Make us homepage
Add to Favorites
FAIL (the browser should render some flash content, not this).

  • All English coursebooks
    ... and more. Learning English together!

    We all need English in our lives: to get a better job, travel around the world or understand the Internet. We're inviting you to study English with our community of 870589 users! Join Englishtips and discover tons of learning materials - all totally free!
    REGISTER LEARN MORE
    Our users speak:
    (...tell us what YOU think!)
    cконец первого слайда-->
  • Welcome to Englishtips.org
    - the place where English lives!

    Live communication, tips and tricks of learning the language, latest educational trends and techniques - all about English! Simple & super-fast registration will let you use all the features: chatting with other users (and believe us - Englishtips never sleeps!), reading reviews and commenting, rating materials and accessing 'members-only' sections.
    REGISTER
    Englishtips.org logo
  • At the moment we have 870589 registered users,
    who have published 99622 materials and shared 554150 comments.

    Englishtips.org was launched in 2005.
    In the last 24 hours Englishtips users have submitted 2 publications and 2 comments.

    We have collected reviews to:
    - 12905 coursebooks
    - 592 exam materials
    - 8758 fiction books in English
    - 6826 audio courses
    - 3326 learning videos

  • Your first step - our most detailed HELP section:
    in the forum.

    We have put a lot of effort into compiling a VERY comprehensive HELP section with all possible explanations about each site's feature - we would appreciate if you found a few minutes to take a look before you ask any questions!
    HELP SECTION
    Use the left-hand NAVIGATION menu to access coursebooks, periodicals, scientific literature in English, and more! The tiny digits next to each section - the total of the publications in that section, and the info about those added today

    The SEARCH field is in the right-hand block of the site. You can access the detailed description and view comments by clicking the 'More' button next to each publication.

    Also, don't miss our FREE daily mini-lesson of English.
  • Where am I?

    What is Englishtips
  • How does it work?

    What happens after I register?
  • Stats

    Cool facts
  • Help

    Where to find it?

Sort by: date | rating | most visited | comments | alphabetically


Peoplewatching
13
 
 

PeoplewatchingPeoplewatching

Peoplewatching is the culmination of a career of watching people – their behaviour and habits, their personalities and their quirks. Desmond Morris shows us how people, consciously and unconsciously, signal their attitudes, desires and innermost feelings with their bodies and actions, often more powerfully than with their words.
Consisting of his timeless classic Manwatching, completely revised and updated, with much new material gathered since the book’s original publication, and for the first time incorporating the text of Bodywatching, this new edition is set to become the definitive “body language bible”.
 
  More..
Punctuation at Work: Simple Principles for Achieving Clarity and Good Style
26
 
 
Punctuation at Work: Simple Principles for Achieving Clarity and Good StyleGood punctuation is more than just a matter of courtesy: in workplace writing, a sentence should yield its meaning instantly. But when punctuation is haphazard, readers need to work to understand or guess at the writer's intent. "Punctuation at Work" provides readers with 18 common sense principles to live by, helping them to avoid time-wasting confusion, questions about professionalism and sometimes even serious and costly miscommunication.
 
  More..
Storming the Heavens - Soldiers, Emperors and Civilians in the Roman Empire
4
 
 

Storming the Heavens - Soldiers, Emperors and Civilians in the Roman EmpireStorming the Heavens - Soldiers, Emperors and Civilians in the Roman Empire

In the closing years of the second century B.C., the ancient world watched as the Roman armies maintained clear superiority over all they surveyed. But, social turmoil prevailed at the heart of her territories, led by an increasing number of dispossessed farmers, too little manpower for the army, and an inevitable conflict with the allies who had fought side by side with the Romans to establish Roman dominion.
 
  More..
Foreign Cults in Rome - Creating a Roman Empire
3
 
 

Foreign Cults in Rome - Creating a Roman EmpireForeign Cults in Rome - Creating a Roman Empire

Religion is a particularly useful field within which to study Roman self-definition, for the Romans considered themselves to be the most religious of all peoples and ascribed their imperial success to their religiosity. This study builds on the observation that the Romans were remarkably open to outside influences to explore how installing foreign religious elements as part of their own religious system affected their notions of what it meant to be Roman.
 
  More..
Generalissimos of the Western Roman Empire
1
 
 

Generalissimos of the Western Roman EmpireGeneralissimos of the Western Roman Empire

John Micheal O'Flynn traces the development of the position of the generalissimo, or emperor's commander of the military forces, in the western part of the Roman Empire during the first century AD. From the arrogant barbarian Arbogast, who treated the youthful emperor Valentinian as his puppet, to Odovacar, who dismissed the last western emperor and was pronounced king of Italy in 476, the generalissimos' seizure of power led to dissolution and chaos from which would emerge the political patterns of medieval and modern Europe.
 
  More..