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9 Incredible Blogs in English You Should Start Following. Psst, I have a secret.

9 Incredible Blogs in English You Should Start Following

Do you wish you could learn English faster? Do you wish you could learn English while being entertained? Oh, and do you also wish that you could do all this without spending any money? Then I have an awesome way to learn English that you are probably not using! They are called blogs. A blog, which comes from the old word weblog (a web log), is a website that is regularly updated with new posts (written entries). Anyone can make a blog, so there are millions that exist today. In fact, you are reading a blog right now. Luckily, these websites happen to be perfect for eager English language learners like you. Why Use Blogs to Learn English?

Mind The Gap. Ask most Brits and Americans to compile a list of spelling differences between their two nations and—more often than not—comparisons such as color/colour, theater/theatre, and meter/metre will land among the three most common … So we come over here and assimilate nicely (so we think), but there are some things we British expats find ourselves doing that may raise American eyebrows anyway.

Mind The Gap

Half the time we’re not even conscious of our oddities. As an expat living in the U.S., you can either get with local dining culture or stick rigidly to your British ideas about restaurant etiquette. America’s British population has taken to the web to voice its displeasure at news that U.S. candy giant Hershey has successfully blocked our much loved U.K. -produced chocolate from being exported to the land of the free.

In the middle of his road trip across America, British filmmaker James Coulson decided he’d seen enough—and applied for U.S. citizenship. British Culture with an American Accent. Blog - English Fluency Now. Blog. In 2016 the United Kingdom decided to leave the European Union in what was called Brexit.

Blog

As the dust still hasn’t really settled (it’s too soon to see any real effect) since this happened, people are still really unsure what this means for the global economy, and other side affects this could cause all over the world. In this… Teaching ESL Online Blog. Lingua.ly, Which Turns The Internet Into A Language Textbook, Raises $1M. Lingua.ly, which saves language students from the tedium of traditional textbooks, has raised $1 million.

Lingua.ly, Which Turns The Internet Into A Language Textbook, Raises $1M

Participants in the round include Udi Netzer (a returning investor), Shai Rephaeli, Yochy Investments, and Seed Fund 1776. The site and apps pulls articles from the web-based on vocabulary lists and each users’ interests. TechCrunch last covered the startup when it launched its free Android app in April 2014 (it is also now available for iOS). The latest funding brings Lingua.ly’s total raised so far to $1.8 million. Meredith Circerchia, a linguist and the startup’s director of communications and e-learning, says the fresh capital will be used to bring Lingua.ly’s free tools, which are available online as a Chrome extension and as Android and iOS apps, to new platforms and markets. For Teachers Archives - Lingua.ly. Lingua.ly helps language students expand their vocabulary and improve their reading skills using foreign newspaper articles —but it does a whole lot more than that too.

For Teachers Archives - Lingua.ly

Here are our Top Tips for Using Lingua.ly in the Language Classroom. Is ‘invite’ acceptable as a noun? Last week a friend told me to expect ‘an invite’ to something.

Is ‘invite’ acceptable as a noun?

This was unremarkable in the context, but I know people who would insist on saying invitation even when it might sound inappropriately formal. Invite is a word whose use as a noun seems destined to always raise hackles. For some people it depends on the circumstances: they can accept it, and might even use it, in text messages and casual speech, but they object to it in formal writing. For others, regardless of register, the usage is just too big an ask. In her article on ‘nouning’, Gill Francis observed that invite has been used as a noun since the 17th century. English Editing Blog - Blogging good English for lovers of language. The Challenges of Understanding Different Regional Accents It’s often easy for regional accents and dialects to make understanding a new language difficult.

English Editing Blog - Blogging good English for lovers of language

From travelling abroad to communicating with people in different countries via e-mail or telephone, understanding new people can be hard for those who aren’t familiar with common » Read More My daughter’s flight was listed at the top of my account page and next to it was the word ‘Rescheduled’! What? I didn’t get an email or text telling me her flight had been rescheduled! By this time, I’m at work and my daughter is on her way to » Read More How big is your goal? The language we use shapes the way that other people see us, so it is important to think carefully about the way that we present ourselves, both in speech and in writing, particularly when we are working on business correspondence.

The question of language as it relates to business probably comes with a great deal of stress.