YES, I CAN LEARN & SPEAK ENGLISH Dr. Joseph Domenech.

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Presentation transcript:

YES, I CAN LEARN & SPEAK ENGLISH Dr. Joseph Domenech

HOW TO LEARN ENGLISH EFFECTIVELY SITTING AT A TABLE LOOKING AT YOUR NOTEBOOK IS NOT THE BEST WAY TO STUDY ENGLISH. MOST OF THE TIME, YOUR MIND IS NOT ACTIVELY USING THE INFORMATION THAT YOU ARE STUDYING, AND PRACTICAL LEARNING DOES NOT TAKE PLACE. HERE ARE SOME TECHNIQUES THAT WILL HELP YOU LEARN MORE EFFECTIVELY.

WRITE A JOURNAL Writing every day lets you see your grammar clearly in front of you, express your ideas, and use a non-oral method in communicate in English. Then read the corrected version out loud. It is a good idea to re-copy the corrected journal too, so that you will have the experience of writing your ideas down in proper English.

READ A BOOK By Reading A Story, You Create A Picture In Your Imagination That Will Connected Different Parts Of Your Brain To English. Find A Book That Is Not Too Difficult. Do Not Stop Every Time You Find A New Word. Guess What The Word Probably Means, Continue Reading, And Check In Your Dictionary At The End Of The Page Or Chapter.

Re-write your class notes every day. Writing your notes a second time will allow you to remember more strongly what you study. It will also make your notebook neater, making it easier to study.

WATCH TV AND MOVIES, AND LISTEN TO THE RADIO. Even if you don’t understand everything, you will still be learning. It is possible to understand the content even if you know only 30% of the words that you hear! Your listening ability will improve day by day-and it’s fun!

KEEP A VOCABULARY NOTEBOOK IN A SEPARATE NOTEBOOK FROM YOUR CLASS NOTES Take an active approach to learning new vocabulary. If you find 5 words a day, 6 days a week, you will learn about 140 new words a month; 10 words a day would bring you over than 280 new words a month. Hint – approach new words by subject: things connected to your hobies, to your interests etc. Do it this way: Think of a word you know in your language. Look it up in your dictionary. When you find the English word, write it down on the left side of your vocabulary note book. In the midle of the page, write down if the word is a noun (n), verb (v), adjective (adj), etc. so that you will know how to use the word. Look the word up in an English-English dictionary. Write the English definition on the right side of the the page (or on the next page). Copy a sentence from the dictionary. This will help you learn how to use the word correctly. Practice reading this sentence untll it becomes natural for you.

SPEAK LOTS OF ENGLISH WITH YOUR FRINDS You improve your spoken English by speaking English in different situations with people of all nationalities. If you want to speak English better in the future, speak it as much as possible now!

THINK POSITIVELY People who say “I can’t speak English well” are corrected. People who say “Every day in every way, my English is getting better and better” are also correct. What you think is what you get. Practice saying the second sentence every day, and you will see greater improvement in your English and in your confidence. Remember: the more fun you have with English,the easier it will be to learn ENJOY

English Grammar In Easy Way

Preview Interjections Determiners Subordinators Interrogatives Qualifiers Sentence combinations Yes/no questions Information questions Punctuation rules Capitalization rules Definitions Nouns Pronouns Verbs Adjectives Adverbs Prepositions Conjunctions

Grammar DEFINITION The grammar of a language is a complex of systems that may be analyzed and studied on these three levels: (Noam Chomsky’s UG) Phonology (set of sounds/ symbols) Morphology (combinations of sounds that carry single units of meaning) 3. Syntax (how single units of meaning are combined to form words, phrases and sentences.

Parts of speech (Nouns) Definition Proper / common Singular / plural (annex) Count / non-count /abstract (annex) (how much –how many) Collectible (group nouns) Units of measurement (Reference: Schramper Azar, Betty,1996. Basic English Grammar)

Definition (proper and common nouns) Nouns – words used to name a person, place, thing, object, quality, idea, concept, or an action. Ref. (American Heritage Dictionary, 2001) Proper Nouns- special or particular name given to common nouns to distinguish them from others of the same kind. Example: common- woman proper Martha a country Puerto Rico a pet Puppy many others a monument The Statue of Liberty a day Monday a place Ryder Hospital A person Carlos Proper Nouns

Proper and common nouns day Saturday associations Members Club month October movies Titanic mountain El Yunque planets Neptune river The Amazon city San Juan ocean Pacific Ocean historical periods Middle Ages book Applied Linguistic language Spanish newspaper New York Times nationality Puerto Rican religion Catholic School course English 101 brand of product Cadillac institutions University of Puerto Rico

Nouns (singular and plural) Rule No. 1 (Add –s to the end of noun) cup cups student students Rule No.2 consonants before “y” change –y to i and add –es city -cities party- parties lady-ladies Rule No.3 vowels before “y” add –s boy –boys key –keys day -days

Singular and plural (cont.) Rule No. 4 (–f and –fe endings) change the –f or –fe to v and –es life –lives wife –wives thief –thieves Rule No. 5 (sh, ch, x, ss endings) add –es bush –bushes match –matches box -boxes kiss -kisses Rule No. 6 (consonant + o) add –es (vowel +o) –s tomato –tomatoes radio radios

PRACTICE EXERCISES USE THE PLURAL FORM TO FILL IN THE BLANKS PRACTICE EXERCISES USE THE PLURAL FORM TO FILL IN THE BLANKS. (PROVIDED LIST) They have one girl and two ______. I visited many _______ last year. Women give birth to _______. She lost the _____ of the car and the house! _____ rides horses in Texas. Madrid and Paris are beautiful _______. We must bring ______ to the English class. Good evening _____ and gentleman. On Saturday nights, I like to go to _______. People carry their food on _____ at the cafeteria. Baby Boy City Country Lady Party Tray Key Dictionary cowboy

Pronunciation of plurals (s / es) Group A Final –s is pronounced /z/ after voiced sounds (taxicabs, beds, dogs, balls, years, days, boys, trees, etc.) Group B Final –s is pronounced /s/ after voiceless sounds (books, cups, groups, cats, students, desks, etc.) Group C Final –s, es is pronounced /ez/ after “s” sounds (classes, horses, boxes, faces) after “z” sounds (sizes, roses, noises) after “sh” sounds (dishes, bushes) after “ch” sounds (matches, sandwiches) after “ge/dge” sounds (pages, ages, bridges, edges)

Irregular plural forms (exceptions) Child children Foot feet Man men Woman women Mouse mice Tooth teeth Fish fish _____ people (is always plural) (no s)

Count and noncount. nouns a book books one book two books some books a lot of books many books a few books Non-count nouns money some money a lot of money much money a little money Common non-count nouns advice, furniture, love, peace, homework, luck information, food, mail, music, traffic, weather, work, bread, cheese, coffee, rice, sand, meat, milk, water, sugar, money, oil, liquids materials (paper) abstracts general food gases

ORAL PRACTICE (COUNT VS. NON-COUNT) Chair Traffic Music Work Furniture Cars Coffee Water Coin Fact Library Jewelry Money Information Peace Rings Letters Homework Advice Justice mail assignment job sugar

Pronouns Definition Personal pronouns (subject-object) Possessive adjectives Possessive pronouns Reflexive Indefinite Interrogative Demonstrative Relative reciprocal

Verbs (verb tenses /conjugation) Definition Regular Irregular verbs Spelling / pronunciation Conjugation (annex-practice) Auxiliary verbs/ modals (annex) Infinitives Gerunds

Verbs Regular/ Irregular/ verb tenses Regular verbs (d or ed endings) /d/ sound pronunciation /t/ sound pronunciation /ed/ pronunciation

Irregular verbs Three forms Two forms One form

Verb conjugation Works Simple present tense I Work You He, she, it We they work

Verb tenses Simple past I Worked You He, she, it We they

Verb tenses Simple future I will work You He, she, it We they Another way to express the simple future I am going to work tomorrow. She is going to work next week. They are going to work on Sunday. I will work You He, she, it We they

Present progressive I am working right now. You are working. He, she, it is working. We They

Past progressive (continuous) was working last night. You were working yesterday. He, she, it was working last summer. We were working a few hours ago. were working last week. They were working last Monday.

Future progressive (continuous) will be working tomorrow. You will be working this afternoon. He, she, it will be working next weekend. We will be working tonight. will be working next summer. They will be working next semester.

Adjectives Definition Articles as adjectives Order of adjectives in a series (color, size, origin, nationalities, shape, age, etc..) Past participles / gerunds used as adjectives Comparatives and superlatives comparisons (annex-practice)

Adverbs Definition Adverbs of frequency (annex) Adverbs of time Adverbs of location (place) Adverbs of mode

Prepositions Definition IN, ON and AT (annex –time and location) All prepositions Transitional expressions (prep. Phrases-annex)

Conjunctions Definition Correlative conjunctions Coordinating conjunctions Subordinate conjunctions Conjunctive adverbs Other subordinators (annex)

Interjections and other words Definition and examples Onomatopoeias Numerals (cardinals, ordinals) Determiners Qualifiers Subordinators interrogatives

Capitalization Rules (annex) Punctuation Rules (annex) Sentence Combinations YES/NO questions Information questions

THANK YOU AND KEEP GOING