Hello! My name's Liliana. I'm a teacher of English (Language and Literature) to Italian teenage stu

Saturday, December 16, 2017

Hard Times mind map


Conditional sentences 1 st type

This is an activity students did in the second year some days ago.
After having listened to a famous song of the 1970s If you leave me now by Chicago students were explained the use of the conditional sentences first type.

Then they were divided into groups of four and they were given the following activity:
Write down about the crazy things your parents said to you when you were a child. 
They wrote sentences starting If you..............

During the next lesson I asked them to stand, I read each of their sentences and I told them:  go on the right if you  have really heard in your lives that sentence from your  parents....or go on the left if you have never heard the sentence......

They had fun......this was a way to make them do a writing activity and a listening activity as well.

Of course this will also be a reading activity....since they will read all of their sentences on this blog!

When I was a child my parents thought Playstation 2 was bad for me.
They said: if you spend too much time on PS2, you won't see very well (your eyesight will get worse and worse)




When I was a child I always made a face and my mum said:
 if you make that face, an angel will change your face and your face will make like that forever.


When I was a child my grandmother said:
if you look at a fixed point for a long time, you'll go blind

My mother always said:
if you eat lots of spinach, you'll be as strong as Braccio di Ferro (Popeye)




My father said: if you eat lots of carrots you'll see better



My parents said: when you see blood in action movies, don't worry, it'll be just tomato



My parents said " when one of your teeth falls, a fairy will come close to you during the night and she will bring to you some money


My mum said to me: if you eat too much, one day you'll explode (burst)

When I was a child my mum said: if you drink too much water when you eat, some frogs will grow into your stomach



My mum said to me: if you keep singing, it'll rain
My mum said to me: if you misbehave, a witch will bring to you a lot of coal




When I was a child my parents always said:


if you eat a lot of fish, you'll be an intelligent girl one day
They said to me: if you stay on your phone too much, you'll lose your eyesight one day
They also said: if you put one of your fingers in your mouth, your hands will fall down
My parents said. if you go in the darkness, GiufĂ  will eat you

If you don't sleep in the afternoon, Mommy Serra will come and make you sleep forever
If you wear your mother's wedding ring, you'll always be unlucky.







Tuesday, November 21, 2017

RHYMING WORDS


RHYMING WORDS

The purpose of this activity was to make students in a second school year realize that it’s not so difficult to build up sentences by linking two rhyming words. I gave each student a word and I told him/her to find the student having the connected ryming word and then create a line using both words.

This is what they have written.

1)MEET                                                               GREET

When my friends I meet with my hands I greet

2)WRITE                                                                             RIGHT

If you study, read and write all your tests will be right

3)RAIN                                                                REIGN

The cold rain over you will always reign

4)DISH                                                                    WISH

I wish to clean a dish
In wonderwish if you break a dish is a wish

5)SELL                                                                      CELL

 Soon I’ll sell my cell

6)FAST                                                                    LAST

The last one becomes the  fast one

7)FREE                                                                     TREE

 Plant a tree and you’ll get free

8)BAND                                                                  SAND

 I’ll create a band and it’ll be like a castle  in  the sand

9)NEST                                                                    BEST

 The best place for a nest is a big forest

10)PEN                                                                      MEN

 I need a pen to write a book about men



Sunday, November 19, 2017

Oliver Twist's characters



Oliver Twist
Fagin Fagin takes in homeless children and trains them to pickpocket for him

Nancy -  A young prostitute and one of Fagin’s former child pickpockets. Nancy is also Bill Sikes’s lover

Rose Maylie -  Agnes Fleming’s sister, raised by Mrs. Maylie after the death of Rose’s father. She ends up marrying Harry Maylie

Mr. Brownlow Mr. Brownlow owns a portrait of Agnes Fleming and was engaged to Mr. Leeford’s sister when she died

Monks  Edward Leeford, Oliver Twist's half-brother; son of Edwin Leeford and his legal wife. With Fagin, he schemes to give Oliver a bad reputation.

Bill Sikes  -  A brutal professional burglar brought up in Fagin’s gang

Agnes Fleming -  Oliver’s mother. After falling in love with and becoming pregnant by Mr. Leeford, she chooses to die anonymously in a workhouse rather than stain her family’s reputation.

Mr. Leeford -  Oliver and Monks’s father, who dies long before the events of the novel.
Oliver's father dies in Rome after having claimed that he intended to pass his inheritance on to Oliver and Agnes.




CONCLUSION
Oliver is revealed to be the illegitimate son of Edwin Leeford and Agnes Fleming. Leeford has fathered the evil Edward (Monks) through a failed former marriage. After seducing Agnes, Edwin dies, leaving a will which states that the unborn child will inherit his estate if "in his minority he should never have stained his name with any public act of dishonor, meanness, cowardice, or wrong" in the event of which all would go to Edward (Monks), hence Monk's attempt to corrupt Oliver via Fagin.

USEFUL WORDS and EXPRESSIONS to talk about the passage Oliver wants some more


  • Estrarre a sorte qualcosa= to draw something by lot

ex. Oliver's name is drawn by lot


  • Tirare a sorte=To draw lots
  • La sorte volle= It happened that..........................
  • I tiri della sorte= The tricks of fortune

  • Condividere la sorte di qualcuno=to cast (to throw) in one's lot with someone

ex. Oliver casts in his lot with the other boys


  • Essere in balia della sorte

Ex. Oliver is at the mercy of fate


  • Meritare una sorte migliore

Ex. Oliver deserves a better fate


  • Toccare in sorte a qualcuno=To fall to someone's lot

Ex. It (asking for some more food) fell to Oliver's lot


  • Affidarsi alla sorte=to trust to chance....








Asking for and giving directions


http://learnenglishteens.britishcouncil.org/skills/listening-skills-practice/giving-directions#

transcript
A.
Go straight on. Then take the first left on to Green Street. Walk past the library and it’s the building next to the library on the left. 
B.
Go straight on. Go past the traffic lights. You will see a shop on the right. Go past that and it’s on the right next to the shop. 
C.
Go straight on. Go past the traffic lights and go straight on until you get to the roundabout. At the roundabout turn left. Go past the theatre. It’s the building next to the theatre, opposite the hospital. 
D.
Go straight on. Go past the traffic lights and take the second right on to King’s Road. Go past the bookshop. It’s the building next to the bookshop opposite the cafĂ©.

Saturday, November 11, 2017

An example of persuasive essay

Write an article for your school magazine with the title " Why I'm not a fan of industrialization?"



Industrialization is a phenomenon that influences our lives every day and we don't know how.
Probably most of us believe that industrialization has brought just positive things, such as better transports, better products in less time......a modern society!!! But are we sure  all that is positive?
Our nature has been disappearing, everything has been changing. We don't have a place in the world that isn't polluted.
What we have created has been destroying us! Is that really necessary? Do we need all that technology to live? Do we really need to destry our world? Ourselves?
Pollution has been taking over our world, changing everything.
Summer is winter and winter is summer, autumn and spring don't exist anymore. The weather conditions are unbearable and nature is revolting against us.
We are obsessed with technology and we've forgotten howthe countryside with a lot of trees and plants and flowers is! We can travel around the world in a minute but we only see lots of fog and mist, because the best and biggest cities in the world are just surroundes by heavy smoke.
I'm not saying that industrialization doesn't have any benefits, because I know that it would be a lie. Maybe our lives are longer now thanks to it, but how long will it last?
To sum up, I think that one day all that will have more drawbacks than benefits and we will regret destroying the environment.


Why I'm not a fan of industrialization.
I'n not a fan of industrialization because I think that people lived better in the past than they do now.
First of all, industrialization has increased pollution and as a result also the level of mortality because everyday we breathe dirty air. A lot of people that live near industrial areas are ill or their children are born with illnesses. It isn't right that people have to suffer because of industrialization, while other people get rich thanks to that!
In the second place for many years and also today, somewhere in the world, businessmen and factory owners use children and women to pay them less than men. So a lot of children have been deprived of their childhood and that still happens nowadays in very poor countries and no one does anything.
Furthermore, industrialization has increased the number of the unemployed, because their jobs have been replaced by machines so that the employers don't have to pay their employees and workers!!!
In conclusion, I'm sure people lived in better conditions when they weren't any factories and huge capitals to be invested on new, thighly technological companies.


Traduci le seguenti frasi

Il Teatro Elisabettiano non aveva luci artificiali



Il loro amore non svanirĂ  mai


Prima di incontrare Romeo, Juliet era molto apprezzata dai suoi genitori


Prima di uscire, i miei genitori mi costrinsero a studiare


Io e tuo padre non comprendiamo perché


Shakespeare critica l’estate perchĂ© è troppo breve


La regina Elisabetta voleva che le persone si uniformassero alla religione protestante


Lei dovette combattere contro la Spagna


Lui non ha mai visto una tale straordinaria bellezza prima


Romeo paragona Juliet alla luce del sole


Romeo vede che Juliet è morta


Romeo dice a Juliet queste parole perchĂ© …..


Juliet è concreta ed è anche determinata


Juliet è la ragazza più luminosa che Romeo abbia mai visto


Juliet lascia che Romeo la baci al primo incontro


I ruoli femminili venivano dati ai ragazzi


Il poeta racconta che il conte di Southampton vivrà finché ci saranno persone che leggeranno il sonetto


Il conte vivrĂ  in quei versiL’unica mia opzione è negare te


Juliet, perché non dichiari il tuo amore a Romeo?


Non è meglio un messaggio su Whatsapp?


Lei è costretta a sposare Count Paris


I genitori vogliono che Juliet sposi il conte Paris


Tu rinuncerai al tuo nome, vero?


La regina Elisabetta salì al trono all’etĂ  di 25 anni


Juliet è presentata come una ragazza non convenzionale e diretta


Alla fine i due amanti sono pronti a tutto


Loro si innamorano a prima vista


Il commercio estero aumentò durante l’epoca elisabettiana


Romeo è un po’ malinconico all’inizio dell’opera

Monday, November 6, 2017

Should-ought to-had better

Should and ought to have the same meaning. They are used to give advice, or say what is the right thing to do; for examples:
You should  call your friend to thank her. 
You should go to the doctor's
We should stop misbehaving

Ought to is less frequently used and is more formal.
Ought to is not usually used in questions or negative statements

Should I open the window?
You shouldn't tell lies

You shouldn't talk so much during the classes
(You oughtn't tell lies)

Had better (or 'd better) has also the same meaning, but it's stronger. It implies a warning or threat of possible bad consequences; There's a danger or a problem if we don't follow the advice. For examples, 

It's raining; you'd better take your umbrella. 
I have a very important meeting at 8; I had better not be late!

I'd better study for the test!
I'd better not hang out with my friends today


https://learningenglish.voanews.com/a/everyday-grammar-modals-should-ought-to-had-better/3458578.html

Video SparkNotes: Shakespeare's Hamlet Summary


Answer the questions


  1. In which country does Hamlet primarily take place?
  2. Who is Hamlet in love with?
  3. How is Claudius related to Hamlet?
  4. How did Claudius kill Hamlet's father, the king?
  5. Who returns as a ghost and tells Hamlet to kill Claudius?
  6. Who is Polonius?
  7. What does Claudius ask Rosencrantz and Guildenstern to do?
  8. Why does Hamlet decide to stage the murder of his father?
  9. What does Claudius do when the actor pours the poison into the king's ear during the play?
  10. Why does Hamlet not kill the king while the king is praying?
  11. Who does Hamlet kill when he finds him spying?
  12. How did Ophelia die?
  13.  Who drinks from the poison goblet that Claudius gives to Hamlet?
  14. Who does not die in the final scene?
  15. Who ends up ruler of Denmark at the end of the play?

Sunday, October 29, 2017

Sunday, October 8, 2017

Rising Intonation - English Pronunciation with JenniferESL

Falling Intonation - English Pronunciation with JenniferESL

How to Write an Argumentative Essay - Planning

Taylor Swift - Love Story



A song inspired by the story of Romeo and juliet
Love Story 
Taylor Swift 

We were both young when I first saw you
I close my eyes and the flashback starts
I'm standing there on a balcony in summer air
See the lights, see the party, the ball gowns
See you make your way through the crowd
And say hello
Little did I know
That you were Romeo, you were throwing pebbles
And my daddy said, "Stay away from Juliet"
And I was crying on the staircase
Begging you, please, don't go
And I said,
"Romeo, take me somewhere we can be alone
I'll be waiting, all that's left to do is run
You'll be the prince and I'll be the princess
It's a love story, baby just say yes
So I sneak out to the garden to see you
We keep quiet 'cause we're dead if they knew
So close your eyes, escape this town for a little while
'Cause you were Romeo, I was a scarlet letter
And my daddy said "Stay away from Juliet"
But you were everything to me, I was begging you, please, don't go
And I said Romeo take me somewhere we can be alone
I'll be waiting, all there's left to do is run
You'll be the prince and I'll be the princess
It's a love story baby just say yes
Romeo save me, they're trying to tell me how to feel
This love is difficult, but it's real
Don't be afraid, we'll make it out of this mess
It's a love story, baby just say "Yes"
Oh, oh
I got tired of waiting
Wondering if you were ever coming around
My faith in you was fading
When I met you on the outskirts of town
And I said
"Romeo save me, I've been feeling so alone
I keep waiting for you but you never come
Is this in my head? I don't know what to think"
He knelt to the ground and pulled out a ring and said
"Marry me, Juliet, you'll never have to be alone
I love you and that's all I really know
I talked to your dad, go pick out a white dress
It's a love story, baby just say yes"
Oh, oh,
Oh, oh
'Cause we were both young when I first saw you.

Tuesday, October 3, 2017

TONGUE TWISTERS 

WEATHER




When the rain is splashing  down 
on the fields and on the town 
singing winds begin to blow 
and the flowers start to grow









TH VOICED SOUND

Whether the weather is warm,   
whether the weather is hot,
we have to put up with the weather,
whether we like it or not





Whatever the weather we'll be together









QUEEN VICTORIA



Victoria (1819-1901) was queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (1837–1901) and empress of India (1876–1901). She was the last of the House of Hanover and gave her name to an era, the Victorian Age.  She and her husband, Prince Consort Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, had nine children.

Her reign saw advances in industry, science (Darwin’s theory of evolution), communications (the telegraph, popular press), and other forms of technology; the building of the railways and the London Underground, sewers, and power distribution networks;  a greatly expanded empire; unequal growth of wealth, with class differences; tremendous poverty; increase in urban populations, with the growth of great cities like Manchester, Leeds, and Birmingham; increased literacy; and great civic works, often funded by industrial philanthropists.

Here is a video about Queen Victoria (first part)

https://youtu.be/wEOtVXydiEI



















http://www.iispandinipiazza.gov.it/wp/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/The-Victorian-Age-1.pdf


Tuesday, September 19, 2017

Wordsworth’s Life Lessons: Splendour in the Grass
William Wordsworth’s Ode to Intimations of Immortality is the classic example of the beauty of the mind, and the complexity of the values of innocence and experience.
The key passage from this Ode, is the following. It is so profound that it inspired the movie Splendor in the Grass with Warren Beatty and Natalie Wood(1961)


“What though the radiance which was once so bright
Be now for ever taken from my sight,
Though nothing can bring back the hour
Of splendour in the grass, of glory in the flower;
We will grieve not, rather find 

Strength in what remains behind;
In the primal sympathy
Which having been must ever be;
In the soothing thoughts that spring
Out of human suffering;
In the faith that looks through death,
In years that bring the philosophic mind.”






 William Wordsworth

Benché la radiosità
un tempo così luminosa
sia adesso tolta per sempre dai miei occhi,
benché nulla possa portare indietro l'ora
di splendore nell'erba,
di gloria nel fiore,
noi non ce ne dorremo, piuttosto troveremo
forza in quel che resta dietro;
nell'affinitĂ  primaria
che essendo stata per sempre deve essere;
nei pensieri docili che sgorgano
dall'umano soffrire;
nella fede che vede attraverso la morte,
negli anni che portano la mente filosofica


LEOPARDI and WORDSWORTH
SIMILARITIES

  • Importance given to emotions and feelings
  • Focus on nature in his poems
  • they believe in the existence of different phases in human life
  • Youth is the age of hopes and illusions
  • poetry as a creative activity is the product of recollections ' in a state of tranquility'
  • they have a tendency to personify the elements of nature (the moon, the rainbow, the daffodils)
  • they are aware of what is painful to live 

DIFFERENCES
LEOPARDI

  • in Leopardi's view, nature is evil, blasting and indifferent to the man  
  • he doesn't believe in any possibility of comfort or solace
  • he rejects the idea of life after the earthly one
  • life is a sequence of painful moments 

WORDSWORTH

  • nature is a moral guide
  • it gives joy and relief
  • it has a comforting function
  • it's a haven from the horrors of the Industrial Revolution
  • he believes in 'Intimations of immortality'
  • before the birth the soul pre-existed in heaven and the child is in a state of innocence and purity because he is still close to God.
  • he is able to recall the heavenly state of his soul
  • through his imagination and the close contact with nature, the poet may recall that condition, as well
La ginestra
it's an example of solidarity and solace in the desert of life 

Daffodils
they're an example of joy and comfort for the man. It's a vital force, a direct expression of the presence of God