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Learning English News
Yahoo! News Search Results for Learn English - Dao youth learn cameras, tourism (Vietnam Net)
VietNamNet Bridge - Around 10 Dao youth surround French filmmaker Patrick Moreau as he teaches them how to use a camera. Their faces brighten as they learn how to work with a machine they have never even touched before. - Rogers: The English language can be tricky for kids, even parents (The Record Searchlight)
English, I believe, is most fun when it's misused. And no one misuses it better than small children. - Immigrants work hard to learn English as 2nd language (The Index-Journal)
“Tiger,” right, and classmates work on a worksheet during a class Monday at Greenwood Literacy Council. (Staff photo by Felicia Kitzmiller) As politicians debate the issues of immigration, many of the people most affected by their words can’t even understand what they are saying. - Councilman Continues English-Only Campaign (WSMV Nashville)
A Metro councilman said he hopes to bypass Nashville’s mayor and other council members in his effort to make English the official language of Metro Nashville. Video - LiLi Tan: Taxi Cab Confessions: Why Beijing Drivers Don't Speak English (HuffingtonPost)
Though I told every one of my drivers that he or she could practice their English with me, only one took advantage. "Light turn! Leff turn! Stop!" one driver exclaimed. - Top Scoops (Scoop.co.nz)
Let's learn English, with John Key. | Aug 06, 2008 09:03 David Slack on his own account What is a paraphrase? Well hello there. Hey, when you and I were at school, it's fair to say that a paraphrase meant something pretty unambitious. - Prize awards Welsh language leap (BBC News)
A Welsh learner picks up a prize for her efforts to learn the language in just 10 months. - Prize for language learner (BBC News)
A woman who earlier rejected Welsh picks up a prize for her efforts to learn Welsh in just 10 months. - Professor’s arguement for wrongly spelled English … (The Herald)
Commonly misspelt words should not be corrected but accepted into everyday usage, a university lecturer suggested yesterday. - King's English, clean Greek (Bennington Banner)
I really don't have many pet peeves. Of the few that come to mind, the need to address them rarely arises, and when they do, I handle them in muted tones.
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