#8 Tongue twister: Please notice
❗️Practice your pronunciation with this tongue twister today.
▶️ If you notice this notice you will notice that this notice isn’t worth noticing.
❗️Pay attention to:
🔘 Pronunciation – “notice” has two syllables and is pronounced [nəʊtɪs], not the same as “notes”.
🔘 Intonation – strong / weak: Nouns and adjectives often sound stronger because they carry more meaning than other words. Repeated words are not so strong.
If you notice (verb) this NOTICE (noun)⤴️ you will notice (repeated verb) that this notice (repeated noun) isn’t worth noticing.
🔘 Intonation – up / down: Different phrases are often marked by rising intonation. At the end of a sentence we usually go down.
If you notice this notice (end of if-clause) ⤴️ you will notice that this notice isn’t worth noticing ⤵️ (end of sentence).
----------
Vocab:
notice (verb) = anglamoq
notice (noun) = bildirishnoma, e’lon
worth doing = qilishga arziydi
👉@afandi_english👈 #tongue_twisters
❗️Practice your pronunciation with this tongue twister today.
▶️ If you notice this notice you will notice that this notice isn’t worth noticing.
❗️Pay attention to:
🔘 Pronunciation – “notice” has two syllables and is pronounced [nəʊtɪs], not the same as “notes”.
🔘 Intonation – strong / weak: Nouns and adjectives often sound stronger because they carry more meaning than other words. Repeated words are not so strong.
If you notice (verb) this NOTICE (noun)⤴️ you will notice (repeated verb) that this notice (repeated noun) isn’t worth noticing.
🔘 Intonation – up / down: Different phrases are often marked by rising intonation. At the end of a sentence we usually go down.
If you notice this notice (end of if-clause) ⤴️ you will notice that this notice isn’t worth noticing ⤵️ (end of sentence).
----------
Vocab:
notice (verb) = anglamoq
notice (noun) = bildirishnoma, e’lon
worth doing = qilishga arziydi
👉@afandi_english👈 #tongue_twisters
#23 Our favourite mistakes: Vocabulary
▶️ Please translate the following sentences:
Afandi juda aqilli. Uning bakalavr va magistrlik darajalari bor.
❌ Perhaps you think it is:
Afandi is very smart. He has a backalaur and a magister degree.
✅ Well, it should be:
Afandi is very smart. He has a bachelor and a master degree. / He has a bachelor’s and a master’s.
❓Why?
❗️ Both bachelor / bakalavr and master / magistr are international but not the same in English and Russian.
❗️ There are some short forms with ’s here. If you have a bachelor’s or master’s it means that you have a bachelor or master degree. If you do a bachelor’s or master’s it means that you study in a degree programme at university.
👉@afandi_english👈 #mistakes #vocabulary
▶️ Please translate the following sentences:
Afandi juda aqilli. Uning bakalavr va magistrlik darajalari bor.
❌ Perhaps you think it is:
Afandi is very smart. He has a backalaur and a magister degree.
✅ Well, it should be:
Afandi is very smart. He has a bachelor and a master degree. / He has a bachelor’s and a master’s.
❓Why?
❗️ Both bachelor / bakalavr and master / magistr are international but not the same in English and Russian.
❗️ There are some short forms with ’s here. If you have a bachelor’s or master’s it means that you have a bachelor or master degree. If you do a bachelor’s or master’s it means that you study in a degree programme at university.
👉@afandi_english👈 #mistakes #vocabulary
#8 University Vocab: Entering & Leaving University
❗️ There are some words to know about starting and finishing your studies at university. What are they?
🔎 There is only one way to begin your studies officially, and that is to enrol after receiving an admission letter to confirm that you have been accepted.
🔎 There are three ways to leave the university. In the best case you complete your programme and graduate. However, some students find studying too hard or they have other things to do. They may stop studying without completing their programme and drop out. Bill Gates and Steve Jobs were famous university dropouts. Finally, some few students may also get expelled for doing something bad.
👉@afandi_english👈 #uni_vocab
❗️ There are some words to know about starting and finishing your studies at university. What are they?
🔎 There is only one way to begin your studies officially, and that is to enrol after receiving an admission letter to confirm that you have been accepted.
🔎 There are three ways to leave the university. In the best case you complete your programme and graduate. However, some students find studying too hard or they have other things to do. They may stop studying without completing their programme and drop out. Bill Gates and Steve Jobs were famous university dropouts. Finally, some few students may also get expelled for doing something bad.
👉@afandi_english👈 #uni_vocab
#7 YouTube Channel Recommendation: Kurzgesagt (In A Nutshell)
⛓ Link: www.youtube.com/user/Kurzgesagt
📊 English Level: Upper
🔤 Subtitles: Available
💬 Topics: Science, society, future, space
💡 Content: Kurzgesagt has some of the most interestingly and professionally animated videos on YouTube. Their content is well-researched and highly informative and gives you in-depth knowledge of important topics that you may have never really thought about. Meanwhile the videos are a great source of high-level vocabulary.
👉@afandi_english👈 #youtube
⛓ Link: www.youtube.com/user/Kurzgesagt
📊 English Level: Upper
🔤 Subtitles: Available
💬 Topics: Science, society, future, space
💡 Content: Kurzgesagt has some of the most interestingly and professionally animated videos on YouTube. Their content is well-researched and highly informative and gives you in-depth knowledge of important topics that you may have never really thought about. Meanwhile the videos are a great source of high-level vocabulary.
👉@afandi_english👈 #youtube
#8 Learn how to learn: Reciting (yodlash)
❓Reciting is a traditional way to learn a language but that doesn’t mean it’s bad. How to use it efficiently?
1️⃣ Less is more. You don’t have to recite lots of texts but do it well.
2️⃣ Reciting grammar rules or random written texts doesn’t move you and you can’t develop your feeling for the language in this way. Choose spoken texts like speeches, poems or song lyrics instead.
3️⃣ Choose texts that you find attractive and imitate. By reciting you make a text your own, and that’s not a small decision.
4️⃣ Make sure you understand the meaning of what you recite. When you don’t understand there is no language learning benefit.
5️⃣ Practice not only your fluency but also your intonation, your vocabulary and even your grammar.
❗️Reciting words one by one is not a very efficient kind of activity. But if we use reciting in a more personal and exciting way it can greatly help us learn a language.
👉@afandi_english👈 #learn2learn
❓Reciting is a traditional way to learn a language but that doesn’t mean it’s bad. How to use it efficiently?
1️⃣ Less is more. You don’t have to recite lots of texts but do it well.
2️⃣ Reciting grammar rules or random written texts doesn’t move you and you can’t develop your feeling for the language in this way. Choose spoken texts like speeches, poems or song lyrics instead.
3️⃣ Choose texts that you find attractive and imitate. By reciting you make a text your own, and that’s not a small decision.
4️⃣ Make sure you understand the meaning of what you recite. When you don’t understand there is no language learning benefit.
5️⃣ Practice not only your fluency but also your intonation, your vocabulary and even your grammar.
❗️Reciting words one by one is not a very efficient kind of activity. But if we use reciting in a more personal and exciting way it can greatly help us learn a language.
👉@afandi_english👈 #learn2learn
#1 Featured article: USA and China fighting on your phone
🆕 In this new series on Afandi English we’re bringing you interesting newspaper articles from high-quality sources like The Economist or the BBC. Whether you’re preparing for IELTS or teach students or just want to stay informed – a good understanding of global affairs makes all the difference to your outlook and advanced skill building.
📍 It’s normal for us to watch YouTube videos on a Chinese phone or download the Chinese app TikTok from Google Play. We get the best of both worlds. But imagine a future in which your country has to decide to use either the technology of the US or that of China, and the two no longer fit together. Get ready for a new cold war on your phone!
⛓https://www.economist.com/leaders/2020/07/11/tiktok-and-the-sino-american-tech-split?utm_campaign=the-economist-this-week&utm_medium=newsletter&utm_source=salesforce-marketing-cloud&utm_term=2020-07-09&utm_content=article2_flytitle
👉@afandi_english👈 #article #economist
🆕 In this new series on Afandi English we’re bringing you interesting newspaper articles from high-quality sources like The Economist or the BBC. Whether you’re preparing for IELTS or teach students or just want to stay informed – a good understanding of global affairs makes all the difference to your outlook and advanced skill building.
📍 It’s normal for us to watch YouTube videos on a Chinese phone or download the Chinese app TikTok from Google Play. We get the best of both worlds. But imagine a future in which your country has to decide to use either the technology of the US or that of China, and the two no longer fit together. Get ready for a new cold war on your phone!
⛓https://www.economist.com/leaders/2020/07/11/tiktok-and-the-sino-american-tech-split?utm_campaign=the-economist-this-week&utm_medium=newsletter&utm_source=salesforce-marketing-cloud&utm_term=2020-07-09&utm_content=article2_flytitle
👉@afandi_english👈 #article #economist
#8 Spot Afandi and his donkey: Afandi enjoying a good light show
❓ Can you spot Afandi and his donkey in this picture?
❗️If you can, follow the instructions in #1 (see pinned message) and win 5,000 Paynet-soums!
👉@afandi_english👈 #spot_afandi
❓ Can you spot Afandi and his donkey in this picture?
❗️If you can, follow the instructions in #1 (see pinned message) and win 5,000 Paynet-soums!
👉@afandi_english👈 #spot_afandi
#24 Our favourite mistakes: Grammar
▶️ Please translate the following sentences:
Afandining do’stlaridan birining ko’proq puli bor.
❌ Perhaps you think it is:
One of Afandi’s friend has more money.
✅ Well, it should be:
One of Afandi’s friends has a lot of money.
❓Why?
❗️ Although the sentence is only about one friend, “friends” is in the plural. This is because Afandi has many friends and we are talking about one of them.
❗️ The word “more” is used for comparisons. When you say “more” the meaning should be “more than …” but in this sentence it’s not clear with who you are comparing Afandi’s friend. Therefore it should be “a lot of money”, not “more money”.
👉@afandi_english👈 #mistakes #grammar
▶️ Please translate the following sentences:
Afandining do’stlaridan birining ko’proq puli bor.
❌ Perhaps you think it is:
One of Afandi’s friend has more money.
✅ Well, it should be:
❗️ Although the sentence is only about one friend, “friends” is in the plural. This is because Afandi has many friends and we are talking about one of them.
❗️ The word “more” is used for comparisons. When you say “more” the meaning should be “more than …” but in this sentence it’s not clear with who you are comparing Afandi’s friend. Therefore it should be “a lot of money”, not “more money”.
👉@afandi_english👈 #mistakes #grammar
#6 It’s a strange world: Polyandry
❓ Traditional Tibetan women may have several husbands at the same time. What??? Several husbands?
❗️Polyandry, the practice of women being married to several husbands, is a traditional in Tibetan society to avoid dividing land between a family’s sons. It’s always interesting to see how different cultures can be!
⛓https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyandry
▶️Here’s a YouTube video about polyandry: www.youtube.com/watch?v=h22-wHytFF0
👉@afandi_english👈 #strange_world #culture
❓ Traditional Tibetan women may have several husbands at the same time. What??? Several husbands?
❗️Polyandry, the practice of women being married to several husbands, is a traditional in Tibetan society to avoid dividing land between a family’s sons. It’s always interesting to see how different cultures can be!
⛓https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyandry
▶️Here’s a YouTube video about polyandry: www.youtube.com/watch?v=h22-wHytFF0
👉@afandi_english👈 #strange_world #culture
#1 Education Video: You can learn anything
🆕 In this new series we’re bringing you videos that are all about education. Whether you’re a simple learner, a teacher or a life-long learner and whether you’re in need of information or inspiration – you will most definitely find the videos meaningful!
❗️Today’s video is from Khan Academy and inspires us to keep going in our learning endeavour.
▶️ www.youtube.com/watch?v=JC82Il2cjqA
👉@afandi_english👈
🆕 In this new series we’re bringing you videos that are all about education. Whether you’re a simple learner, a teacher or a life-long learner and whether you’re in need of information or inspiration – you will most definitely find the videos meaningful!
❗️Today’s video is from Khan Academy and inspires us to keep going in our learning endeavour.
▶️ www.youtube.com/watch?v=JC82Il2cjqA
👉@afandi_english👈
YouTube
You Can Learn Anything
Khan Academy is on a mission to unlock the world's potential. Most people think their intelligence is fixed. The science says it’s not.
It starts with knowing you can learn anything. Join the movement at http://khanacademy.org/youcanlearnanything.
About…
It starts with knowing you can learn anything. Join the movement at http://khanacademy.org/youcanlearnanything.
About…
#9 World Englishes: Indian English
❗️ 12-30% of Indians are fluent in English. That may not seem much but given India’s huge population, the number of speakers is 200 to 400 million, similar to the US. Indians are only going to speak Indian English to you, so better learn to understand!
🔘 Pronunciation: [t] and [d] sounds are retroflex, the tongue is curbed upwards and moves forward; the ‘th’ sounds [ð] and [θ] are replaced with [d] and [t], the [r] is trilled and the double vowels [eɪ] or [ou] are long single vowels [e:] and [o:].
🔘 Grammar: The ‘-ing’ form is used even for verbs like “know” and “understand”.
🔘 Vocabulary: “Less” can be an adjective (“My money is very less”) and there are double comparatives like “more better”; big numbers are different – 100 thousand is 1 lakh and 10 million is 1 crore; “yar” is the informal question tag “isn’t it?”.
▶️ Check out what it sounds like:
⛓ Serious
⛓ Funny
👉@afandi_english👈 #world_englishes
❗️ 12-30% of Indians are fluent in English. That may not seem much but given India’s huge population, the number of speakers is 200 to 400 million, similar to the US. Indians are only going to speak Indian English to you, so better learn to understand!
🔘 Pronunciation: [t] and [d] sounds are retroflex, the tongue is curbed upwards and moves forward; the ‘th’ sounds [ð] and [θ] are replaced with [d] and [t], the [r] is trilled and the double vowels [eɪ] or [ou] are long single vowels [e:] and [o:].
🔘 Grammar: The ‘-ing’ form is used even for verbs like “know” and “understand”.
🔘 Vocabulary: “Less” can be an adjective (“My money is very less”) and there are double comparatives like “more better”; big numbers are different – 100 thousand is 1 lakh and 10 million is 1 crore; “yar” is the informal question tag “isn’t it?”.
▶️ Check out what it sounds like:
⛓ Serious
⛓ Funny
👉@afandi_english👈 #world_englishes
#25 Our favourite mistakes: Pronunciation
▶️ Try pronouncing the following words:
• answer
• sword
• half
• talk
• walk
• iron
• fruit
• juice
• muscle
• scissors
• debt
• plumber
• tomb
• receipt
• handsome
❓What do these words have in common?
❗️They all contain silent letters:
• silent w in answer [a:nsə] and sword [sɔ:d]
• silent l in half [ha:f], talk [tɔ:k] and walk [wɔ:k]
• silent r in iron [‘aɪən]
• silent i in fruit [fru:t] and juice [ʤu:s]
• silent c in muscle [mʌsl] and scissors [‘sɪzəz]
• silent b in debt [det], plumber [‘plʌmə] and tomb [tu:m]
• silent p in receipt [rɪ’si:t]
• silent d in handsome [‘hænsəm]
❗️Some words are often but not always pronounced with a silent letter:
• almost – both [‘ɔ:lməʊst] or [‘ɔ:məʊst]
• always – both [‘ɔ:lweɪz] or [‘ɔ:weɪz]
• asked – both [‘a:skd] or [‘a:sd]
• often – both [‘ɔ:ftən] or [‘ɔ:fən]
👉@afandi_english👈 #mistakes #pronunciation
▶️ Try pronouncing the following words:
• answer
• sword
• half
• talk
• walk
• iron
• fruit
• juice
• muscle
• scissors
• debt
• plumber
• tomb
• receipt
• handsome
❓What do these words have in common?
❗️They all contain silent letters:
• silent w in answer [a:nsə] and sword [sɔ:d]
• silent l in half [ha:f], talk [tɔ:k] and walk [wɔ:k]
• silent r in iron [‘aɪən]
• silent i in fruit [fru:t] and juice [ʤu:s]
• silent c in muscle [mʌsl] and scissors [‘sɪzəz]
• silent b in debt [det], plumber [‘plʌmə] and tomb [tu:m]
• silent p in receipt [rɪ’si:t]
• silent d in handsome [‘hænsəm]
❗️Some words are often but not always pronounced with a silent letter:
• almost – both [‘ɔ:lməʊst] or [‘ɔ:məʊst]
• always – both [‘ɔ:lweɪz] or [‘ɔ:weɪz]
• asked – both [‘a:skd] or [‘a:sd]
• often – both [‘ɔ:ftən] or [‘ɔ:fən]
👉@afandi_english👈 #mistakes #pronunciation
#2 Go out and teach! Approach, Method, Technique
❗️These three are often confused. Make sure you know the difference!
🔎 An approach is your basic idea of what language is and how it is learnt. Perhaps you think that students need to follow the teacher, they need rules and discipline. Or you think the opposite –students need to explore and discover the language and themselves. Your approach decides your method!
🔎 A method is a way of teaching and learning, more concrete than your approach. If your approach is traditional you’ll probably choose the Grammar-Translation Method. Your students learn grammar through rules and translation. Or it’s communicative, letting them learn more during communication. Your method decides your techniques!
🔎 A technique is the smallest unit. Traditional techniques include memorising, translating, or letting students repeat after you (drilling). Modern ones include eliciting, role play, feedback, etc.
👉@afandi_english👈
❗️These three are often confused. Make sure you know the difference!
🔎 An approach is your basic idea of what language is and how it is learnt. Perhaps you think that students need to follow the teacher, they need rules and discipline. Or you think the opposite –students need to explore and discover the language and themselves. Your approach decides your method!
🔎 A method is a way of teaching and learning, more concrete than your approach. If your approach is traditional you’ll probably choose the Grammar-Translation Method. Your students learn grammar through rules and translation. Or it’s communicative, letting them learn more during communication. Your method decides your techniques!
🔎 A technique is the smallest unit. Traditional techniques include memorising, translating, or letting students repeat after you (drilling). Modern ones include eliciting, role play, feedback, etc.
👉@afandi_english👈
#9 Spot Afandi and his donkey: Afandi inspecting a geography fail
❓ Can you spot Afandi and his donkey in this picture?
❗️If you can, follow the instructions in #1 (see pinned message) and win 5,000 Paynet-soums!
👉@afandi_english👈 #spot_afandi
❓ Can you spot Afandi and his donkey in this picture?
❗️If you can, follow the instructions in #1 (see pinned message) and win 5,000 Paynet-soums!
👉@afandi_english👈 #spot_afandi
#9 Tongue twister: A rather fishy business
❗️Challenge yourself and practice your pronunciation with this tongue twister today.
▶️ Selfish Miss Smith's fish-sauce shop seldom sells shellfish.
❗️Pay attention to:
🔘 Pronunciation – The two sounds s and ʃ are confusingly similar. There is also one ‘th’ sound θ.
🔘 Linking – Same or similar consonants are linked with one another:
Selfish Miss ͜ Smith's fish ͜ sauce ͜ shop seldom sells ͜ shellfish.
🔘 Practice – Practice parts of the sentence first, not the whole sentence right away because you may want to give up too quickly. Practice meaningful units in the following way: “Smith” … “Miss Smith” … “Selfish Miss Smith” … “Selfish Miss Smith’s” … “fish sauce” … “fish-sauce shop” … “shellfish” … “sells shellfish” … “seldom sells shellfish” … Then only the whole sentence!
----------
Vocab:
fishy = ishonib bo'lmaydigan
selfish = egoist, xudbin
seldom = kamdan kam
shellfish = dengiz chig’anoqlari
👉@afandi_english👈 #tongue_twisters
❗️Challenge yourself and practice your pronunciation with this tongue twister today.
▶️ Selfish Miss Smith's fish-sauce shop seldom sells shellfish.
❗️Pay attention to:
🔘 Pronunciation – The two sounds s and ʃ are confusingly similar. There is also one ‘th’ sound θ.
🔘 Linking – Same or similar consonants are linked with one another:
Selfish Miss ͜ Smith's fish ͜ sauce ͜ shop seldom sells ͜ shellfish.
🔘 Practice – Practice parts of the sentence first, not the whole sentence right away because you may want to give up too quickly. Practice meaningful units in the following way: “Smith” … “Miss Smith” … “Selfish Miss Smith” … “Selfish Miss Smith’s” … “fish sauce” … “fish-sauce shop” … “shellfish” … “sells shellfish” … “seldom sells shellfish” … Then only the whole sentence!
----------
Vocab:
fishy = ishonib bo'lmaydigan
selfish = egoist, xudbin
seldom = kamdan kam
shellfish = dengiz chig’anoqlari
👉@afandi_english👈 #tongue_twisters
#9 University Vocab: Coursework
❗️ University isn’t like a primary school. We may have to do some reading as homework for the next seminar or lecture but what about written, graded homework?
🔎 In each semester you have some coursework to do. Coursework consists of assignments you have to write for each course (seminar, lecture, etc.) that you are taking. That could be essays, project reports, summaries, internship reports, or any other pieces of writing that you give (hand in or submit) to your professor or lecturer for grading.
🔎 What’s really important for coursework is the deadline of each assignment, sometimes also called “due date”. You will be given a date and by that date you have to finish writing and submit. If you’re late you may get punished, perhaps by a 5% penalty on your mark per day. Some universities are very strict with this.
👉@afandi_english👈 #uni_vocab
❗️ University isn’t like a primary school. We may have to do some reading as homework for the next seminar or lecture but what about written, graded homework?
🔎 In each semester you have some coursework to do. Coursework consists of assignments you have to write for each course (seminar, lecture, etc.) that you are taking. That could be essays, project reports, summaries, internship reports, or any other pieces of writing that you give (hand in or submit) to your professor or lecturer for grading.
🔎 What’s really important for coursework is the deadline of each assignment, sometimes also called “due date”. You will be given a date and by that date you have to finish writing and submit. If you’re late you may get punished, perhaps by a 5% penalty on your mark per day. Some universities are very strict with this.
👉@afandi_english👈 #uni_vocab
#26 Our favourite mistakes: Vocabulary
▶️ Please translate the following sentences:
Afandining o’g’li abituriyent.
❌ Perhaps you think it is:
Afandi’s son is an applicant.
✅ Well, there are three possibilities:
🔘 Afandi’s son is a high school graduate. (He just finished school and we assume that he will enter university)
🔘 Afandi’s son is preparing to enter university. (He is any age, at school or out of school)
🔘 Afandi’s son is a university applicant. (He has actually applied)
❓Why?
❗️ Someone who is not familiar with the Uzbek education system will not understand what “applicant” means here. It’s not precise enough.
❗️ The word “applicant” would usually be understood as job applicant.
❗️ Whether job applicant or university applicant, before an application is made we cannot call the person an applicant.
👉@afandi_english👈 #mistakes #vocabulary
▶️ Please translate the following sentences:
Afandining o’g’li abituriyent.
❌ Perhaps you think it is:
Afandi’s son is an applicant.
✅ Well, there are three possibilities:
🔘 Afandi’s son is a high school graduate. (He just finished school and we assume that he will enter university)
🔘 Afandi’s son is preparing to enter university. (He is any age, at school or out of school)
🔘 Afandi’s son is a university applicant. (He has actually applied)
❓Why?
❗️ Someone who is not familiar with the Uzbek education system will not understand what “applicant” means here. It’s not precise enough.
❗️ The word “applicant” would usually be understood as job applicant.
❗️ Whether job applicant or university applicant, before an application is made we cannot call the person an applicant.
👉@afandi_english👈 #mistakes #vocabulary