The ideal complement for teaching English in primary school. I love English magazine brings a variety of activies for learning English with audio included. The magazine is divided in different section. "It's funny" deals with jokes, expressions and tongue twister among others. "It's easy" presents a grammar topic with dialogues, games and audio activities. "Listen an play" is a great section in which students can practice pronunciation or complete dialogues by listening carefully to the recording.
Check Your Vocabulary for Natural English Collocations
This workbook is aimed at non-native speakers who want to build essential vocabulary and learn to speak fluent and natural-sounding English. For example, in English we use different words to describe different types of food when they go bad. We can describe meat as rotten, cheese as mouldy, milk as sour and butter as rancid - but we would not say sour meat, or rotten milk. Knowing how words are naturally used together is known as collocation. A good knowledge of these word combinations greatly improves the style of written and spoken language for non-native speakers. Levels: B2 - C2.
Added by: mg100 | Karma: 14.00 | Black Hole | 3 July 2012
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CBSE and NCERT Indian School Textbooks, CLASS 1 to 12
This is a set of school textbooks used in India published by NCERT (National Council of Educational Research and Training) Govt. of India. It is used nationwide in different schools in different languages. The books are in English. It can be of great help for students and teachers.
No collections, please. Could you make a separate posts, please?
Kamus is an English-Indonesian Dictionary and vice verse. This program is released as freeware for personal and non commercial use. Many software dictionaries are available, this one is different from the others, it tries to facilitate the translations and also helps in reading.
Who's Whose?: A No-Nonsense Guide to Easily Confused Words Book
Added by: saimoh76 | Karma: 7331.60 | Black Hole | 25 June 2012
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Who's Whose?: A No-Nonsense Guide to Easily Confused Words Book
The English language is a minefield, full of words that look and sound alike but mean different things in different places. Here's an entertaining and essential guide to the most commonly confused words in English today, with real examples of good and bad usage.
You'll never again confuse affect and effect Have you ever been fazed by the spelling of phased, or fretted over the difference between anxiety and angst, stationery and stationary? If so, you are not alone: the English language is a minefield, full of words that look and sound alike but mean different things in different places.
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