segunda-feira, 22 de agosto de 2011



The ABC's of great communication by Jason Bermingham

If somebody tells you to "stick a cork (põe uma rolha) in it", don't take it as a compliment.
The expression "stick a cork in it" is just another way of saying "shut up." But there is one case in which stiching a cork in your mouth has its bennefits.
This technique can strengthen (reforçar/melhorar) your communication skills by improving your articulation.
What do I mean by articulation?
Pay attention to how Tv host (apresentador de televisão) Ryan Seacrest talks during an episode of American Idol. It sounds like he's pronouncing ev-ery syl-la-ble of ev-ery word.
People don't talk this way in real life, but TV and radio personalites depend on clean articulation - speaking slowly and deliberately - to get their messages across (para comunicar-se efetivamente).


Author and voice-over (locutor/narrador) actor James Alburg teaches a good way to improve articulation in his book The Art of Voice Acting, and variations of this technique have been around ever since the Greek orator Demosthenes put pebbles (pedrinhas de rio) in his mouth to improve his own communication skills.
Here's how it works: stick a cork between your front teeth as if it were a cigar. Don't have a cork? Use your thumb. Now, read a passage of text out loud. Read slowly and pronounce ev-ery syl-la-ble. Really work your mouth. When you're done (quando você estiver terminado) remove the cork and read the passage again. Do the words sound clearer and easier to understand?
Of course, there is such a thing as too much articulation. Your goal (objetivo/meta) shouldn't be sound like Ryan Seacrest on American Idol. After all, if you're not as good looking as Ryan is, people will just think you're crazy. But you don't have to be on TV or radio to get a message across. Practice the cork technique and your audience will understand what you have to say.
Teacher Marcius

quarta-feira, 17 de agosto de 2011

American: Mayday, mayday!!!...hello can you hear us!!!? Can you hear us!!!? Over............WE ARE SINKING, WE ARE SINKING!!!
 Russian: Hello this is Jhon... (Russo) :)
Americano: WE ARE SINKING, WE'RE SINKING!!!
Russian: What... are you "THINKING"... about?

Vocabulary:
Sink = afundar
Think = pensar
Hear = ouvir
Can = poder

Ps: Improve your English.
      Melhore seu Inglês.

Mayday é a chamada radiotelefônica de emergência ou socorro, versão anglicizada do francês m'aider ou m'aidez, que significa "venha me ajudar". Utilizada principalmente nas navegações marítimas e aeronáuticas, faz parte do Código internacional de sinais e do Código Fonético Internacional.
Teacher Marcius

terça-feira, 16 de agosto de 2011

Woman: Excuse me, hi, hi...hiiiiiii. Where are my chips?
Waitress: They're on your plate.
Woman: No, They're NOT!
Waitess: Uannn!!! Yeah, they are...
Teacher Marcius

terça-feira, 2 de agosto de 2011

segunda-feira, 1 de agosto de 2011

Quadro Comum Europeu de Referência

http://www.uc.pt/fluc/cl/ficheiros/qecrl

Twitter

Os recursos na internet não param de evoluir. O mais recente sistema de social network é o comentadíssimo Twitter, um outro tipo de Messenger, só que mais rápido. Vamos dar uma olhada no termo. By Mark Worden.
Every year there is a new internet phenomenon. In the past we have seen email, Google, Messenger, Wikipedia, You Tube, MySpace and Facebook.
The latest sensation is called Twitter. It is very popular in the United States, Britain and Japan.
Twitter is a "social networking system" like MySpace and Facebook. The difference is that you write messages with a maximum of 140 characters.
In your message you answer one simple question: "What are you doing now?"
Twitter is popular with "normal people", but it also popular with celebrities who use it as a blog. Barack Obama, Jhon McCain, Gordon Brown and Britney Spears all like Twitter. The simple format makes Twitter easy to use from a mobile phone. Many guests at Obama's presidential inauguration wrote Twitter messages during the ceremony. People watching on television complained about this.
A Twitter message is called a tweet.
"Tweet" is literelly the sound of a small bird: the symbol on the twitter website is a bird on a tree. The word twitter also refers to the sound of birds singing.
Humans can also twitter when they talk quicky or nervously.
In British English a twit is a stupid person.
Twitter may not be an intelligent word, but it is the new digital activity. It is replacing "chat" as the most important form of communication.
Other twitter words include follower, a person who "follows" a twitter's old messages; retweet, which means sending another person's message; and Twitterati, which describes the people who use twitter. Twitter is based in Silicon Valley, California.
Will Twitter replace Facebook? Who knows. According to the British newspaper The Financial Times, last year Facebook offered to buy Twitter for $500 million. Twitter said no. 
Teacher Marcius