too," she said softly.  "You understand.  I've seen you here before, I'm sure.  And was yours--a little girl?"
The gray-haired woman shook her head.
No, dearie, it's a little boy--or he was a little boy forty years ago."
"Forty years--so long!  How could you have lived forty years--without him?"
Again the little woman shook her head.
"One has to--sometimes, dearie, but this little boy wasn't mine.
"But you care.  You understand.  I've seen you here so often before."
"Yes.  You see, there's no one else to care. But there was once, and I'm caring now, for her sake."
"For her?"
"His mother."
"Oh-h!"  It was a tender little cry, full of quick sympathy.  The eyes of the Lady in Black were on the stone marked "Kathleen."
"It ain't as if I didn't know how she'd feel," said the gray-haired woman.  "You see, I was nurse to the boy when it happened, and for years afterward I worked in the family.  So I know.  I saw the whole thing from the beginning, from the very day when the little boy here met with the accident."
"Accident!"  It was a cry of concern and sympathy from Kathleen's mother.
"Yes.  It was a runaway and he didn't live two days."
"I know!  I know!" choked the Lady in Black.  Yet she was not thinking of the boy and the runaway horse accident.
"Things stopped then for my mistress," continued the little gray-haired woman, "and that was the beginning of the end.  She had a husband and a daughter, but they didn't seem to be important--not either of 'em.  Nothin' seemed important except this little grave out here.  She came and spent hours over it, bringin' flowers and talkin' to it."
The Lady in Black raised her head suddenly and quickly looked into the woman's face.  The woman went on speaking.
"The house got sadder and sadder, but she didn't seem to mind. She seemed to want it so.  She shut out the sunshine and put away many of the pictures.  She sat only in the boy's room.  And there, everything was just as it was when he left it.  She wouldn't let a thing be touched.  I wondered afterward that she didn't see where it was all leadin' to, but she didn't."
"'Leading to'?" The voice shook.
"Yes.  I wondered she didn't see she was losin' 'em--that husband and daughter; but she didn't see it."
The Lady in Black sat very still. Even the birds seemed to have stopped their singing.  Then the gray-haired woman spoke:
"So, you see, that's why I come and put flowers here.  It's for her.  There's no one else now to care," she sighed, rising to her feet.
"But you haven't told yet--what happened," said the Lady in Black, softly.
"I don't know myself really.  I know the man went away.  He got somethin' to do travelin' so he wasn't home much.  When he did come he looked sick and bad.  He come less and less, and he died.  But that was after she died.  He's buried over there beside her and the boy.  The girl--well, nobody knows where the girl is.  Girls like flowers and sunshine and laughter and young people, you know, and she didn't get any of them at home.  So she went--where she did get 'em, I suppose.
"There, and if I haven't gone and tired you all out with my talkin'!"  said the little gray-haired woman regretfully.
"No, no.  I was glad to hear it," said the Lady in Black, rising unsteadily to her feet. Her face had grown white, and her eyes showed a sudden fear.  "But I must go now. Thank you."  And she turned and hurried away.
(MUSIC)
The house was very still when the Lady in Black reached home.  She shivered at its silence.  She hurried up the stairs, almost with guilt.  In her own room she pulled at the dark veil that covered her face.  She was crying now, a choking little cry with broken words running through it.  She was still crying as she removed her black dress.
Long minutes later, the Lady--in black no longer--moved slowly down the stairway.  Her eyes showed traces of tears, but her lips were bravely curved in a smile.  She wore a white dress and a single white rose in her hair.  Behind her, in the little room over the porch, a tiny clock ticked loudly on its shelf near the end of the bed.
There came a sound of running feet in the hall below, then:
"Muvver!--it's Muvver come back!" shouted a happy voice.
And with a little sobbing cry Bobby's mother opened her arms to her son.
"The Lady in Black" was written by Eleanor H. Porter.  It was adapted for Special English by Lawan Davis who was also the producer.  The storyteller was Faith Lapidus.

VOA Special English - Text & MP3  www.manythings.org/voa/stories 
Liked this entry? Telling for friends and promote both MANYTHINGS.ORG and ENGLISH TIPS

terça-feira, 23 de agosto de 2011

Folklore Month Revives Saci, Cuca & Co.


Foto (Moçambique): Milton Fagundes

Source: http://www.maganews.com.br/
Para mais informações acesse o site e adquira já a Revista Maganews. 

              Folklore Month Revives Saci, Cuca & Co.

Who has not heard of Saci Pererê, Mula-sem-Cabeça, Cuca, Curupira and so many other figures from Brazilian folklore? These characters are part of Brazilian culture but in these days of the Internet, cell phones and satellite TV they are losing ground in the imagination of today’s kids. But at least during August, Folklore Month, these myths of the popular imagination will be remembered all over Brazil. Get to know a little more about these ever-lasting characters       

SACI PERERÊ - Saci Pererê is a smart kid that lives in the forest and has only one leg. He uses to walk at nights and he likes to play tricks on animals and hide toys from the kids. Saci wears a red hood and hold a pipe in his mouth.

CURUPIRA - Curupira is ugly, with green teeth and he has a different way to walk as if he were walking backwards. He protects the forests, the woods and the animals, scaring away hunters and passers-by. This mythic character appeared in the North.

CUCA - Certainly the best known myth of childhood fears (remember the song - “Nana neném que a Cuca vem pegar...?”). It is said that Cuca would take kids to a mysterious and distant farm to be devoured or used in some kind of magic. In Monteiro Lobato’s books, Cuca took the form of a great big green alligator.

MULA SEM CABEÇA (The Headless Mule) - The headless mule, so the story goes, appeared out of the romance between a woman and a priest. This forbidden love came at a high cost to the beautiful woman: she was punished by being turned into a mule. Not just a normal mule, you understand, but a mule with fire in the place of its head, a mule which only appears at night on Thursdays or Fridays when there is a full moon.

NEGRINHO DO PASTOREIO - There is a legend that says the Negrinho do Pastoreio is pure, without sin, and a good angel. He lives to find things that we have lost and to put them where they can be found.

BOTO - A well-dressed, handsome, dancing man who appears at night to charm the girls and take them to the banks of the Amazon river where they become pregnant. However, before dawn the man turns into an Amazon river dolphin and disappears into the waters. When night falls, the story repeats itself.

Vocabulary
losing ground – perdendo espaço
ever-lasting - duradouro
leg - perna
to play trick – pregar uma peça (aprontar)
to wear – usar (vestir)
hood – capuz
pipe – cachimbo
walking backwards – andar para trás
scaring away – afugentando
10 hunter – caçador
11 alligator - jacaré
12 – forbidden – proibido
13 sin - pecado

Ilustração - Calberto



I STILL HAVEN'T FOUND WHAT I'M LOOKING FOR- U2 - Present Perfect & Past Tense


Source: http://www.englishexercises.org/makeagame/viewgame.asp?id=6676
Credits for the ESL teacher Luiza from Brazil 


A song can teach much, keep in touch. 


   
1.LISTEN TO THE SONG AND CHOOSE THE CORRECT ANSWER:
 
 highest mountains                                        
 through the fields
Only to be with you
Only to be with you
 
I have run
 I have scaled these city walls
These city walls
Just to be with you
 
But I still haven't found what I'm looking for
But I still haven't found what I'm looking for
 
 
 honey lips
Felt the healing in her fingertips
It burned like fire
This burning desire

 with the tongue of angels
 the hand of a devil
It was warm in the night
I was cold as a stone

But I still haven't found what I'm looking for
But I still haven't found what I'm looking for

I believe in the kingdom come
Then all the colors will bleed into one                                                        
Bleed into one
Well yes I'm still running

You  the bonds and you
 the chains
 the cross
Of my shame
Of my shame
You know I  it
 
But I still haven't found what I'm looking for.......
 
2.THERE ARE SOME WORDS IN BOLD IN THE LYRICS.WRITE THEM ACCORDING 
TO THE PICTURE: 
 
                             
          
 
                                              
         
 
 
3.WHAT DO THE VERBS MEAN?
 
Climb                 Heal                 Bleed              Burn              
Crawl         Look for 
 
 
I hope you enjoyed this activity. See you!!