domingo, 2 de outubro de 2011

Are you alone? Change your habits!


This is an awesome genuinely Brazilian magazine, I recommend you take a subscription enter the website and getting started to receive a great English material at home. 
Love
Are you alone? Change your habits!
Study done by a dating agency reveals that certain kinds of men and women have more chances of being alone


     Being a good-looking man or woman with a good professional career does not mean guaranteed success in love. Many of these people have great difficulty in finding a good partner and cannot find out why. A specialized dating site, A2 Encontros, carried out a survey to find out why some people have so much difficulty finding their soul mate. The first conclusion is obvious: very demanding men and women run serious risks of being alone. However, the survey also revealed kinds of men that women reject more, and the kind of women men avoid getting close to. Let’s learn about these types.

Types of women who are not successful with men:
Women who are too smart, not very affectionate and unfeminine; lazy women and vulgar women. Men also tend to avoid lawyers (because they tend to be “know-it-alls”) and doctors, because they have less time to be with them.

Types of men who are not successful with women:
Indecisive men; men who do not like talking; men who do not pay attention to women and men who think a lot about sex. Women also tend to avoid police officers (because of the risk of them dying at work) and politicians (because politics is increasingly associated with lying).



Vocabulary
dating agency – agência que promove encontros (namoro / casamento)
does not mean – não significa
to find out – descobrir
to carry out – realizar
survey – pesquisa
soul mate – alma gêmea
very demanding – muito exigente
men avoid getting close to – homens evitam se aproximar
lazy – preguiçosa
know-it-alls – “sabe-tudo” / “dona (o) da verdade”
lying - mentira

sábado, 1 de outubro de 2011

WHAT’S IN A NAME? IN THE NAME OF POP ( the ‘70s and ‘80s)



WHAT’S IN A NAME?

IN THE NAME OF POP ( the ‘70s and ‘80s)

Standard: B1 Lower Intermediate
Speaker: Justin Ratcliffe

In the late 1970s punk returned to the style of names beginning with “The Bands upset the establishment with their controversial attitudes. The Clash means conflict. The Damned means condemned . The Pogues’ name comes from the Irish for “kiss my arse.” The Sex Pistols, with their combination of sex and violence, created moral panic.

After punk, names became more varied – like the music. The Cure sounds like an antidote to punk aggression. Morrissey chose the most ordinary English name for his band: The Smiths. Drummer Stewart Copeland perhaps called his band The Police because his father was CIA agent, but he joked that the name gave them free publicity in every country.

INITIALS AND ACRONYMS

Glam rock and new wave names were of the inspired by literature: design and cinema. Others took names form song titles or lyrics.

Another fashion used acronyms, initials and numbers. ABBA means father in Hebrew, but it also stands for the band members: Agnetha, Bjorn, Benny and Anni-Frid (Frida).  AC/DC means alternating current/direct current. The band chose it to suggest electrical power. They didn’t realise that it is also slang for bisexual.  R.E.M means Rapid Eye Movement, the state of sleep when we dream.

Some initials form words when they are spoken. XTC sounds like ecstasy; INXS suggests “in excess.” Other bands shortened their names: Electric Light Orchestra to ELO; Orchestra Manoeuvres in the Dark to OMD. The origin of U2’ name is debated. It may be the classroom where the band met, or an Irish unemployment form, or a US spy plane shot down during the Cold War it also suggests interactivity: “you too.”

WEIRD AND WONDERFUL

The 1980s saw a resurgence of bizarre names. Some sound like corporations: Public Image Limited, the style Council. Other conjure up comical images of the band Super Furry Animals, Manic Street Preachers, Half Man Half Biscuit. There was new fashion for using complete sentences.

Heavy Metal favours metallic name (Led Zeppelin, Iron Maiden, Metalica, dangerous names (Poison, Antrax, Guns’n’Roses), dark and biblical names (Black Sabbath, The Darkness, Exodus, Armageddon).

The ‘80s ended as the ‘70s began, with drug and dance culture flourishing in 1967’s Summer of Love. The Flowerpot Men mixed “flower power” with pot” (cannabis), although “Bill and Ben the Flower Pot Men” was also the name of a famous children’s TV programme on the BBC.

In 1989’s Summer of Love. The Stone Roses were still combining flowers with getting “stoned.”

BAND NAMES FROM SONG TITLES AND LYRICS: (no audio available).
Rolling Stones is a Muddy Waters song. Simple Minds is a phrase in David Bowie’s song “Jean Genie.”
Sisters Of Mercy is a Leonard Cohen song, named after a religious order. The Small Faces were inspired by The Who’s song “I’m the Face.”

BANDS AND LITERATURE

The Velvet Underground is a book about sex by Michael Leigh (right). The Doors of Perception is a book about psychedelic drugs by Aldous Huxley.
Steppenwolf is a Herman Hesse novel. Supertramp: from Autobiography of a Super tramp by R.E.Davies.
The Birthday Party (Nick Cave) is a play by Harold Pinter. Joy Divison: from the novel The House of Dolls by “Ka-Tzetnik 135633.”
Marillion: from J.R.R. Tolkien’s Silmarillion. Savage Garden: from The Vampire Chronicles by Anne Rice.

ART AND REVOLUNTION

Bauhaus was a school of architecture in Berlin’s Spandau Prison. Depeche Modele is a French fashion magazine.
Eurythmics: an art and movement therapy from the 1890s.

BANDS WHICH ARE COMPLETE SENTENCES

Pop Will Eat Itself/ Curiosity Killed the Cat Johnny Hates Jazz/ Dead Can Dance Yo La Tengo. 

sexta-feira, 30 de setembro de 2011

Great Song: I have a Dream


Definitely this is a fantastic staff of teachers, many thanks and all credits for Maria Helena Sabadini, English tips really tip the cap for your dear teacher, keep it up! 
Credits for: Maria Helena Sabadini
Source: http://www.englishexercises.org/makeagame/viewgame.asp?id=3975

 

EXERCISE ONE: listen to the song and fill in the blanks with  SOMETHING, ANYTHING, EVERYTHING
 
I have a dream, a song to sing
To help me cope with 
If you see the wonder of a fairy tale
You can take the future even if you fail
I believe in angels
 good in  I see
I believe in angels
When I know the time is right for me
I'll cross the stream - I have a dream

I have a dream, a fantasy
To help me through reality
And my destination makes it worth the while
Pushing through the darkness still another mile
I believe in angels
 good in  I see
I believe in angels
When I know the time is right for me
I'll cross the stream - I have a dream
I'll cross the stream - I have a dream

MUSIC

I have a dream, a song to sing
To help me cope with 
If you see the wonder of a fairy tale
You can take the future even if you fail
I believe in angels
 good in  I see
I believe in angels
When I know the time is right for me
I'll cross the stream - I have a dream
I'll cross the stream - I have a dream
 

EXERCISE TWO: listen again, this time you have to choose the correct verb for each blank space  


 a dream, a song to 
To  with anything
If you  the wonder of a fairy tale
You can  the future even if you 
 in angels
Something good in everything I 
 in angels
When I  the time is right for me
I'll  the stream - I  a dream
 a dream, a fantasy
To  me through reality
And my destination  it worth the while
Pushing through the darkness still another mile
 in angels
Something good in everything I 
 in angels
When I  the time is right for me
I'll  the stream - I  a dream
I'll  the stream - I  a dream

MUSIC

 a dream, a song to 
To  with anything
If you  the wonder of a fairy tale
You can  the future even if you 
 in angels
Something good in everything I 
 in angels
When I  the time is right for me
I'll  the stream - I  a dream
I'll  the stream - I  a dream

Eco Tips



SpeakerSpeaker


Rachel: You were talking about Earth Hour and that's switching the lights off is one way to save electricity and protect the environment. What other things do you do in your life to save for example water?Steven: Well, as for me, I recycle all my waste. I also, as for water, before brushing teeth, I have a cup. I just fill the cup and then use it. I don't know if you do it. Do you do it?
Rachel: Actually, I have to confess, I don't save water very efficiently. I usually leave the tap running when I'm brushing my teeth, so I will try.
Do you have any other tips for saving water?
Steven: Well, start off buying a cup before you brush your teeth, and of course, try to close the tap. When you're trying to like throw trash or something, try to separate your trash, and of course turn off any electricity that you're not using. Unplug them because even if you don't use it, and you have a plug, it will use electricity.
Rachel: Thank you. So do you always unplug your laptop computer when you go to sleep or do you sometimes leave it running?
Steven: I actually plug my laptop. I will charge it fully and then I will unplug it and use it -- all the battery, so I guess I do, and especially I don't use my laptop. For my laptop I just use it for class, so pretty much yes.
Rachel: Well, my computers very old, and I'm always scared if I turn it off that it won't start up again, so I leave mine on all the time. I think I'm the worst environmentalist. But I do recycle a lot of our trash, and I also have never owned a car, so I take public transport everywhere. Do you have a car?
Steven: I do have a car. However I try not to use it, because if I use it I will just take the whole family: my parents and my sisters. And as for shopping, I will just take the public transportation because it's right almost really near to my house.
Rachel: In Costa Rica, do you actually need a car to travel between places or is public transport very good?
Steven: Compare Costa Rica with other countries, for example the United States or Japan, Costa Rica doesn't have the railroads. It doesn't have the subways. But we do have a good bus, transportation, and it's pretty much really cheap.
Rachel: So Steven you've inspired me to be more environmentally friendly, so I think I'm gonna go and buy a cup so I can brush my teeth and save water.
Steven: Great idea. Thank you Rachel.

quinta-feira, 29 de setembro de 2011

Promoting it for friends: Hello Class: Breakfast/Foods, Learn English Vocabulary Online

Studying English here is far easy, in particular if you accessing the website HELLO CHANNEL, you'll find a lot of useful YouTube Videos, available for free. Watching this and much more on http://hellochannelenglish.org.


Liked English tips and HELLO CHANNEL? Telling for friends, twit us, use FB for promoting them around the world. 


Source: HELLO CHANNEL







http://hellochannelenglish.org

Learn by songs. Chris Norman - Midnight Lady

 All credits of this Exercises for Teacher Judith Jekkel from Hungary
Source: http://www.englishexercises.org/makeagame/viewgame.asp?id=905


This is one of my favorite website, English Exercises provides a self-studying for English learners and a rich English material for English teachers, pass it on for friends. 
 
                                                                
 
Watch the video and do the following exercises.
 
Write in the missing words. The images may help.

You think love is a , love is a motion 
  and so deep, always emotion

I've got many , to reach tomorrow
Love will always grow, no  , no sorrow

When you take me in your , you can  me with your heart
I feel the magic of your , oh, you're tearing me apart

Choose the correct verbs.

Midnight lady, love  time
Midnight lady, it's hard to 
Midnight lady, I  your name
 you can  my pain

Midnight lady, just you and me
Midnight lady, eternally
Midnight lady, I can  in your arms
 high

Unscramble the words in brackets.

Magic (ecodthu) my life, I'm still (rgdanmei)
Anything (foeber) has lost its meaning

(Heneav) in your eyes, my soul is on (rife)
Oh, my feelings (owgr), we can't go higher

Oh, I just (atwn) a girl, baby, just to call my own
And I just wanna dream, I don't have to dream (enloa)

Unscramble the following lines.

  Midnight lady, I call your name
  Midnight lady, it's hard to find
  Midnight lady, love takes time
  I know you can ease my pain
  Midnight lady, eternally
  Midnight lady, just you and me
  Midnight lady, I can fly in your arms
  I'll get high

Short Story: 'The Diamond Lens' by Fitz-James O'Brien, Part 2


source of the picture: alangullette.com
Source: www.manythings.org/voa/stories



Short Story: 'The Diamond Lens' by Fitz-James O'Brien, Part 2

Continue of the part 1


Now, the Special English program, AMERICAN STORIES.
Our story is called "The Diamond Lens. " It was written by Fitz-James O'Brien. Today we will hear the second and final part of the story. Here is Maurice Joyce with part two of "The Diamond Lens."
STORYTELLER:
When I was a child, someone gave me a microscope. I spent hours looking through that microscope, exploring Nature's tiny secrets. As I grew up, I became more interested in my microscope than in people.
When I was twenty years old, my parents sent me to New York City to study medicine. I never went to any of my classes. Instead, I spent all my time, and a lot of my money, trying to build the perfect microscope. I wanted to make a powerful lens that would let me see even the smallest parts of life. But all my experiments failed.
Then one day, I met a young man, who lived in the apartment above mine. Jules Simon told me about a woman who could speak to the dead. When I visited Madame Vulpes, she let me speak to the spirit of the man who invented the microscope. The spirit of Anton Leeuwenhoek told me how to make a perfect lens from a diamond of one hundred forty carats.
But where could I find a diamond that big?
When I returned home, I went to Simon's apartment. He was surprised to see me and tried to hide a small object in his pocket. I wanted to discover what it was, so I brought two bottles of wine to his apartment. We began to drink. By the time we had finished the first bottle, Simon was very drunk.
"Simon, I know you have a secret. Why don't you tell me about it?" Something in my voice must have made him feel safe. He made me promise to keep his secret. Then he took a small box from his pocket. When he opened it, I saw a large diamond shaped like a rose. A pure white light seemed to come from deep inside the diamond.
Simon told me he had stolen the diamond from a man in South America. He said it weighed exactly one hundred forty carats.
Excitement shook my body. I could not believe my luck. On the same evening that the spirit of Leeuwenhoek tells me the secret of the perfect lens, I find the diamond I need to create it.
I decided to steal Simon's treasure.
I sat across the table from him as he drank another glass of wine. I knew I could not simply steal the diamond. Simon would call the police. There was only one way to get the diamond. I had to kill Simon.
Everything I needed to murder Simon was right there in his apartment. A bottle full of sleeping powder was on a table near his bed. A long thin knife lay on the table. Simon was so busy looking at his diamond that I was able to put the drug in his glass quite easily. He fell asleep in fifteen minutes.
I put his diamond in my pocket and carried Simon to the bed. I wanted to make the police think Simon had killed himself. I picked up Simon's long thin knife and stared down at him. I tried to imagine exactly how the knife would enter Simon's heart if he were holding the knife himself.
I pushed the knife deep into his heart. I heard a sound come from his throat, like the bursting of a large bubble. His body moved and his right hand grabbed the handle of the knife. He must have died immediately.
I washed our glasses and took the two wine bottles away with me. I left the lights on, closed the door and went back to my apartment.
Simon's death was not discovered until three o'clock the next day. One of the neighbors knocked at his door and when there was no answer, she called the police. They discovered Simon's body on the bed. The police questioned everyone. But they did not learn the truth. The police finally decided Jules Simon had killed himself, and soon everyone forgot about him. I had committed the perfect crime.
For three months after Simon's death, I worked day and night on my diamond lens. At last the lens was done. My hands shook as I put a drop of water on a piece of glass. Carefully, I added some oil to the water to prevent it from drying. I turned on a strong light under the glass and looked through the diamond lens.
For a moment, I saw nothing in that drop of water. And then I saw a pure white light. Carefully, I moved the lens of my microscope closer to the drop of water.
Slowly, the white light began to change. It began to form shapes. I could see clouds and wonderful trees and flowers. These plants were the most unusual colors: bright reds, greens, purples, as well as silver and gold. The branches of these trees moved slowly in a soft wind. Everywhere I looked, I could see fruits and flowers of a thousand different colors.
"How strange," I thought, "that this beautiful place has no animal life in it."
Then, I saw something moving slowly among the brightly-colored trees and bushes. The branches of a purple and silver bush were gently pushed aside. And, there, before my eye, stood the most beautiful woman I had ever seen! She was perfect: pink skin, large blue eyes and long golden hair that fell over her shoulders to her knees.
She stepped away from the rainbow-colored trees. Like a flower floating on water, she drifted through the air. Watching her move was like listening to the sound of tiny bells ringing in the wind.
She went to the rainbow-colored trees and looked up at one of them. The tree moved one of its branches that was full of fruit. It lowered the branch to her, and she took one of the fruits. She turned it in her tiny hands and began to eat.
How I wished I had the power to enter that bright light and float with her through those beautiful forests.
Suddenly, I realized I had fallen in love with this tiny creature! I loved someone who would never love me back. Someone who is a prisoner in a drop of water. I ran out of the room, threw myself on my bed and cried until I fell asleep.
Day after day, I returned to my microscope to watch her. I never left my apartment. I rarely even ate or slept.
One day, as usual, I went to my microscope, ready to watch my love. She was there, but a terrible change had taken place. Her face had become thin, and she could hardly walk. The wonderful light in her golden hair and blues eyes was gone. At that moment, I would have given my soul to become as small as she and enter her world to help her.
What was causing her to be so sick? She seemed in great pain. I watched her for hours, helpless and alone with my breaking heart. She grew weaker and weaker. The forest also was changing. The trees were losing their wonderful colors.
Suddenly, I realized I had not looked at the drop of water for several days. I had looked into it with the microscope, but not at it. As soon as I looked at the glass under the microscope, I understood the horrible truth. I had forgotten to add more oil to the drop of water to stop it from drying. The drop of water had disappeared.
I rushed again to look through the lens. The rainbow forests were all gone.
My love lay in a spot of weak light. Her pink body was dried and wrinkled. Her eyes were black as dust. Slowly she disappeared forever.
I fainted and woke many hours later on pieces of my microscope. I had fallen on it when I fainted. My mind was as broken as the diamond lens. I crawled to my bed and withdrew from the world.
When I finally got better, months later, all my money was gone. People now say I am crazy. They call me "Linley, the mad scientist."
No one believes I spoke to the spirit of Leeuwenhoek. They laugh when I tell them how I killed Jules Simon and stole his diamond to make the perfect lens. They think I never saw that beautiful world in a drop of water.
But I know the truth of the diamond lens. And now, so do you.
ANNOUNCER:
You have just heard "The Diamond Lens" by Fitz-James O'Brien. It was adapted for Special English by Dona de Sanctis. Your storyteller was Maurice Joyce.
Listen again next week for another AMERICAN STORY told in Special English on the Voice of America. This is Shirley Griffith.