English Language Blog
Menu
Search

Archive for October, 2012

What is a panagram? Posted by on Oct 14, 2012

Take a look at the sentences below.  All of these sentences are panagrams.  I want you to try and figure out what a panagram is before I tell you.  All the information you need to know to figure out this riddle is below, but to help you out here are two more clues. 1. Panagrams…

Continue Reading

Vowel sounds: Is the letter y a vowel? Posted by on Oct 13, 2012

If you ask an elementary school child who speaks English to tell you the vowels they will likely say “a, e, i, o, u, and sometimes y.”  This is what I was taught about vowels as a child, it is what I have taught my ESL students, and it is still what children who are…

Continue Reading

Vowel sounds: Looking at the letter u Posted by on Oct 12, 2012

To continue our look at vowel sounds, today we will investigate the letter ‘u.’  I wanted to learn more about this letter to share with you and so I turned to Wikipedia for some help and found some very interesting information about how the vowel ‘u’ and consent ‘v’ were once connected. Apparently during late…

Continue Reading

Election Season: Presidential Debates Posted by on Oct 11, 2012

Throughout the American presidential election campaign the presidential candidates hold debates*.  This election season there are three presidential debates and one vice presidential debate (the vice presidential debate is tonight!).  In these debates the candidates are asked questions, which are sometimes posed by a journalist or sometimes by members of the audience watching the debate. …

Continue Reading

Vowel sounds: Looking at the letter o Posted by on Oct 9, 2012

To continue our look at vowel sounds, today we will investigate the letter ‘o’.  What is there to say about this letter. Well it is the fifteenth letter of the alphabet and along with the capital letter H, I, and X, the letter O is one of the few letters that look the same if…

Continue Reading

Mother, father, mom, and dad Posted by on Oct 8, 2012

There are many different names for parents in English.  Some of the different names people (children and adults) use to refer to their parents are found in different regions of the English speaking world, for example in England is more common to call one’s mother, “mummy” or “mum”, than it is to do so in…

Continue Reading

Clara Barton and the American Red Cross Posted by on Oct 7, 2012

The Red Cross or Red Crescent is a volunteer-led, humanitarian movement that provides emergency assistance, disaster relief, and education worldwide.  This movement began in Europe in 1861, and now include member organizations with over 97 million volunteers, members and staff in countries across the globe. In the United States the American Red Cross is counted…

Continue Reading

Older posts
Newer posts