domingo, 21 de junio de 2015

So, But, Because

Week 16th -18th June

Hi everybody!
Are you having fun? Are you enjoying the weekend?

Last week we finished watching the videos about the arrival of Allie in the USA.

We learnt some useful phrases:

You look good!                              Well done!
How was the fight?                        Did you sleep well?
You must be really tired!              How are things?
I’m so pleased you came!            What are the plans for the week?
It’s great to see you!                     It’s time to go!

Don’t forget that they use different words for the same words depending if it is the USA or the UK.
The USA                   The UK
Lift                              elevator
Parking Lot              car park


And we finished with a story.
The story of a girl that went out with her friends one Saturday. They went to a disco. The DJ fell in love with the girl in the yellow dress and they started going out together.
They met in a café every evening when she finished work. One evening she was driving very fast because she was in a hurry. She didn’t see a man in a dark coat that was crossing the road. She ran the man over but she didn’t realize.
She waited for her boyfriend in the café but he didn’t turned up (appeared) so, she went home.
While she was watching TV the doorbell rang. It was a police officer. She told her that her boyfriend had an accident and was in hospital. A woman driving a white car ran over him but she didn’t stop to help.
Who do you think ran over the boy?

Remember the use of so, because and but.
Reason: because. It answers the question ‘Why?’
Result: so. The consequence of something.

·         She was driving very fast because she was in a hurry. (Why was she driving fast?)
·         She was in a hurry, so she was driving fast.

We´ll continue with another story on Tuesday!

Enjoy the rest of your Sunday!

domingo, 14 de junio de 2015

Immigration, Checking in, Calling Reception...Practical English

Week 9th -11th June

Hi again!

I was very happy to hear that Juan was really pleased with the English he spoke in Italy. It’s very rewarding (satisfying) for me to feel that I have helped you to learn and that you could communicate abroad (in a foreign country) thanks to that. But of course, the effort is yours! You’re the one who is studying and taking advantage of (using in your benefit) the lessons. Anyway, I’m very proud of you!

In view of the success of ‘Practical English’, we continued with this section last week.
We watched the videos and listened to the dialogues.
Do you remember Mark and Allie?
Mark is from San Francisco. He’s divorced and he works for a music company: MTC. Allie is British. She also works for MTC, but in London. Last month, Mark travelled to London on business and he met Allie. They went for a coffee. They went shopping. They had dinner at a restaurant. They got on very well, so Mark invited her to a conference in San Francisco. And now, Mark is at the airport, waiting for Allie.

We watched the video.
Allie went through ‘immigration’. Then she met Mark and he took her to her hotel. She was very tired. The flight was 11 hours long and she couldn’t sleep on the plane. Besides it was 5a.m. in England and 7p.m. in the USA!
She checked in the hotel. She called reception because the air conditioning didn’t work and she also ordered a sandwich!
You can see the videos again here.


See you on Tuesday!!!

jueves, 4 de junio de 2015

Let's Talk!!!!

Tuesday 2nd June

Hello!
Are you enjoying this day off (a day when you don’t have to work)?
Yes, I know, we have to work tomorrow so, this is not a long weekend.
But…it doesn’t matter. At least we don’t have to work today…or have we? Because if I’m writing the blog, I’m working!
          Last Tuesday, we had a conversation class.                             
We talked about:

Personal Information
Family
Music
Where are you from?
Do you have a big family?
What kind of music do you listen to?
What nationality are you?
How many brothers and sisters have you got?
When do you listen to m music?
What do you do??
Do you get on well with them?
Who wrote our favourite song?
What languages do you speak?
What does your best friend do?
How often do you go to concerts?
       
Languages
Do you think…?
Making offers
Why do you think it’s important to learn languages?
Do you think the weather will be good tomorrow?

“I can’t do this homework. It’s very difficult”
Shall I help you?
Why are you learning English?
…you’ll study English next year?
“Oh no!. I don’t have any money with me”
Shall I lend you some?
Do you think English is a difficult language to learn?
…you’ll get some e-mails today?
“These bags are very heavy”
Shall I carry them for you?
Would you like to learn Chinese?
…your country will win the next football championship?
“It’s very hot in here”
Shall I switch the air conditioning on?


Practise more conversations with this video

And that was our class!

I hope Juan is having fun!


Tell us about your trip next week!

viernes, 29 de mayo de 2015

Questions With and Without Auxiliaries and Prepositions of Time.

Week 26th – 28th May

Hi everybody! How are you?
Let’s see…What did we do in our last lessons?
We revised how to make questions with and without auxiliaries.


I’m not going to repeat the theory, as it was posted on the previous blog. You can just scroll down and you’ll find it!
I won’t write the explanation again but you can watch it on these videos. It may be more entertaining than reading!
We also reviewed prepositions of time: in, on, at, for, during and since.
In/on/at for time. Exercise:  In, On, At ...
I was born on Saturday on25th in December in 1991 in winter in the morning at /on (American English) the weekend at 9p.m

·         On New Year’s Eve we stay up until midnight.
·         We send cards to family at Christmas and on birthdays.
·         They are sweet and we often eat them on special occasions, like Christmas. What are they?
·         Pumpkins are popular at Halloween.
·         People often put up special decorations around the house at Christmas

Use of the prepositions, for, since, ago with present perfect or past simple.


 ·          Since is only used with perfect tenses.
He’s lived in Madrid since 2006.
 ·          Ago is only used with past simple.
He moved to Madrid 8 years ago.
 ·          For can be used with both tenses but the meaning of the sentences is different.
He lived in Santander for six years.        
 He doesn’t live in Santander.
He’s lived in Santander for six years.      He’s probably living in Santander now.
Watch the video and you’ll understand the use much better!            



And we finished the class with Juan making us feeling jealous (envious) because he’s going to Italy for a week! Enjoy your trip and have fun!!!          
See you in two weeks’ time. And Laura, Luis, see you on Tuesday!!!!
Enjoy your weekend!

domingo, 24 de mayo de 2015

Election Day,'Imagine'!

Week 19th – 21st May
Hello! How are you?

Are you interested in the elections? Would you like to learn some vocabulary related to them?
You can learn some in here.

British Politics and Election Vocabulary      Useful Vocabulary

Things you might see around election time
ballot paper(s)
ballot paper
leaflet(s) / pamphlet(s)pamphlets
party political broadcastbroadcast
politician(s)thatcher
poll card(s)poll
poster(s)poster
postal vote(s)envelope
vote(s)vote
voting booth(s)booth
Main Political Parties in the UK - from left to right. Their Colours and Logos
labour roselibdem birdconservative tree
Labour - Red - Rose
Liberal Democrats - Gold - Bird
Conservatives - Blue - Tree
Words you might see or hear during an election
block voteA way of voting in which your vote represents other members of your organization, especially at trade union meetings.
by-electionA special election, held between regular elections, when an area votes. A by-election can be 'called' if an existing M.P. dies or retires.
campaign (n)In an election a campaign is a political campaign is an organized effort which seeks to win the vote of the electorate. Often called a 'political campaign' or an 'election campaign'.
campaign (v)The things a candidate does to be elected. (KIssing babies, shaking hands, giving speeches to the WI etc.)
candidate (n)The person who is running in an election.
coalition (n)If there's no outright winner in an election a government can be formed in which several parties cooperate.
constituent (n)A citizen who is represented in a government by officials for whom he or she votes.
constituency (n)Each of the electoral areas or divisions in the UK which elect one or more members to parliament.
debate (n)A formal discussion of the merits of something.
debate (v)To argue for and against something.
deposit (n)The sum of money that a candidate must pay in return for the right to stand in British parliamentary elections.
dissolution (n)The termination of the current parliament, which has to take place before a general election.
dissolved (v)Once the dissolution of parliament has been announced, we say it has been dissolved.
elect (v)The act of voting to select the winner of a political office.
election (n)The formal decision-making process by which a population chooses an individual to hold public office.
electorate (n)The people who are eligible to vote in an election.
general electionAn election held for a nation's primary legislative body.
gerrymanderTo redraw electoral district boundaries for political advantage.
governmentThe political body with the power to make and/or enforce laws for a country,
House of CommonsThe lower house of the British parliament.
House of LordsThe upper house of the British parliament.
independentA candidate who is not controlled by a political party.
leaderThe person who runs a political party. (Margaret Thatcher was the leader of the Conservatives).
local electionCounty, unitary authority, borough, district, city, town or parish elections.
MPAbbreviation of Member of Parliament.
Member of ParliamentThe person who represents their constituency in the House of Commons.
oppositionThe major political party opposed to the party in office and prepared to replace it if elected.
partyAn organization formed to gain political power.
policyA deliberate act of government that in some way alters or influences the society or economy outside the government.
politicalRelated to politics.
politicianA person active in politics.
politicsThe process by which governments make decisions.
PMAbbreviation of Prime Minister.
prime ministerThe person who holds the position of head of the government.
proxy voteThe delegation of someone to vote on someone else's behalf.
rhetoricThe art of using language as a means to persuade someone to your way of thinking.
runTo campaign to stand for a political position.
spinTo present the facts in such a way as to sway public opinion.
spin doctor
vetoA vote that blocks a decision.
Build Up - Different forms of government / political power
Autocracy
A system of government in which supreme political power to direct all the activities of the state is concentrated in the hands of one person, whose decisions are subject to neither external legal restraints nor regularized mechanisms of popular control (except perhaps for the implicit threat of coup d'etat or mass insurrection).
Aristocracy
A privileged social class whose members possess disproportionately large shares of a society's wealth, social prestige, educational attainment and political influence, with these advantages having been acquired principally through gift or inheritance from a long line of similarly privileged and cultivated ancestors. The term refers also to a form of government in which the state is effectively controlled by the members of such a class. The term tends to have a somewhat unsavory or derogatory connotation today in the light of democratic theories, but in classical political philosophy it meant rule by “the best people” of the society, who were expected to feel a paternalistic concern for the humbler members of the society that would keep them from ruling in a purely self-seeking fashion.
Communism
Severe government interference in economics. Centralized planning by the government, ONE PARTY rule, and stresses that there should be only one class of people.
Democracy
A system of government in which effective political power is vested in the people. In older usage (for example, in the writings of the classical Greek and Roman philosophers or in the Federalist Papers), the term was reserved exclusively for governmental systems in which the populace exercised this power directly through general assemblies or referenda to decide the most important questions of law or policy. In more contemporary usage, the term has been broadened to include also what the American Founding Fathers called a republic -- a governmental system in which the power of the people is normally exercised only indirectly, through freely elected representatives who are supposed to make government decisions according to the popular will, or at least according to the supposed values and interests of the population.
Dictatorship
Government by a single person (or group) whose discretion in using the powers and resources of the state is unrestrained by any fixed legal or constitutional rules and who is (are) in no effective way held responsible to the general population or their elected representatives.
Generic term used to describe any government controlled by a single individual and giving the people little or no individual freedom. Typically a person who rules by threat of force. People who are loyal to a dictatorship swear allegiance to the person first and the country second. Fascism, Theocracies, Monarchies and Communism can all be dictatorships. A Republic cannot be a dictatorship.
Fascism
A class of political ideologies (and historical political regimes) that takes its name from the movement led by Benito Mussolini that took power in Italy in 1922. Mussolini's ideas and practices directly and indirectly influenced political movements in Germany (especially the Nazi Party), Spain (Franco's Falange Party), France, Argentina, and many other European and non-European countries right up to the present day.
Marxism
The theory of government based on the ideals of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels in the book The Communist Manifesto written in the 1800's. Marxism advocates the "workers" (Proletariats and petite-bourgeoisie) rise up and overthrow businesses and government and take control themselves. Marxism advocates a classless society in which everything is shared and owned by all. In its true form it follows the mandates of a Direct Democracy in which the mob or general population rules and allocates resources based upon the will of the majority with equal consideration given to all without exclusions or privileges to any.
Monarchy
A government that has a single person who is generally considered the ruler by the title and birthright. Titles include: Czar, King, Queen, Emperor, Caesar, etc... Power is absolute and is either taken through conquest or passed down to family members without regard for ability or appropriateness. Society is formed around feudal groups or tribes in which the ruling family delegates power and authority based upon the desires of a single individual. Power struggles are common. A monarchy is based upon a class system where those of a certain birthright are perceived to be of superior intellect and strength to those not of the same family line. The resources and wealth of a country is generally preserved solely for the hedonistic and self-fulfilling desires of the reigning monarch with little regard for the general population or its welfare. The inhabitants of a country under a monarch are alive to serve the monarch. In contrast the inhabitants of a republic are served by the their leaders.
Oligarchy
Any system of government in which virtually all political power is held by a very small number of wealthy but otherwise unmeritorious people who shape public policy primarily to benefit themselves financially through direct subsidies to their agricultural estates or business firms, lucrative government contracts, and protectionist measures aimed at damaging their economic competitors — while displaying little or no concern for the broader interests of the rest of the citizenry. “Oligarchy” is also used as a collective term to denote all the individual members of the small corrupt ruling group in such a system. The term always has a negative or derogatory connotation in both contemporary and classical usage, in contrast to aristocracy (which sometimes has a derogatory connotation in modern usage, but never in classical).
Republic
Originally, any form of government not headed by an hereditary monarch. In modern American usage, the term usually refers more specifically to a form of government (a.k.a. “representative democracy”) in which ultimate political power is theoretically vested in the people but in which popular control is exercised only intermittently and indirectly through the popular election of government officials and/or delegates to a legislative assembly rather than directly through frequent mass assemblies or legislation by referendum.
Socialism
Limited government interference in business activity, (as opposed to communism) but more than in capitalism. Certain areas of an individual's life are controlled and representation tends to be parliamentary in nature. In other words, people vote for a particular party and the party elects the leaders of the country. The notable difference here is that there is more than one party.
Theocracy
A government which claims to be immediately directed by God, and divinely blessed. The country tends to be intolerant either passively or overtly to faiths other than that recognized by the state. The country identifies itself and its laws within religion and religious doctrine. There is no legal separation between church and state, and citizens of other faiths are often excluded or hampered from participation or expelled. Because a theocracy is exclusionary, it can never be a democracy which requires inclusion without exception of all equally. It cannot be a republic because a republic requires the separation of church and state and equal rights to all.Naturally Speaking
Voting
  • I'd like to register to vote.
  • I'm on the electoral registry.
  • I haven't had my poll card, yet.
  • Where is the polling station?
  • Have you voted, yet?
  • Are you going to vote?
  • Which party are you voting for?*
  • Who are you going to vote for?*
  • Who got the most votes?
*Be careful about asking this. For many people in the UK, voting is a personal matter.
Watch and listen to this walk-through on how to vote in the UK.
Dialogue
Mr and Mrs Smith are discussing the elections.
Election  - Conversation
Mrs Smith:Are you coming to vote? The polling station will be closing in an hour.
Mr Smith :It's raining!
Mrs Smith:So what?
Mr Smith:I can't be bothered. It doesn't matter who I vote for, we always end up worse off. They're all as bad as each other.
Mrs Smith:Well don't complain to me if you don't like the policies of whoever wins.
Mr Smith:I don't think anyone will win. They're predicting a hung parliament.
Mrs Smith:Well if no one bothers to vote, I guess they'll be right. I'll be back in ten.
See more at:    http://www.learnenglish.de/vocabulary/elections.html#sthash.mlyNyxtb.m5ApxICM.dpuf





Last week we revised prepositions of place and prepositions of time. Do you remember?
We continued talking about music. We listened to the song ‘Imagine’.
·         What’s the place where some religions think good people go when they die?
·         And the place where bad people go when they die, according to some religions?
·         How do you call the place where you can see the stars, the moon, the sun etc.?
·         How do you call a person who dreams?
·         What is the feeling of community and great friendship between people?


Suffixes –ship / -hood
Friend (noun)
friendship (abstract noun)
Neighbor (noun)
neighbourhood (collective noun – group)
Brother (noun)
brotherhood (collective noun- group)







And talking about music and songs…
…did you see the Eurovision Song Contest? Did you like the song which won?
We can learn how to say countries and nationalities in English. Did you practise yesterday?

This is all, See you on Tuesday! Bye!