Wednesday 28 October 2015

Tuesday 27 October 2015

HALLOWEEN


Listen to this short video about the history of Halloween and answer these questions: 
1. When did it all begin? 
2. What did they originally celebrate on 31, October? 
3. Why did they use fire? 
4. What was Hallowmas? 
5. Where does the word Halloween come from? 
6. When did this tradition arrive in America? 
7. What was originally tricking or treating? 

If you want to know more...

Wednesday 21 October 2015

BACK TO THE FUTURE


When Marty McFly was sent 30 years into the future as part of the plot in "Back to the Future Part II," he arrived in a time when where there were hoverboards zipping around, people wore self-lacing shoes and flying cars were the norm.
The date? It was Oct. 21, 2015.
Sure, there was a lot of the film got wrong about 2015 - but there are some things it got right too.
By this time in history, technology had progressed as much during the 30 years since 1985 as it had during the previous 30 years from 1955 to 1985. Electronics were in virtually everything from clothing to garbage cans to make them move, talk and/or make electronic noises.
Flying cars, once they were invented and perfected, had become so common that drivers no longer needed roads — except perhaps for short journeys. Skyways dominated the skies of central California and eventually the entire world. Cultural influences from other countries, particularly Japan, were more often seen in food and clothing.
Life was lived at a quicker pace than before, in evidence by the speed that people walked down the street, the time it took to cook dinner, and the swiftness of court trials.
Hill Valley underwent a period of gentrification, or revitalization of its downtown. With an increased concern for the environment, the Courthouse Square was landscaped with a large artificial lake (with the surrounding road having NO LANDING markings applied to dissuade drivers of flying cars from bringing their vehicles down near the lake), and businesses were brought back with the construction of an underground Courthouse Mall.
In Back to the Future Part II, while Doc Brown (dad of Jules and Verne Brown, husband of Clara Clayton Brown) takes care of an unconsious Jennifer ParkerMarty McFly lands into the water after using ahoverboard during the chase, managing to escape from Griff Tannen and his gang, and as a result, they crash into the courthouse and end up in jail, thus preventing the robbery for which Marty Jr. would have been jailed.
It should be noted however that 2015 encountered by the DeLorean is presented as only one possible future. Some events such as Marty getting into an automobile accident in 1985 as well as him being fired from his office job in 2015 are explicitly shown to have been averted by the end of Back to the Future Part III. Whether the rest of 2015 was altered as a result remains to be seen. It is also possible that Doc and Marty's activities in1885 had long-term effects that were still too subtle to be noticed when Marty returned to 1985, but which fanned out and caused significant historical changes between 1985 and 2015. Examples must remain purely hypothetical, but one could for instance imagine that the great-grandmother and great-grandfather of the person who would invent anti-gravity devices in the 1990s met on a train in 1886. However, since the locomotive that would pull said train was stolen and destroyed by Marty and Doc already one year earlier, an entire family line faded from history. The inventor of anti-gravity devices was never born. Such hypothetical scenarios could explain why we are currently living in a 2015 without hoverboards and flying cars.
Have a look at this link, to check the predictions that were right! 

Wednesday 14 October 2015

JOURNEY, TRAVEL OR TRIP?

THE WORDS TRAVEL, TRIP AND JOURNEY ARE USUALLY VERY CONFUSING FOR SPANISH STUDENTS OF ENGLISH, 

LET'S HAVE A LOOK AT THE MEANING AND USE OF THESE WORDS.

Trip (n.)


The act of going to another place (often for a short period of time) and returning.

  • We took a five-day trip to the Amazon.
  • You’re back from vacation! How was your trip?
  • I went on business trips to Switzerland and Germany last month.
Use the verbs “take” and “go on” with trip.

  • A round-trip ticket is a ticket for going and coming back.
  • A one-way ticket is only for going.

Travel (v.)

Going to another place (in general).

  • I really like to travel.
  • He travels frequently for work.
  • My sister is currently traveling through South America.
Travel (n.) can be used to describe the act of traveling in general:

  • Travel in that region of the country is dangerous.
  • World travel gives you a new perspective.

Incorrect uses of travel:


  • How was your travel?
    How was your trip?
  • I’m planning a travel to the U.S. next year.
    I’m planning to travel to the U.S. next year.
    I’m planning a trip to the U.S. next year.

Journey (n.)

One piece of travel (going from one place to another) – usually a long distance.

  • The journey takes 3 hours by plane or 28 hours by bus.
  • He made the 200-mile journey by bike.
  • “A journey of a thousand miles must begin with a single step” – Lao-tze, Tao Te Ching
We can also use journey in a more “metaphorical” way to talk about progress in life:

  • He has overcome a lot of problems on his spiritual journey.
  • My uncle is an alcoholic, but he’s beginning the journey of recovery.
  • LE'T PRACTICE THE DIFFERENCE NOW! 
  • TRAVELTRIPJOURNEY 

FORTUNE TELLER BY MAROON 5


THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN WILL AND GOING TO


Watch this video to revise the different uses of will and Going to... Can you give some new examples?

BE GOING TO AND WILL: EXTRA PRACTICE


Thursday 8 October 2015

FRIDAY I'M IN LOVE



What's your favourite day of the week? Mine is Friday and I love this song!

Wednesday 7 October 2015

SONGS FOR PRACTISING PAST TENSES


WORLD ANIMAL DAY

World Animal Day is an international day of action for animal rights  and welfare celebrated annually on October 4, the Feast Day of St. Francis of Assisi, the patron saint of animals. It started in 1931 at a convention of ecologists in Florence, Italy who wished to highlight the plight of endangered species. 






Lets's watch a couple of videos as our particular homage to animals... the sea turtle, the tamarin monkey, and the honey bee! 


what's your favourite animal? why?

ENGLISH GRAMMAR IN USE: PAST SIMPLE AND PAST CONTINUOUS


PAST SIMPLE AND CONTINUOUS IN SONGS

These are the songs we sang in class last week to practice past simple and past continuous... check if you filled the gaps correctly and sing along!

PAST CONTINUOUS: WHAT WAS HAPPENING IN THE CANARIES..?


What was happening in the Canaries? watch this video about a couple's holidays at the Canaries and tell us your last holidays! Use past continuous tense!

Tuesday 6 October 2015

WHAT'S THE WEATHER LIKE TODAY?



Watch this video to learn some new words related to the weather. What's the weather like today in your town?

THE 10 WEIRDEST JOBS IN THE WORLD

We've rounded up some of the weirdest and wackiest jobs out there.
Some are awesome, some are dangerous and some are just disgusting.

1. Pet Food Tester
Yes, it's a thing, and yes it's totally gross.
But as the owner of pet food company Huds and Toke, Mark Gooley, says, "If you wouldn't put it in your mouth, don't you dare expect your dog to eat it."
Mr Gooley eats dog food for a living. He eats everything from doggie treats and chewy bones to liver mixture.
Mmmmm dog food.

"The dog might not be able to tell me 'that tastes terrible', so I have to taste it," he said.
And if it doesn't pass the taste test, it's back to the drawing board.
"I don't know how to explain it. It's like being a mad scientist. People look at me blankly and say, 'I just don't get it'. But I wouldn't do anything else."Someone has to do it I guess.

2. Face Feeler

Ever wondered how shaving brands and beauty companies can claim their products give you the smoothest skin?Well, one lucky person has verified it for them.
A face feeler tests how soft and smooth a person's skin is after using a product, to prove how well it works.
So all day, they just sidle up to beautiful test models and feel their faces.
Nice.

3. Gumologist

A lot of hard work goes into creating the perfect piece of chewy.
Just ask Jesse Kiefer, who works as a Gumologist for Cadbury Schweppes.
"A piece of gum weighs just one to seven grams, but it's packed with a lot of different technology," he told Fortune.
"It has to deliver a burst of flavour, a lot of sweetness, and a lot of tartness if it's a fruit gum. "Our team figures out how to combine all those."Some days, I don't blow any bubbles. Other days I have to blow a lot. It depends on what stage we are in the project."
Gum chewing. For a living. It's a thing.

Kiefer has to get the flavour just right, which isn't easy with some combos like strawberry and lime - which he says don't complement each other that well.
Kiefer started out as a chemical engineer and was working mainly with detergent and soaps.
"But with gum there's just so many flavours! I find the job very stimulating. I've had only one cavity since I started here."

4. Fountain Pen Doctor

Don't you just hate it when your fountain pen breaks? It's the worst.
Luckily there's a man whose sole job it is to fix fountain pens.
Richard Binder, 59, of Richard Binder Fountain Pens in Nashua, New Hampshire, has been "pen doctoring full-time" since leaving his software engineer job in 2002.
He receives broken pens from everywhere - Argentina, Japan, South Africa. He often has 600 pens waiting to be fixed at any one time.
"More than half of my work, really, is nib work," Binder told Fortune. 
"The heart of a fountain pen is the nib, the point through which the ink flows. If the nib is no good, it doesn't matter how fancy the rest of it is, it's not a good pen. Nibs can be scratchy if they're worn or misaligned. People often want them adjusted for more or less ink flow, or customised for calligraphy.
"My gross income is less than when I was a software engineer, but I'm happier.
"I just got a handwritten thankyou from a gentleman in the Philippines. Basically I get my pleasure from making people happy with their pens."
What a nice guy.

5. Chicken Sexer

Don't worry. It sounds worse than it actually is.
When chicks are born they all cuddle together in masses trying to stay warm.
But these cute young things need to be separated according to their sex.
It's a sad end for male chicks - most are sent off for culling because they're irrelevant for egg production.
But the female chicks are primed for their future careers as egg-layers.
Brutal, but true.

6. Waterslide Tester

Monday morning definitely seems a lot more enticing if you get to spend your working week slipping down water slides. Especially come summer.
A slightly different work setup than the boring old office.
A slightly different work setup than the boring old office. Source: Supplied
And water slides are usually placed in massive theme parks. Imagine getting to spend your lunch break on a rollercoaster, and eating a hot dog for lunch.
Working holiday, am I right?

7. Teddy Bear Repair Technician

Kids get really emotional about their toys. Remember when your favourite toy lost an arm, or suffered a similar life-threatening injury? It was devastating.
But now there's a special technician who can come to the rescue.
The Build-A-Bear Workshops have a Teddy Bear Repair Technician who is hired to repair those much-loved teddy bears and get them back to their cuddly, intact, lovable selves.

8. IMAX Screen Cleaner

Those giant cinema screens are total germ-bait. It's a business model just waiting to happen.
And Michael Quaranto, of Houston's 1570 Cinema Services, capitalised on it big time.
The airline pilot got together with his best mate, Andrew Brown, and on their 14 days off a month, they travel around the country and clean IMAX screens.
"The biggest problem is that they get dusty. The most dust we've ever seen was a quarter-inch thick.
"We usually have to empty the vacuum cleaner at least two or three times during the process. We're covered in dust by the end of the night".
So next time you go to the movies, make sure you take a good look at that super-clean screen.

9. Cup Keeper

This job takes babysitting to a whole new level.
The Stanley Cup is awarded to the championship team in the US/Canada's National Hockey League competition.
But there's only one cup, and each year's winning teams are engraved on it.
The famous Stanley Cup, awarded to the winner of the National Hockey League. Picture: AP

Due to the trophy's huge price tag, it must be chaperoned at all times while it's away from its permanent home at the Hockey Hall of Fame.
A "Keeper of the Cup" is paid to accompany the trophy during its travels and make sure it doesn't go astray.

10. Snake Milker 

Snake venom is powerful stuff. It can be turned into drugs to treat all kinds of conditions, including a poisonous snake bite.
But some brave soul needs to collect that venom by hand. They gently expose the snake's fang and squeeze out the deadly juices.
"The only difference between me and any other company in the world that produces something is that the means of production here can kill you...and wants to," Alabama snake milker Ken Darnell told NRP.
Would you want to work in any of these professions?
from www.news.com.au