Sunday, 28 February 2021

learn english through gaming

In the latest issue of E L Gazette, Liz Granirer looks at how loving a video game can push us to learn English:

Harness a passion for learning a language

For years, parents have been told to limit their kids’ screen time, but maybe that wisdom needs a re-think…

When Renata Mojola was seven, she got hooked on playing PC game Heroes of Might and Magic III. The only trouble was, as she grew up in Brazil, Portuguese is the first language for most people, and the game’s instructions and menus were in English. It was tough going for her to always understand what was required.

Though she was already learning English at school, she wasn’t anywhere near proficient enough to cope with all the language being used in the game. She asked her teacher for help with specific words, and  her older cousins were able to explain broadly what she needed to know to play, but it was the game itself and her passion for it that fuelled her English-language acquisition.

“The simplistic storytelling and slow pace of turn-based strategy games gave me the time to figure out key words and understand what effect they had,” she says on the PCGames website. “I learned the basics of grammar at my language school, but it was Heroes of Might and Magic III that taught me most about vocabulary.”

Renata is now a part-time English teacher herself, so the take-away here? If you want to motivate students, get them to harness their language learning to a passion. Oh, and maybe screen time isn’t all bad for kids.

Harness a passion for learning a language | E L Gazette

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A lot of other professionals see it as a good idea:

Learn English Through Video Games - Real English for Gamers

Level Up Your English Skills: The 14 Best Video Games for Learning English | FluentU English

How video games can help you learn English - The London School of English

How Swedish children learn English through gaming

3 Reasons Why Playing Games Helps You Learn English Faster - EnglishClass101.com Blog

Gaming the system: Video gamers learn English while they play - CSMonitor.com

Video games are good for you! | LearnEnglish Teens - British Council

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Saturday, 27 February 2021

english as a viking language

It's bad luck that the world has to learn such a complicated language as English:

"English has horrendous orthography, an extremely complicated inventory of vowels, a few hundred irregular verbs, a huge vocabulary, and other features that make it ill-equipped to be a global language used by millions of people who must learn it in adulthood (Pullum 2015)."

English: The language of the Vikings | linguisticsociety.org

But why is it so complicated?

A reason lies in its complex history:

Jay Doubleyou: identity in the uk

Jay Doubleyou: why is english so different from other languages? part two: grammar

There's a new theory out:

Joseph Emonds, a distinguished theoretical syntactician, and Jan Terje Faarlund, a leading Scandinavianist, now offer a radical challenge to the philologists’ conception of English as progressing gradually and often imperceptibly from one stage to another. E&F postulate that socalled early Middle English, spoken and written in the East Midlands in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, represents a new language, which they call Anglicized Norse, having a Scandinavian syntax alongside words descended from Old English antecedents. 

English: The language of the Vikings | linguisticsociety.org

Peter Trudgill writes in the New European:

the linguistics professors Joe Emonds and Jan Terje Faarlund who, in a book entitled English: the Language of the Vikings, have made the attractive suggestion that modern English is not so much a descendant of Old English heavily influenced by Old Norse, as a descendant of Old Norse which has been heavily influenced by Old English.

There are certainly many respects in which what they say is clearly true. One of the most obvious is that the modern English pronouns they, them, their and theirs are all of Old Norse origin.

How Old Norse invaded the English language | The New European

The book has certainly caught a lot of attention:

English as North Germanic in: Language Dynamics and Change Volume 6 Issue 1 (2016)

Linguist List - Reviews Available for the Book

The noun phrase and the ‘Viking Hypothesis’ | Language Variation and Change | Cambridge Core

Language history - Do you make Scandinavian mistakes? | Johnson | The Economist

Language families - Do you speak a Scandinavian language? | Johnson | The Economist

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Sunday, 21 February 2021

planting trees on roads

The council at the city of Sheffield didn't seem to like trees on its streets:

Futures Forum: "Sheffield's tree massacre": How locals have battled to protect Europe's greenest city

But it makes good sense to plant trees right next to roads:

3 Reasons Why It is Important to Install Trees on the Roads

Benefits of Roadside Plantings

But what about planting trees on urban streets?

The group Treeconomics put this report together a couple of years ago:

GBU - Street Tree Cost-Benefit Analysis - 2018.pdf

Our mission: Sustainable treescapes for everyone

It is the goal and passion of Treeconomics to work to understand how trees improve our urban spaces, making them better places to live.

Home - Treeconomics

As used in the Sid Valley, Devon:

Sid Valley i-Tree Eco Survey - Treeconomics

Arboretum Towns.pdf

THE GUARDIAN 15 August 2015 Patrick Barkham wrote: “Our ‘urban forests’ can make us healthier, wealthier and happier”. …Trees on British streets lack any government department or national body to look after them.”

Tree Report | sidmoutharboretum.org.uk

Other places are embracing tree-planting - in a very new and clear context:

"The UK government has committed to achieving net zero carbon emissions by 2050. As part of our overall response to this, Surrey County Council has committed to facilitate the planting of 1.2 million trees – one for every Surrey resident – by 2030."

And the council has put together a programme to make that happen - by encouraging people to plant trees next to roads:

Planting trees on the highway - Surrey County Council

For example:


Let’s fill our streets with trees - Start With Local

But, still, it's a challenge - which can be met, as the Start with Local group points out:

Street-trees can be expensive

Planting trees in streets can be expensive. Funnily enough, the tree is itself the cheapest component – a 3-4m high tree should cost your council £60-70, depending on species. The initial watering of a street-tree over 3 years is a massive £200-£250. Planting a tree in a grass verge may cost £100 but do so in a hard surface and you may be looking at £250, and more if you then get into engineered trees pit and tree guards. So, on average Defra estimates it costs about £600 to plant a street-tree. No wonder we’re not seeing a renaissance in street-trees, quite the opposite.

How to create a step-change?

At Start with Local, we’re working on a scheme to support the mass planting of street-trees – Trees for Streets...

Let’s fill our streets with trees - Start With Local

And here's the scheme, starting Easter 2021:

Trees for Streets - Let's fill our streets with trees

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Saturday, 20 February 2021

green nationalism

Suddenly every newspaper in the land is going green.

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First, last November, the Sun was extolling the PM's green credentials:

Boris Johnson vows a green revolution as the prize of finally delivering Brexit – The Sun

Then it created a campaign and logo to push for green policies:

Green Team | The Sun

Including some specific ideas and projects we can all take on:

– a brilliant new campaign showing how EVERY ­reader ­can make small lifestyle changes to help save the planet. And we want you and your ­family to join our eco revolution. 
Our measures will not cost the earth. In fact they will help you SAVE money.
A poll of Sun readers found nearly three quarters are more concerned than five years ago about our impact on the planet.

Join The Sun's Green Team campaign with small lifestyle changes to save money and the planet

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Now the Express is doing the same:

Daily Express: Green Britain: Revolution will create 1.18 million new jobs in huge post-pandemic boost | Bright Blue

With a launch of their campaign earlier this month:

An exclusive poll commissioned by the Daily Express shows we are tapping into a new national mood with 66 percent of adults worried by the state of the planet, climate change and the decline of wildlife and nature. And there is a majority in favour changing the tax laws to encourage a greener approach and to make polluters pay.
The Daily Express is calling on Boris Johnson to show world leadership on the issue in the run-up to the G7 summit in Cornwall in June and the crunch Cop 26 climate change summit in Glasgow in November.
Our “Green Britain Needs You” campaign has already won the backing of the bosses of the biggest green groups who between them represent well over eight million members.

It's time for a GREEN Britain: Daily Express launches historic crusade | Nature | News | Express.co.uk

And support for the government's own green policies:

The Government has ambitious plans to invest billions more into the renewable sector, putting the country on the path to being the green envy of the world.

Five ways Britain can lead the world in a green revolution | Nature | News | Express.co.uk

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Certainly the new editor at the Express has brought about new directions:

Daily Express editor Gary Jones: 'We've come a long way' - Press Gazette

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There is inevitably some scepticism being expressed:

So the Sun and Express have come out in favour of climate action...

Transition Exeter – Posts | Facebook

Long-time environmentalists have welcomed the shift, even if with a healthy trace of “I told you so”. The former Green Party leader Natalie Bennett wrote on Twitter: “We've won the argument, but now we need #ClimateAction, not just words.”

How the right-wing press is embracing green politics | newstatesman.com

Finally, the uncritical narrative of a glorious national past and prosperous green future silences issues around inequalities in the experiences and effects of environmental degradation both within the UK and globally. Neither the Express nor the Sun afford much space to global climate justice and the narratives and demands of environmental movements from the global south. Ultimately, these are significant limitations that should temper our enthusiasm.

Britain's right-wing tabloids have turned to 'green nationalism' to sell climate action

“This is a volte-face of enormous proportions,” said James Painter, who researches the media’s representation of climate change at the University of Oxford’s Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism. 

The publications’ backing of Johnson’s green campaign has the potential to boost support for stronger policies, as it’s done in the past with Brexit and during elections. It’s difficult for the media to change peoples’ minds about a topic, but it can reinforce existing views through repetition, said Painter. In the case of climate change, the tabloids are a good barometer of how public opinion in the U.K. has shifted, and a sign it will probably continue to move in that direction. 

After Brexit, British Tabloids Take Up a New Cause—Going Green - Bloomberg

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Monday, 15 February 2021

the language of scamming

A 'scam' is 'a stratagem for gain':

[And this definition includes some good example sentences]

Scamming definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary

And we need to know how it works. A good way is to look at the language used by scammers. For example:

"Good news dear, It is my pleasure to inform you that the latest development regarding the news from the New president of the United State of America to release all your fund through bank of america without any further delay."

--- End scam email 1 ---

The bad grammar, incorrect capitalization, curious wording and the references to the singular United State, are exactly as written. As the blogger who received it said: "This one is so bad, it's good."

(Incidentally, all the spelling and grammar errors in the examples in this article are exactly as in the originals - they're not ours!)

Learn The Language Of The Scam.html

Here's a glossary of the language of scamming:

Fraud Speak: A Guide to Scammers Lingo

And here are some examples of spoken scams:

The Language Of Cybercrime : NPR

Finally, here's lexicographer Susie Dent looking at the history of scamming - and how these words have come into the English language:

In the fairgrounds and market places of 17th-century England, the charlatans and quacks held sway. Standing on raised platforms, they would recite their patter while touting their miracle medicines and potions. The crowds would snap up their wares, falling prey to the most practised and unscrupulous fraudsters in the book.

In some regards, little has changed. Data from Barclays reveals that 2020 had the highest number of scams on record, while a poll conducted by the bank suggested that fewer than half of us have the confidence to talk about it.

The language of scamming has long been bizarre, from ‘plucking a pigeon’ to ‘licking another's fingers’

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Friday, 12 February 2021

the british are not as bad at learning languages as they think

How good are the Brits at learning foreign languages?

The usual story is that it's pretty bad:

Jay Doubleyou: why don't the british learn foreign languages?

Jay Doubleyou: britain is bottom of the class when it comes to second languages

Well, some feedback from language learnng apps in the UK from the last year shows that this is actually not the case. 

As reported in the E L Gazette:

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Lockdown language learning rockets in UK

Foreign language learning is booming in the UK during Covid 19, according to the BBC, with a number of app providers telling the British broadcaster that the increase in the number of Britons downloading a language course far outstrips the growth in numbers worldwide.

US-based Duolingo reports a 137% increase in the number of British users in 2020, almost double the worldwide growth rate. Busuu reports a fourfold rise in UK numbers, giving it a total of 3 million users in the country, while Babbel’s UK registration rose by 80%. All the digital providers reported the top two languages for British language learners were Spanish and French.

According to Babbel, its data shows the British are not as bad at learning languages as they think. Babbel’s chief executive, Arne Schepker, told the BBC that learning engagement, accuracy and rate of progress “is absolutely competitive in the international environment”.

Only time will tell if the British follow the example of their European neighbours and become life-long language learners enrolling in local language schools or taking language learning holidays.

Lockdown language learning rockets in UK | E L Gazette

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Tuesday, 9 February 2021

homonyms and polysemes

English can be terribly confusing - because so many words look and sound the same, but which mean very different things:

Jay Doubleyou: english is ambiguous

Here's a closer look at some of these:

polyseme is a word or phrase with different, but related senses

Polysemy - Wikipedia

A distinction is sometimes made between true homonyms, which are unrelated in origin, such as skate (glide on ice) and skate (the fish), and polysemous homonyms, or polysemes, which have a shared origin, such as mouth (of a river) and mouth (of an animal).

Homonym - Wikipedia

At 3:20, we look at the difference:

SEMANTICS-16: Sense Relations (Homonymy vs Polysemy) - YouTube

And here's a very informative and helpful piece from the New European:

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The words that went their own ways

How homonyms came about | The New European

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Wednesday, 3 February 2021

conflict resolution

The idea is to listen - without interruption. 

Then to reflect - both in the sense of thinking about what you just heard - and to act as a mirror on what you just heard.

So, finally, to repeat back to the person what you have heard and what you understand - without interpretation.

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This is the basics of conflict resolution:

Conflict resolution - Wikipedia

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And this is how to do it:

Training for Conflict Resolution | Main Section | Community Tool Box

Conflict Resolution: Definition, Process, Skills, Examples

Conflict Resolution Skills - HelpGuide.org

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BBC Radio 4 gives us an example:

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Does impartiality impede good journalism?

Across the Red Line
Series 5

Anne McElvoy presents the debate programme which invites two public figures who disagree on an issue of principle to listen closely to each other's arguments - and then to find out what drives them. In this edition, 

Anne is joined by James O'Brien, LBC presenter and author of 'How Not to Be Wrong', and Roger Mosey, former Head of BBC Television News, to debate whether impartiality impedes good journalism. 

And Anne works with conflict resolution specialist Louisa Weinstein to foster a more exploratory conversation, to encourage both speakers to probe the values and experiences that underpin each other's beliefs.

Across the Red Line - Series 5 - Does impartiality impede good journalism? - BBC Sounds

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They are specialist skills:

Louisa Weinstein | Conflict Resolution Centre

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Here are some videos from more specialists:

Conflict to Resolution in 4 Steps - YouTube

Three Ways to Build Trust For Effective Conflict Resolution | The Conflict Expert

3 steps to having difficult — but necessary — conversations |

3 ways to resolve a conflict | Dorothy Walker | TED Institute - YouTube

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