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viernes, 20 de junio de 2014

SOCCER OR FOOTBALL, IS IT THE SAME GAME?

TOMADO DE VOICE OF AMERICA VOA Learning English imageanchor="1"> Soccer or Football, Is It the Same Game? From VOA Learning English, this is As It Is. I'm Anna Matteo in Washington! Children all over the world spend countless hours outside kicking around a ball on the ground. Soccer is a game beloved from South America to Europe, from Africa to Asia. At its simplest, it involves a foot and ball. But in the United States soccer can involve much more than that – parent, schedules, mini-vans! Let’s just say … it’s complicated. Soccer Mom, Soccer Dad and their Mini-van (Photo: Wall Street Journal)Soccer Mom, Soccer Dad and their Mini-van (Photo: Wall Street Journal) ​Mario Ritter explains. For many around the world, playing soccer is as natural as breathing. The fact that the game is so pure is part of its beauty. All you need is a ball. And even that does not stop a child who wants to play. They will just make one. Soccer’s free spirit is captured in a new children’s book called, Goal! The book’s colorful photographs by Caio Vilela show soccer at its simplest and most spontaneous, or unplanned. All the photographs share two things in common: a soccer ball and big smiles of children. Caio Vilelo's photograph of boys playing soccer.Caio Vilelo's photograph of boys playing soccer. Arthur Antunes Coimbra (Ar TURR ANTUNIS Ko’ IB ra), better known as Zico, is now a soccer coach. But in the late 1970s and early 1980s, he was one of the world’s top soccer players. In the introduction to Goal!, Zico says the book reminds him of playing soccer as a child, and how the spontaneous games are where he really learned to play. “The spontaneous game means everything for a soccer player. That’s where you polish your skills. You learn to find vacant spaces in the ground, you get to find your place in the game and finally you’re taught how to score the most amazing goals. We played with rubber balls, plastic ones, with balls made of socks.” Zico says that he believes this is what true soccer is all about—pure spontaneous play. No commitment, no money. Yet that is very different from mainstream soccer culture in the United States. Soccer for most children in the U.S. is a planned activity for the whole family. U.S. kids usually join a soccer league organized by parents or a school. There are fees to pay and soccer uniforms to buy. They have planned practice times and a parent, often a mother, takes kids to their practices and games. Even snacks and drinks are organized by a parent volunteer, sometimes called a “soccer mom.” Allison Merten is a soccer mom in Washington, D.C. She has been the manager of her 7-year-old daughter’s soccer team for the past three years. She says it is a lot of work. ALLSION MERTEN: “I’ve been the team manager for a couple of seasons and I’m now going to hand that off to someone else because it’s a lot of work to organize and get everyone to the games and practices and coordinate the schedules and make sure everyone knows when their snack day, and drink day is, and organizing the end-of-year party and the coach’s gift and you know … it’s a lot of details and a lot of work that goes into planning soccer for little kids.

jueves, 12 de junio de 2014

PARA NIÑOS PRINCIPIANTES EN INGLÉS

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ALy-1_uXZ6w&list=PL68BFC0CB753E6CAE&feature=share&index=5


-This is a pig
-This is a pig
-This is a pign
-There're happy
-This is a wolf
-The pig is afraid
-House -House -House
-House -Bed -House -House
-Door
-Chimney

domingo, 1 de junio de 2014

Europe and India Tango over Mango

TOMADO DE VOA LEARNING ENGLISH - VOICE OF AMERICAN http://learningenglish.voanews.com/


Europe and India Tango over Mango From VOA Learning English this is As It Is! I’m Anna Matteo in Washington. India and the European Union are involved in a heated trade fight over mangoes. The EU banned them. But most people in India are not complaining. The ban has led to a flood of mangoes in local Indian markets and a sharp drop in prices. Prices for one kind, the Alphonso mango, have crashed, or fallen fast and far. This type of mango is usually so costly that it is out of reach for middle-class households. Purnima Dhir in New Delhi had stocked up on vegetables and fruits during the weekend. But after reading reports that prices of the prized Alphonso mango had crashed, she rushed back to a supermarket to buy more or as she puts it, to get her fill. “I am absolutely delighted. We can have our fill of it, I can’t believe it.” Ms. Dhir can thank a tiny fruit fly. The European Union imposed an 18-month ban on Indian mangoes along with a few other vegetables after finding fruit flies in some of the produce. When the ban went into effect on May 1st, prices of the Alphonso mango fell to their lowest level in nearly 20 years. They are selling at about $ 2.50 to $ 4 per kilogram, which is half their usual price. An Indian vendor displays Alphonso mangoes at a whole sale market in Mumbai, India, May 6, 2014.An Indian vendor displays Alphonso mangoes at a whole sale market in Mumbai, India, May 6, 2014. The juicy, sweet mango is a popular treat during the scorching summer heat on the Indian plains. There are several kinds of mangoes. But the Alphonso mango is known as “The King of Mangoes.” It is popular from Japan to Europe. As it usually happens, its popularity raised the price and forced most Indians to look for more affordable varieties. While shoppers in India are enjoying the surplus of Alphonso mangos, exporters having a difference experience. The ban is hitting them hard and directly affecting their profits. Sanjay Pansare is a director at the Agriculture Produce Market Committee in Mumbai, the center of the mango trade. And he is concerned that the ban could affect the mango market for a long time. “We are not worried about the prices, what we are worried is we are going to lose the European market. That is the main problem.” Exporters are already counting their losses. Bharat Pawar is the manager of Shree Ganesh Fruit Stall in Mumbai. He says at least half his export orders have been cancelled. He is now selling in the local market. Officials in New Delhi have asked the European Union to reconsider the ban. They have even threatened to take the issue to the World Trade Organization. This is not the first time that the mango has been involved in high-level diplomacy. Indian officials often give the prized fruit to foreign leaders. Harley Davidson motorcycle on parade.Harley Davidson motorcycle on parade. And in 2006 India and the U.S. struck what is now known as the “mangos for bikes deal.” New Delhi reportedly permitted Harley Davidson motorcycle imports in exchange for lifting an 18-year ban on mango imports by the United States. I’m Anna Matteo. What food ban would most affect you? And do you have a favorite mango recipe? Tell us in the comment section! Or just practice with the vocabulary you learned in the article -- words like “ban” and “surplus.”