Hello Miss Stefanie . Seja benvinda . Esse é o link da tua página onde faremos os registros dos conteúdos programáticos . Teu sucesso é minha vitória .
Exercícios on line . ( inglês ) ( 1 )
What day is today ? What day was yesterday ? What day was the day before yesterday ?
12.03.2021
Please read aloud and translate . ( Voz alta ) .
Why is to hard to say " red lorry , yellow lorry " ? Because your brain gets confused ( not your tongue ) . To prove this , try to mentally articulate " red lorry , yellow lorry " three times in rapid succession , without moving your lips . Then do the same with the phrase " red lorry , yellow lorry " . Your brain probably has trouble with the first phrase , but not with the second .
Now try to say " the big black bug bit the big black bear but the big black bear bit the big black bug back and I saw Suzie sitting in a shoe shine shop , where she shines she sits and where she sits she shines .
How can you explain that ? The answer is that the brain has to "plan " each sound in series of the words or syllables before you can say it . When two or more similar sounds occur close together the brain gets confused in its plan , and you stumble when you try to say the phrase .
Some people , however , have no difficulty with these confusing phrases which are called tongue-twisters ( brain-twisters ) . Language expert professor Brian Butterworth of University College London has one student who can say " Peggy Babcock " 120 times in one minute . Try it if have nothing better to do .
Why is to hard to say " red lorry , yellow lorry " ? Because your brain gets confused ( not your tongue ) . To prove this , try to mentally articulate " red lorry , yellow lorry " three times in rapid succession , without moving your lips . Then do the same with the phrase " red lorry , yellow lorry " . Your brain probably has trouble with the first phrase , but not with the second .
Now try to say " the big black bug bit the big black bear but the big black bear bit the big black bug back and I saw Suzie sitting in a shoe shine shop , where she shines she sits and where she sits she shines .
How can you explain that ? The answer is that the brain has to "plan " each sound in series of the words or syllables before you can say it . When two or more similar sounds occur close together the brain gets confused in its plan , and you stumble when you try to say the phrase .
Some people , however , have no difficulty with these confusing phrases which are called tongue-twisters ( brain-twisters ) . Language expert professor Brian Butterworth of University College London has one student who can say " Peggy Babcock " 120 times in one minute . Try it if have nothing better to do .
Registro
--------------------------------------------------------------
Modal Verbs
----------------------------------------------------------
World Music
Adele - When we were young ( LYRICS )
Idiomatics expressions : on call , up side down , pick a lot of it up , the gamble has paid off , on the back burner , cats and dogs , sick and tired , be in touch , let´s get the ball rolling , let´s start our show on the road again , What´s up ? , what´s going on , here you are , from here on , well know-way , by the way , any way , one : someone , everyone , no one , this one that one , so far so good .
ResponderExcluir