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Movie & TV Series Club - Wornham School & myplace
- Length: 1:11
- Rating: ( ratings)
- Views: 49
- Author: wornhamschool
Tags: Wornham School ACADEMIA(S) Coruña ACADEMIA DE inglés ESCUELA DE inglés CURSOS DE inglés CLASES DE inglés APRENDER inglés EXAMENES CAMBRIDGE MYPLACE wornhamschool
Every Monday at 7pm. we'll be holding our Movie and TV Series Club. Come and share a wonderful moment with the rest of the students and teachers as we enjoy watching a movie or series, but most important of all practicing our english in a colloquial setting.
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- Length: 36:17
- Rating: 5.0' max='5' min='1' numRaters='7' rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#overall ( ratings)
- Views: 1009
- Author: TechSupportGuyTV
Tags: Microsoft Skype ios5 Apple Steve Jobs Dennis Ritchie Denis Richie Tech Support Guy TV
Microsoft buys Skype, iOS5 is released, we mourn the passing of Steve Jobs and Dennis Ritchie. Show Notes & URLs: forums.techguy.org The Tech Support Guy Show: www.TechGuy.tv Get free technical support www.TechGuy.org
Learn Arabic Numbers 1-10: Teach Kids Counting عربية للأطفال Educational for Children
- Length: 32:53
- Rating: 5.0' max='5' min='1' numRaters='2' rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#overall ( ratings)
- Views: 84
- Author: SyrajArabicBooks
Tags: MSA Fusha teach learn Arabic Numbers counting math Educational Children's Video education school family preschool toddler baby tutorial kids kid children Childrens lesson Lessons Student Modern Standard Arabic Arabic Language Teacher Infant Students Teachers Tutorials Resource Resources islam islamic kuran quran write read standard formal colloquial bilingual arab arabic alphabet أغانٍ للأطفال باللغة العربية dvd movie film foreign langauge Syraj Books
***** 5 Stars from Parents & Teachers! (See Reviews Below) Start Today! Teach your Children Arabic NOW with this Educational Arabic Language Children's video. Ages: 6 Months to 5 years old. Language: Modern Standard Arabic / Fusha with some colloquial Arabic. Learn Arabic Numbers 1-10. Arabic Children's DVD: Counting. A playful and interactive introduction to Arabic numbers 1-10. Exposes little ones to the concept of counting and reinforces numbers recognition through repetition, songs and our usual medley of animation, puppet skits and nursery rhymes. Little Thinking Minds produces educational Arabic DVDs for babies & children that are now available to rent/stream on YouTube! Colorful cartoon animation, cute kids, and happy songs make this film essential to your Arabic library. Producer: Little Thinking Minds (المفكون الصفار) www.LittleThinkingMinds.com Buy this on DVD at www.Syraj.com REVIEWS: An absolute must for parents who want to raise their children fluent in Arabic. This is the best DVD i have ever bought for my little baby girl. She is 11 months and loves watching it every day.. She will be staring at the TV. Great picture, great songs. They actually sing a lot of arabic songs to teach kids the arabic language. I highly recommend it to everyone wants to teach their child the arabic language in a fun way. Alqaysi I bough this DVD to my son who is 2 years old. He loved it from the first time he saw the DVD. He is so concentrated when he sees it and can watch it ...
ELCSOLAR Speaking - USING COLLOQUIAL LANGUAGE
- Length: 1:3
- Rating: ( ratings)
- Views: 29
- Author: elsolarsupport
Tags: elc solar elsolar elcsolar speaking ietls speaking test english practice speaking practice cityu english speaking colloquial language elsolarsupport
'Whats up! Wanna, shoulda, coulda' -- these are colloquial language. If you want to be able to understand and use them more, try interacting more with English speakers or watching English language TV series. You can keep a small English notebook and jot down expressions for revision, but please do remember to avoid colloquial language in formal academic settings.
Robert Frost "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" Poem animation
- Length: 0:45
- Rating: 4.5' max='5' min='1' numRaters='8' rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#overall ( ratings)
- Views: 904
- Author: poetryreincarnations
Tags: poem animation robert frost ezra pound walt whitman lanier brel service poet poetry posie poeme poetryreincarnations
Heres a virtual movie of the celebrated American poet Robert Frost reading his favourite own poem "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening".The sound recording on this virtual movie was made in 1948. "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" is a poem written in 1922 by Robert Frost, and published in 1923 in his New Hampshire volume. Imagery and personification are prominent in the work. Frost wrote this poem about winter in June, 1922 at his house in Shaftsbury, Vermont that is now home to the "Robert Frost Stone House Museum." Frost had been up the entire night writing the long poem "New Hampshire" and had finally finished when he realized morning had come. He went out to view the sunrise and suddenly got the idea for "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening." He wrote the new poem in just a few minutes and later stated that "It was as if I'd had a hallucination." "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" was Frost's favorite of his own poems and Frost in a letter to Louis Untermeyer called it "my best bid for remembrance." The poem is written in iambic tetrameter in the Rubaiyat stanza created by Edward Fitzgerald. Each verse (save the last) follows an aaba rhyming scheme, with the following verse's a's rhyming with that verse's b, which is a chain rhyme. Overall, the rhyme scheme is AABA-BBCB-CCDC-DDDD. There was also a choral piece written for this poem. The piece was written by Eric Whitacre, a contemporary American composer whose other choral works include Lux Aurumque, When ...
05 09 2011 The Summation of More Than a Decade in Texas (TV-MA)
- Length: 9:52
- Rating: 5.0' max='5' min='1' numRaters='6' rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#overall ( ratings)
- Views: 13
- Author: AmericasMaji
Tags: Dallas Fort Worth Texas Field Report Americas Maji
The video version of the field report on Texas. Still somewhat rough, but I don't think I need to spend too much more time on this as I am getting on with my own life. I spent 13 years in DFW, and could never really get past the colloquial "you ain't from around here." Goes back to my earlier statement of "who you know, who knows you." What I did find is that the "Street Politics" does bridge that gap to some degree, but there is still the "who the hell are you?" and "what are you doing here?" attitudes. Strikes me as being very strange. Too, DFW's media does not allow for much in the way of dissidents. And, I don't know what to say about the intellectual snobbery that I found down there. DFW is a closed system where nothing new can be added to the discussion. From 2006 to 2009 I released five books. Three of which predicted the era we are now in. The publisher handled the press releases, and *nothing* was ever mentioned in any reviews. Too, the assertion that people have to educate themselves is all fine and good, but it does little good when the culture goes out of its way to freeze people out. Much of this smacks of "I've got mine, to hell with you." And I have seen enough of that as well. Too, the media in DFW is driven by a need to embellish on fluff. Maybe a few more people would show up if they had a track on where to go, or were free to go. Due to socioeconomic stratification sometimes it is not possible. The bottom line for me, on a personal level, is that I did ...
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