Militant spares four-year-old after the boy shames him
A four-year-old British boy survived the bloody Kenyan shopping mall
attack after standing up to a terrorist gunman and telling him: “You’re a
very bad man.”
Elliott Prior, from Windsor in southeast England, showed great courage
when men with AK47s stormed the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi on
Saturday, the Sun reports.
He was protecting his mother Amber, who had been shot in the leg. As a
gunman approached him, his mother and his six-year-old sister Amelie, he
shouted: “You’re a bad man, let us leave.”
Surprisingly, the gunman appeared to take pity on the family. After going
so far as to give Elliott and Amelie candy bars, he allowed them to
escape with their mother, saying, according to the Sun: “Please forgive me, we are not monsters.”
Amber, a 35-year-old film producer, also rescued two other children from
the mall, including a wounded 12-year-old boy whose mother had been
murdered, and pushed them outside in a shopping trolley. Dramatic photos
of the distraught-looking Amber, Elliott and Amelie coming out of the
mall were then flashed around the world.
Source: Time Magazine
Embajadores EOI, Madrid. This blog is built at home, aside from my compulsory working hours!
September 30, 2013
September 27, 2013
Go!
September 26, 2013
Check what you know
Hi!
I think it would be a good idea to revise intermediate grammar points with activities from New English File Intermediate:
September 24, 2013
Welcome to this new school year!

I'd like to welcome you to this new accademic year 2013-2014. I hope it will bring plenty of learning experiences and that we will learn a lot from each other.
Our coursebook will be Outcomes (Upper Intermediate)
Heinle Cengage Learning
Authours: Hugh Dellar (Author), Andrew Walkley (Author)
All the best,
M.ª José
Etiquetas:
NI2
September 17, 2013
Modern Love: Falling in Love at 71
September 12, 2013 By Arthur Jones
Nora Johnson, long divorced, wasn't looking for love when she met George, a widowed 83-year-old. It just happened.
How different is love at 71 from when you are younger?
Related Article: Age Is No Obstacle to Love, or Adventure
September 11, 2013
Business: Asking permission & polite requests
Hi there!
Don't miss this 6-minute English programme.
Making requests in a polite way is an important skill. Most people learn how to say 'please' and 'thank you' at a very young age – but what about politeness in the English-speaking workplace? What do you say if you want someone to open the window, turn down the air conditioning or tidy up the office?
Join Feifei and Neil as they
argue about air-conditioning and explore the language of asking
permission and making polite requests in English.
Don't forget to go over the polite language used when asking for something on the transcript.
BTW What type of officie do YOU prefer?
Don't miss this 6-minute English programme.

Making requests in a polite way is an important skill. Most people learn how to say 'please' and 'thank you' at a very young age – but what about politeness in the English-speaking workplace? What do you say if you want someone to open the window, turn down the air conditioning or tidy up the office?
Don't forget to go over the polite language used when asking for something on the transcript.
BTW What type of officie do YOU prefer?
Etiquetas:
NI1,
NI2,
Speaking,
strategies
September 05, 2013
Town and City Vocabulary
Dear NI2 students,
This is a nice post on how to showcase your expressions referring to Town and City. Although the dialogues of the IELTS exam is not the same as our school exam, it might inspire you to talk to your partner or to elaborate your monologues.
Examiner: What is it like where you live?
Christiane: I live in a residential area of a busy town in the south of Spain … we have all the facilities you need … good public transport … a good shopping centre … it’s nice …
Examiner: Do you like living in the city?
Andrea: Yes I do … I like going out with my friends and there are lots of lively bars and restaurants within walking distance of my apartment … I’m a bit of a culture vulture as well so it’s great to have access to art exhibitions and that kind of thing …
Examiner: Do you get many tourists visiting your area?For more expressions on IELTS Vocabulary practice for Speaking click here
Mandy: Not really no … I live in the inner-city and the area is a little run down … it’s basically a lot of high-rise flats and many of the shops are boarded up … so nothing to interest tourists really …
September 04, 2013
English speaking tips
I thougth you might want to have a look at these expressions to practice for your oral exam.
I wish you good luck!!
- Talking about the holidays
- English conversation tips
- Talking about the news in English
- Talking about fear in English
- Saying how happy or sad you are
- Giving and receiving presents in English
- How to keep an English conversation going
- Talking about your hobbies in English
- Telling a story in English
- Talking about the weather in English
- How to ask for things in English
- English greetings
- Talking about your opinions and beliefs in English
- Talking about likes and dislikes in English
- Agreeing in English
- Making generalisations
- Suggestions and advice in English
- Speaking about hopes in English
- Making invitations
- Making appointments
- Complaining in English
- Talking about probability and making predictions
- How to make requests and offers in English
- How to express shock in English
August 31, 2013
Arranging meetings

Join them as they role-play a business conversation - and pick up a few useful phrases to take away with you!
Have a look at the script as well so you can memorize the key phrases when arranging meetings. How about practicing this situation with a partner on the phone?
August 29, 2013
Language tip of the week: increase | Macmillan
This week’s language tip brings you some useful advice on other ways of saying increase:
Be/go up: to increase; used for talking about prices or levels House prices went up a further 12 percent last year.
Push up: to make something increase; used for talking about prices or levels It is feared that the new taxes will push up fuel prices.
Rise: to increase The number of complaints rose to record levels.
Soar: to increase quickly and to a very high level; used mainly in journalism Stock prices have soared to an all-time high.
Rocket or skyrocket: (informal) to increase quickly and suddenly; used mainly in journalism Bad weather means fresh fruit prices are set to skyrocket.
Mount: to increase steadily The CEO is under mounting pressure to resign.
Be on the increase: to be increasing steadily New cases of breast cancer seem to be on the increase.
Double: to increase to twice the original amount or level Oil prices have more than doubled since last year.
Triple: to increase to three times the original amount or level The last six months have seen the company’s value triple.
Be/go up: to increase; used for talking about prices or levels House prices went up a further 12 percent last year.
Push up: to make something increase; used for talking about prices or levels It is feared that the new taxes will push up fuel prices.
Rise: to increase The number of complaints rose to record levels.
Soar: to increase quickly and to a very high level; used mainly in journalism Stock prices have soared to an all-time high.
Rocket or skyrocket: (informal) to increase quickly and suddenly; used mainly in journalism Bad weather means fresh fruit prices are set to skyrocket.
Mount: to increase steadily The CEO is under mounting pressure to resign.
Be on the increase: to be increasing steadily New cases of breast cancer seem to be on the increase.
Double: to increase to twice the original amount or level Oil prices have more than doubled since last year.
Triple: to increase to three times the original amount or level The last six months have seen the company’s value triple.
August 28, 2013
Going where the work is
Some 214 million people are international migrants, living in a different country from the one in which they were born. There are plenty with high-level skills who end up working for at least part of their careers outside their home country.
Some take work they are overqualified for, because it still pays better than what is available at home. This has led to a brain drain from some developing countries.
Find out what this means as well as some other vocabulary associated with migration.
This week's question:
According to figures from the United Nations, which one of these countries has the largest number of immigrants as a percentage of its national population? Is it:
a) United States of America
b) Qatar
c) Turkey
Listen to the programme to find out the answer.
Text
Etiquetas:
NI1,
NI2,
Reading and listening
August 27, 2013
NI2 Reading Comprehension
Dear NI2 students,
Find some reading practice in these links. I hope you find them useful:
Find some reading practice in these links. I hope you find them useful:
- Wole Soyinka (Cloze)
- Reality TV (Multiple choice)
- Pirahnas (Cloze)
- The fastest Dinosours (Cloze)
- Liverpool (T/F/DS)
- When you have a sore throat (Multiple Choice)
- Sale-Rabat Tramway (text exploitation)
- Black English (Text exploitation)
NI1 Reading Comprehension
Hi!
As some people are interested in practicing reading comprehension for September exam, I'm showing some nice links for you to go through.
I hope you are having a great summer and enjoying your free time :-)
As some people are interested in practicing reading comprehension for September exam, I'm showing some nice links for you to go through.
I hope you are having a great summer and enjoying your free time :-)
August 18, 2013
Texts, and what to do with them

In the last few decades the quantity of text available has increased exponentially, and current technology enables any kind of text to be located and accessed almost instantly. Whether you want to read about tips for home brewing, recent developments in quantum physics or the history of railways in India, it will only take you a few seconds to find something suitable.
You generally read in your first language (L1) for information or entertainment, or a combination of both, and you can – and should! – do the same in English, provided you have sufficient knowledge of the language. But as a language learner, you can also approach English-language texts from a different perspective: you can regard them as raw material for learning, and take an interest not only in their subject matter but also in their language content. As well as reading a text, finding out what you want from it and enjoying it, there are plenty of other things you can do with it. Here are a few examples.
1 Take a short text and translate it into your L1. A couple of days later, take your translation and translate it back into English. Compare the result with the original.
2 Read an international news item in your L1. Locate the key words and expressions and predict what their English equivalents will be. Then read the same news in English.
3 Make a note of the key vocabulary in a text and then try to reconstruct the complete text.
4 In a text you’ve read, find a sentence which is particularly interesting for you, perhaps because you can only understand it with some difficulty. Copy each of the words of the sentence onto separate slips of paper. Jumble these slips and spread them out on a table. Try to reassemble them in the right order. Try again a few days later.
5 Look through a text and find all the words containing a particular sound, e.g. /u:/. Check your results in your dictionary.
6 Look through a text and find all the words containing a particular spelling, e.g. ‘ea’. Sort them into categories according to pronunciation, e.g. /e/, /i:/, /eə/ etc.
7 Look through a text and find all the two-syllable words with stress on the second syllable.
8 Take a text with, let’s say, 60 words. Reduce it to 59 words while keeping the meaning intact; you could do this by changing the vocabulary or grammar, or by simply removing a non-essential word. Then reduce the length to 58 words, then 57, and so on.
Returning to the same text a number of times, and doing exercises such as these, you can deepen your understanding of the language in the text as well as appreciating the content. Perhaps you use other such exercises? If so, let us know!
Source: Macmillan
Posted by Jonathan Marks on July 29, 2013
August 13, 2013
NI1 Summer reads
Hi!
These are some readers you might want to read these days. I hope it's not too late, is it?
The Enchanted April by Elizabeth von Armin
When Rain Clouds Gather by Bessie Head
Bridget Jones’s Diary by Helen Fielding
One Day by David Nicholls
These are some readers you might want to read these days. I hope it's not too late, is it?




August 12, 2013
August 11, 2013
Language tip of the week: sure | Macmillan
This week’s language tip helps with ways in which you can express that you feel sure about something:
I’m sure: the most usual way of saying that you are sure about something
I’m positive/I’m certain/I know for a fact (that): a stronger, more emphatic way of expressing certainty
I know: used for expressing certainty that something will happen, based on a strong feeling rather than on facts
I bet: used informally to show that you are confident about the truth of what you are saying no doubt: a more formal way of expressing certainty about what someone is thinking or feeling, often used by people in authority
I am satisfied: a way of expressing certainty about the facts of a situation, often used in official situationsExamples:
I’m sure she won’t forget – she’s very reliable.
I’m positive I had the keys with me when I left.
We’re certain we made the right decision.
I know for a fact that he lied to me about the party.
You’re going to enjoy the show – I just know you are.
I bet they’ve gone without us!
I bet he’s not as good a cook as you.
You will no doubt be relieved to hear that the management has agreed to your request.
Having examined the evidence, we are satisfied that safety regulations were not broken.
August 09, 2013
Modern Love
In the first installment of a
monthly animated video series based on the Modern Love column, Steven
Petrow explains how a cowboy inspired him to hire a matchmaker.
Related• Article: A Dollar a Day, for Only 20 Years
July 30, 2013
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