Thursday, 25 June 2015


                                            From English is Fun

Thursday, 18 June 2015


                                              From FuNGLiSH CafE

Tuesday, 16 June 2015

JUST



                                                                                            From YDS GRUBU

Monday, 15 June 2015

New words added to OxfordDictionaries

Social media and technology
The world of social media and technology continue to advance, and these changes bring new vocabulary with them. The word selfie was crowned Oxford Dictionaries’ Word of the Year in 2013, thanks to its use in social media, and it is now joined in OxfordDictionaries.com by selfie stick. This device – ‘a rod on which a camera or smartphone may be mounted, enabling the person holding it to take a photograph of themselves from a wider angle’ – has grown hugely in popularity (and, in some corners, unpopularity), as has the term designating it, which is accordingly added to the dictionary.
The rise of social media also brings with it a rise in a certain sort of trollThe sense of troll referring to ‘a person who makes a deliberately offensive or provocative online post’ is already in OxfordDictionaries.com; it is now joined by the specific variety concern troll: ‘a person who disingenuously expresses concern about an issue with the intention of undermining or derailing genuine discussion’. 





The noun mainstream (‘the ideas, attitudes, or activities that are shared by most people and regarded as normal or conventional’), and the equivalent adjective mainstream, will probably be long-familiar words. Now the informal, derogatory term lamestream is also included in the dictionary: it is a blend of lame (with the sense ‘uninspiring and dull’) and mainstream, and is ‘used to refer contemptuously to the mainstream media’ as both a noun and an adjective.
Other new words in the spheres of social media, technology, and science include
Slang and topical
Some terms have grown in popularity because of recent events or topical discussions. In the recent British General Election, much news coverage was devoted to the right-wing political party UKIP (United Kingdom Independence Party). Although the party only secured one seat, there was enough discussion to popularize the informal noun Ukipper (orUKIPper) for ‘a member or supporter of UKIP’.
The run up to the election also saw notable uses of another new entry: brain fade, ‘a temporary inability to concentrate or think clearly’. Prime Minister David Cameron blamed brain fade when he accidentally announced his footballing allegiance to West Ham United rather than Aston Villa, while Green party leader Natalie Bennett said brain fade was responsible for a radio interview that she confessed was ‘very bad’.
Bae was on the shortlist for 2014’s Word of the Year, and is now in OxfordDictionaries.com. Bae is used as an informal term of endearment for one’s romantic partner, especially among young people in North America. It originated as an abbreviation of baby or babe (and probably not an acronym of ‘before anyone else’, though this has been suggested), and has proliferated through use on social media and in hip-hop and R&B lyrics.


Monday, 8 June 2015

"How are you?" in British English

In this lesson, you'll learn how to ask and answer "How are you?" in British English.

Tuesday, 2 June 2015

Common mistakes

No podría estar más de acuerdo con este artículo, en el que Mónica  enumera los errores más comunes de estrategia que cometen los alumnos que deciden hablar inglés DE VERDAD. Thanks Monica!



Mistakes