Vocabulary for the advanced English language learner. Topic: Expressions related to bulls. (No profanity! Just colorful expressions commonly used by Americans.)
If you enjoy our post, feel free to subscribes to our rss feeds
Practice writting and Speaking English
Vocabulary for the advanced English language learner. Topic: Expressions related to bulls. (No profanity! Just colorful expressions commonly used by Americans.)
If you enjoy our post, feel free to subscribes to our rss feeds
Topic: Use of the glottal stop in place of the true t in American English. Level: intermediate to advanced.
If you enjoy our post, feel free to subscribes to our rss feeds
Topic: pronunciation of T in American English. I focus on the “true” T and the flap T (or tap). This is a lesson in 3 parts. Part 3 offers additional practice with the flap T. Level: intermediate to advanced.
If you enjoy our post, feel free to subscribes to our rss feeds
Topic: pronunciation of T in American English. I focus on the “true” T and the flap T (or tap). This is a lesson in 3 parts. Part 2 presents the flap T. Level: intermediate to advanced.
If you enjoy our post, feel free to subscribes to our rss feeds
Topic: pronunciation of T in American English. I focus on the “true” T and the flap T (or tap). This is a lesson in 3 parts. Part 1 presents the “true” T. Level: intermediate to advanced.
If you enjoy our post, feel free to subscribes to our rss feeds
Topic: Omission of /t/ in spoken American English. Level: intermediate to advanced.
If you enjoy our post, feel free to subscribes to our rss feeds
PART TWO of a lesson in two parts. Topic: CAN’T and CAN. Part Two focuses on the pronunciation of CAN. An explanation and exercises are provided. Level: Intermediate to advanced.
If you enjoy our post, feel free to subscribes to our rss feeds
PART ONE of a lesson in two parts. Topic: CAN’T and CAN. Part One focuses on the pronunciation of the contraction CAN’T. An explanation and exercises are provided. Level: Intermediate to advanced
If you enjoy our post, feel free to subscribes to our rss feeds
PART FOUR of a lesson in FOUR parts. Topic: Falling and Rising Intonation. Part FOUR offers practice with intonation in questions. Viewers can also strengthen their ability to comprehend what different intonation patterns communicate. Tips for more natural intonation are shared. Levels: intermediate to advanced.
If you enjoy our post, feel free to subscribes to our rss feeds
PART THREE of a lesson in FOUR parts. Topic: Falling and Rising Intonation. Part THREE presents the second intonation pattern: rising intonation. Exercises follow. Levels: intermediate to advanced
If you enjoy our post, feel free to subscribes to our rss feeds
PART TWO of a lesson in FOUR parts. Topic: Falling and Rising Intonation. Part TWO offers practice with falling intonation. Levels: intermediate to advanced.
If you enjoy our post, feel free to subscribes to our rss feeds
PART ONE of a lesson in FOUR parts. Topic: Falling and Rising Intonation. Part ONE explains what intonation is in general and presents the first intonation pattern: falling intonation. Levels: intermediate to advanced.
If you enjoy our post, feel free to subscribes to our rss feeds
PART THREE of a lesson in THREE parts. Topic: Stress in phrases and sentences. Part C offers general practice with rhythm, helping learners begin to transfer oral reading skills to free speech. Level: advanced.
If you enjoy our post, feel free to subscribes to our rss feeds
PART TWO of a lesson in THREE parts. Topic: Stress in phrases and sentences. Part B presents two new rhythmic patterns to practice. Level: advanced.
If you enjoy our post, feel free to subscribes to our rss feeds
PART ONE of a lesson in THREE parts. Topic: Stress in phrases and sentences. Part A reviews rhythmic patterns from Lesson 8 by testing the learner’s ability to predict the patterns in new texts. Level: advanced.
If you enjoy our post, feel free to subscribes to our rss feeds
PART TWO of a lesson in THREE parts. Topic: Stress in phrases and sentences. Develop your awareness of rhythm in English speech. Learn to stress words correctly and naturally. Levels: intermediate to advanced.
If you enjoy our post, feel free to subscribes to our rss feeds
BBC CommonMistakes conversation Effort English englishvideo funnyvideo Grammar IELTS IELTSSpeaking minilesson Misterduncan Pronunciation RealEnglish sozoexchange Speak Naturally video Vocabulary
©2010 English Video -Speaking24h.com
Disclaimer: All data and information provided on this site is for informational purposes only.
WordPress Themes by Irish Band & Steel Band | Distributed by eBlog Templates -