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#11
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| Of course you did not, my friend, at least not me. |
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#12
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Previously, I thought that song lyrics could do, but now I realize the progress is too slow, I rarely find lyrics with different sentences, most of them are saying the same words repeatedly. |
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#13
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#14
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| I love Francis Scott Fitzgerald - The Great Gatsby and The Beautiful and Damned. Even if these books are not the best to read when it comes to improve speaking skills, Fitzgerald's poetical language is worth reading and enjoying his marvelous stories with rich thematic content embedded in social and historic pecularities. I admire his profound mind and the emotional depth. Marc Haddon's 'A spot of bother' is a novel that gives you a funny look into the lives of ordinary people as well as it provides you with English in everyday life situations. It is advisible to look for books with lots of dialogue anyway. As our English lessons at school (a long time ago 'On Chesil Beach' by Ian McEwan is a wonderful novel if you like stories about the trials and tribulations of relationships placed on a historical cusp between the repressed 1950's and the liberated 60's. Besides, I love reading biographies. I guess there are many interesting biographies you can choose from. Other authors I definitely recommend are Oscar Wilde, Agatha Christie and some more, which I just can't think of at the moment. As regards learning English by listening to music there is some music, which is both useful and good. Depending on what you like. In Germany you can buy newspapers and magazines professionally edited and especially prepared for the needs of English learners. Perhaps you can find something like that in your country. Another thing I prefer is to read postings by native speakers attentively and write down expressions and words which I find useful. Last edited by Snowcake; 12-Apr-2008 at 00:42. |
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#15
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| [quote=Snowcake;279921] Marc Haddon's 'A spot of bother' is a novel that gives you a funny look into the lives of ordinary people as well as it provides you with English in everyday life situations. It is advisible to look for books with lots of dialogue. Since our English lessons at school (a long time ago quote] I am with you here, Snowcake. It is all about being able to react naturally and spontaneously in a language situation. Thanks for your post! Last edited by banderas; 12-Apr-2008 at 00:45. Reason: typo |
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#16
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| Last edited by Snowcake; 13-Apr-2008 at 15:29. |
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#17
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| My English teacher (in the UK) recommended us "Alice in Wonderland", praising the book for its top quality English (I think it's true) PS. By the way, Haddon is British and hence it's Mark, not Marc! I mention this because one won't find "Marc Haddon" on Amazon or AbeBooks etc. |
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