domingo, 25 de septiembre de 2011

Consonant Diagraph WH

/WH/  is a consonant diagraph.    
/wh/ pronounced  /hw/
When “wh” is said, air should be felt softly on the palm of your hand held before your mouth. Usually an initial sound.
Cuando formas (wh/, debes sentir el aire suavemente con su mano en frente de tu boca.  Usualmente wh es un sonido al comienzo de una palabra.
Whip, why, whiz, whit, which,
when, whisk, whisper, white,
when, wheel, where,
wheelbarrow, wheat     
Consonant /w/
No air felt when saying “w” as in we, with, or wear.
No debes sentir aire cuando diciendo el /w/ como en…
Wit, win, wet, wag, was, web,
well, wed, wasp, watch
Sometimes “wh” sounds like /h/ .
A veces el “wh” suena como /h/.

Whole, whose, whom, who

Here is a fun tongue twister:  Whether the weather is warm, whether the weather is hot, we have to put up with the weather, whether we like it or not. 

Thought for the week:  Yesterday is a cancelled check; tomorrow is a promissory note; today is the only cash you have—so spend it wisely.
El ayer es un cheque cancelado; el mañana un pagaré; el presente es el único efectivo que tienes; úsalo con sabiduría. Trapeador: Aprovechar el tiempo, 7.

domingo, 18 de septiembre de 2011

CONSONANT DIAGRAPH TH:


CONSONANT DIAGRAPH  TH:   

Sound-  sonido
Formed- formación
Examples-  ejemplos
/th/   or    /θ/
The breath hisses between the tongue tip and the upper teeth… called “voiceless” 
*La respiración esta forcado entre la punta de la lengua y los dientes frontales de arriba…. Entonces se llama “sin voz”
Thing, Seth, thank, think, three, thin, moth, cloth, sixth, depth, three, thief, broth, thigh , ether:
/th/  or   /ð/
The tongue position is the same but the voice is used to give sound as the air is forced out… called “voiced”.
La posición de la lengua es la misma pero se usa la voz mientras que la respiración esta forcado para afuera… entonces se llama “con voz”.
This, That, these, those, then, them, though, they, than,  thy,  the, thou, thee, their, father, mother, thine, either, 
Not to be confused with compound words

No se confunda con palabras compuestos
The t and h are pronounced separately, being part of different words.
El t y h se pronuncia individualmente, siendo parte de diferentes palabras.
anthill, outhouse, lighthouse, pothead, Chatham

Practice this tongue twister:    The bathing beauty sisters thought that their two brothers took longer lathering their hair than both their thin thrifty mother and toothless father.

The distribution pattern may be summed up in the following rule of thumb which is valid in most cases: in the beginning of a word we use the voiceless sound except in function words; in the middle position we use the voiced  /ð/ sound except for foreign loan words; and in the end of a word we use the voiceless  /θ/ sound except in verbs.

El patrón de distribución puede ser resumido en la regla siguiente que es válida en la mayoría de los casos:  para el comienzo de una palabra usamos el sonido /th/ sin voz con la excepción de palabras de función;   en la mitad de una palabra usamos el /th/ con voz excepto en palabras prestados de otras idiomas;  y al final de una palabra usamos el /th/ sin voz excepto en verbos.



domingo, 11 de septiembre de 2011

Consonant Diagraph "SH"

CONSONANT  DIAGRAPH “SH”:  This blend of two letters which makes  the new sound (diagraph) SH, is the sound that you make as if to mean “be quiet” or “silence”.  This same sound may be spelled by other combinations of letters: su, ss, ci and ti. See the chart.
/sh/ sound formed by the letters:
Letters-letras
Examples- ejemplos
sh
Wish, mesh, flesh, fish, slosh, flash, ship, brush, cash, dish
su
Sugar, sure, insure, insurance
ss
Russia, issue
ci
Special, commercial, ancient, physician, appreciate, ancient
ti
Nation, station, motion, action, patient, impatient, mention

Practice this common tongue twister to differentiate the simple /s/ and /sh/ sounds:  She sells sea shells on the sea shore. 
“Consonant diagraph”= dos consonantes que combinan para hacer un solo sonido SH, lo cual es el sonido que haces para indicar “tranquilízate” o “silencio”.  Este mismo sonido puede ser deletreado por otras combinaciones de letras: ss, su, ci, y ti.  Vea el grafico.
Práctica esta traga lengua común para diferenciar el simple /s/ del /sh/.  



Thought of the week:  The ability to speak several languages is valuable, but the art of keeping silent in one is precious when necessary. 
Pensamiento de la Semana: La habilidad de hablar en varias idiomas es valiosa, pero el arte de mantener silencio en una es precioso cuando necesario. 

domingo, 4 de septiembre de 2011

Preposiciones ¿Cual?


PREPOSITIONS
Everything has a place or a position in relationship to everything else. Prepositions are words or phrases that help show where something is, or bring out some relationship between nouns or noun-substitutes (pronouns, gerunds, etc. ) They come before the noun or pronoun.

Often we have difficulty choosing the correct preposition to use after certain words.  The following list may be helpful.- 

According to
Disagree with
Part from (somebody)
Afflict with
Disappointed in (something)
Part with (something)
Agree to (something)
Disappointed with (somebody)
Prevail on
Agree with (somebody)
Disgusted at (something)
Protest against
Aim at
Disgusted with (somebody)
Pursuit of
Angry with
Dislike for
Recoil from
Ashamed of
Divide among (many)
Regard for
Attack on
Divide between (two)
Rely on
Blame for
Equal to
Similar to
Change for (something)
Filled with
Suffer from
Change with (somebody)
Full of
Tired of (something)
Comment on
Good for
Tired with (action)
Complain of
Guilty of
Thirst for (or after)
Confer with
Indignant at (something)
Vexed at (something)
Conscious of
Indignant with (somebody)
Vexed with (somebody)
Defiance of
Inspired by
Victim of
Despair of
Interfere with
Wait for (person, thing)
Die of
Invasion of
Wait upon (somebody)
Differ from (opinion)
Meddle with
Write about (something)
Differ with (somebody)
Opposite to
Write to (somebody)

Todo ocupa un lugar o posición con relación a las demás cosas. Las preposiciones son palabras que nos ayudan a ver donde se encuentra algo, o bien indican la relación que existe entre nombres, pronombres, etc. Anteceden al nombre o pronombre. Dicho de otro modo, son partículas que sirven para enlazar las palabras unas con otras.

En muchos casos no estamos seguros de que preposición usar antes o después de una palabra determinada. A continuación damos una lista que puede ser de utilidad.