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jueves, 24 de septiembre de 2020

VERBOS AUXILIARES- AUXILIAR VERBS

 PARA COMPRENDER MEJOR LOS VERBOS AUXILIARES, DAMOS UNA DEFINICIÓN. VERBOS AUXILIARES EN INGLÉS SON LOS QUE ACOMPAÑAN AL VERBO PRINCIPAL PARA FORMAR ORACIONES INTERROGATIVAS Y NEGATIVAS.  DIGAMOS QUE PARA HACER ORACIONES INTERROGATIVAS Y NEGATIVAS EN INGLÉS, NO PODEMOS HACER COMO EN ESPAÑOL, INVIERTIENDO EL ORDEN DE LAS ORACIONES Y EMPEZAR CON EL VERBO LUEGO EL PRONOMBRE PERSONAL Y FINALIZAMOS CON EL COMPLEMENTO (LAS DEMÁS PALABRAS QUE LAS ACOMPAÑAN) O EN ALGUNOS CASOS SIMPLEMENTE, LA ORACIÓN INTERROGATIVA, ES LA MISMA ORACIÓN AFIRMATIVA, PERO CON ACENTO DIFERENTE. POR EJEMPLO YO DIGO:

¿VAS A LA ESCUELA?

VAS=VERBO

=PRONOMBRE PERSONAL

A LA ESCUELA=COMPLEMENTO

EN ESTA ORACIÓN SE COLOCÓ PRIMERO EL VERBO [IR] EN LA FORMA DE INFLEXIÓN VERBAL(CONJUGADO) = VAS  LUEGO EL PRONOMBRE PERSONAL DE SEGUNDA PERSONA DEL SINGULAR [] Y FINALMENTE EL COMPLEMENTO= [A LA ESCUELA]  

EN ESTA ORACIÓN AL FINAL TAMBIÉN TIENE UN ACENTO DE FORMA INTERROGATIVA, ES DECIR QUE EN LA PALABRA ESCUELA SUBE EL TONO DE VOZ

PERO TAMBIÉN PUEDO HACER UNA ORACIÓN INTERROGATIVA, ÚNICAMENTE CAMBIANDO LA ENTONACIÓN, ES DECIR TOMAR LA MISMA ORACIÓN AFIRMATIVA Y SIMPLEMENTE SUBIR EL TONO DE LA VOZ AL FINAL DE LA ORACIÓN. EJEMPLO:

¿TÚ VAS A LA ESCUELA?

PARA VER LOS VERBOS EN INGLÉS, TOMAMOS LA SIGUIENTE PÁGINA DONDE VERÁS ESTE TEMA CON MAYOR AMPLITUD

https://myenglishgoals.com/la-guia-definitiva-sobre-los-verbos-auxiliares-en-ingles/







sábado, 18 de julio de 2020

US Withdraws Planned Visa Restriction for International Students

TOMADO DE
SOBRE LAS VISAS A ESTUDIANTES INTERNACIONALES
The administration of U.S. President Donald Trump has withdrawn planned visa restrictions for international students. The restrictions would have forced international students to leave the country if their schools held classes online because of the coronavirus crisis. The surprise announcement came during a federal court hearing on Tuesday in Boston, Massachusetts. Both Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) had filed the legal action seeking to overturn the rule. Judge Allison Burroughs said federal immigration officials had agreed to cancel the planned restrictions, which were announced July 6, and “return to the status quo.” A lawyer representing the U.S. government confirmed that the judge’s announcement was correct. The decision means that international students are again permitted to attend classes online and keep their visas during the health emergency “exemption.” Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) had established the exemption on March 13, when the coronavirus was spreading across the country. But on July 6, the agency said international students must take at least some of their college classes in person during the upcoming autumn term. If they could not, they must transfer to another school offering in-person classes or leave the country. The agency added that students would have to leave the country even if a health emergency forces their classes online after the school year begins. The restriction came on the same day that Harvard and several other colleges said they would hold all of their classes online in the fall. On July 8, Harvard and MIT filed legal action against the new restriction. Harvard University President Lawrence Bacow said at the time that the restriction “comes at a time when the United States has been setting daily records for the number of new infections.” More than 200 colleges and at least 17 states have supported the action. Some colleges also filed their own legal action against the rule. About 5,000 international students at Harvard and nearly 4,000 attending MIT could have lost their visas under the restriction. Across the United States, nearly 400,000 international students received the F-1 or M-1 visa in the 12-month period ending in September 2019. “I feel relief,” said Andrea Calderon, a biology student from Ecuador. The City College of New York student told the Associated Press, “It would have been a very big problem if I had to leave the country right now.” I'm Jonathan Evans. Hai Do wrote this story for Learning English with additional information from the Associated Press. Ashley Thompson was the editor. _______________________________________________________________ Words in This Story status quo - n. the way things are now exemption - n. freedom from being required to do something transfer - v. to move from one school to another fall - n. the season between summer and winter

martes, 10 de marzo de 2020

VOA- READING AND NEWS

TOMADO DE VOA




Catching Plastic: Fishermen on Frontline of Ocean Clean-up



A group of Spanish fishermen will receive financial support to catch plastic as well as fish. It is part of a new project aimed at fighting the huge amount of waste left in the world’s oceans.

About 12 million tons of plastic waste are entering the oceans every year. This garbage pollutes the water, kills wildlife and breaks down into small particles -- called microplastics -- that fish and other creatures eat.

Carlos Martin is one of the fishermen taking part in the project. Martin is captain of the ‘Bonamar 2,’ a boat based at the Spanish port of Barcelona. VOA joined him and his crew early one morning as they began removing pieces of plastic from their fishing nets.

Martin blames rivers for carrying a lot of plastic to the sea.

Martin says he and his crew collect the solid plastic and bring it back to land. He adds that wood-based cellulose plastic often gets caught in the nets.

He says, “The net does not function properly in relation to its height in the water, and it takes on mud, causing the net to break because it weighs so much.”

Under the new programs, one million euros of taxpayer’s money will support ocean cleanup efforts for fishermen like Martin. The money is coming from the European Union and the Catalan government.

Sergi Tudela, the General Director of Catalonia Fisheries, is supervising the cleanup project.

“With these funds, they can improve what they need to carry onboard - the boxes, all the facilities they need to cope with the problem…We are hopeful that if we are successful in this project, this project could be replicated in other areas in the Mediterranean.”

Government reports that the amount of plastic waste washing up along the Spanish coastline has grown by 65 percent in just six years. Martin says the fishing community now understands how big the problem is.

He says, “Before we didn't see it that way, we took it and threw it back into the water, we had no conscience. I think that a few years here we have become very aware, nothing is thrown into the water, we collect everything and bring it to shore.”

Fishing equipment makes up a large part of the estimated 8 to 12 million tons of plastic left in the world’s oceans every year. Martin and his fishing community look to become part of the international effort to clean up the oceans.

I’m Jonathan Evans.



Henry Ridgwell reported this story for VOA News. Jonathan Evans adapted it for Learning English. George Grow was the editor.

______________________________________________________ 


Words in This Story



conscience – n. the part of the mind that makes you aware of your actions as being either morally right or wrong

function – v. to work or operate

funds – n. an amount of money that is used for a special purpose

mud – n. soft, wet dirt

net – n. a fabric made of strands of thread, cord, rope, or wire that weave in and out with much open space

onboard – adj. carried or happening on a vehicle

properly – adv. in a way that is acceptable or suitable

replicate(d) – v. to repeat or copy something exactly


miércoles, 1 de enero de 2020

UN NIÑO GENIO EN ESPAÑA

Una maravilla, resultó la presentación de un niño de dos años en España

miércoles, 25 de diciembre de 2019

MERRY CHRISTMAS

FOR OUR READER "MERY CHRISTMAS"

jueves, 26 de septiembre de 2019

PREMIO NOBEL DE PAZ- YEAR 2019 A Nobel Prize for Sweden's Greta Thunberg

YEAR 2019 A Nobel Prize for Sweden's Greta Thunberg?

La activista medioambiental sueca y la conocida como "Gandhi saharaui" se ven acompañadas, en la relación de galardonados, por el líder indígena yanomami Davi Kopenawa y la abogada china Guo Jianmei.

Swedish 16-year-old activist Greta Thunberg sails on the Malizia II racing yacht in New York Harbor as she nears the completion of her trans-Atlantic crossing in order to attend a United Nations summit on climate change in New York, U.S., August 28, 2019.
 

Swedish teenager Greta Thunberg’s shaming of world leaders and air travelers over climate change has won her millions of supporters. She has also gained many new followers to her cause. But it just might cost her the Nobel Peace Prize. Thunberg is one of only a few people whose nomination has become known before the Nobel ceremony. Prize experts consider her to be the favorite to win the award this year. At 16, she would be the youngest recipient of the award. She would also be the first to win the prize for environmental work since Al Gore. The former American vice president shared the prize in 2007 for spreading knowledge of climate change. But Thunberg’s youth, directness and resolve – among the causes of her popularity – could be seen as problems for the Norwegian Nobel Committee. Her sometimes sharp criticism of those who choose to travel by airplane has upset some people. The denunciation of world leaders by a teenager can be divisive, also. Most liberals see Thunberg as a speaker of the truth about climate change. Most conservatives, however, see her as a liar, or a trickster. Some have suggested her parents have misdirected her. Thunberg, who does not usually take media requests directly, did not immediately answer requests for comment. She has denied accusations that she is paid for her activism or is being “used” by anyone. She wrote on Facebook earlier this year that “there is no one ‘behind’ me except for myself. My parents were as far from climate activists as possible before I made them aware of the situation.” 'How dare you?' Thunberg won international fame last year by taking time off school each Friday to demonstrate about the lack of action on climate change. She would sit -- alone at first -- outside the Swedish parliament. Last Friday, millions of young people protested around the world to put pressure on governments to act. The huge demonstrations were inspired by Thunberg’s activism.


This week, Thunberg accused leaders at the U.N. climate meeting of stealing her dreams and childhood with “empty words” on climate change action.
“How dare you?” she asked throughout her speech.
Greta
Sverre Lodgaard is a former deputy member of the award committee. He told Reuters that committee members would consider Thunberg’s age and the method she uses to share her message.
“The problem is that the principle of ‘flight shame’ brings her chances...down. Shame is not a constructive feeling to bring about change,” he said.
Five years ago, Pakistani education activist Malala Yousafzai won the award at the age of 17. But her candidacy was less divisive than Thunberg’s.
Asle Sveen has written several books about the peace prize. He said it can be a “burden” for teen-aged winners. Even so, both he and Lodgaard say Thunberg has a chance of winning.
The award committee could choose to reduce the weight of expectation on Thunberg by awarding a shared prize. But it also could decide that the young activist’s behavior shows she is wise beyond her years.
“They would have seen and heard her and she would have come across as thoughtful and effective. She could be a very good candidate,” Lodgaard said.
The definition of peace
Also possibly counting against Thunberg is a debate among thinkers about whether environmental activism counts as working for peace.
“The argument ‘for’ is that the science shows we are experiencing a dramatic change of climate and we could have extreme conditions, with consequences in terms of war and refugees,” Sveen said.
“The argument ‘against’ would be: does a prize to the environment fall outside the boundaries of Nobel’s will?” he added.
Apart from Thunberg, other leading possible nominees for the award include Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed for his country's peace deal with Eritrea last year.
Abiy, who took office in April 2018, is pushing Ethiopia towards new democratic freedoms. However, rights groups say more needs to be done to deal with many years of government repression.
The Nobel committee also could choose to recognize Reporters Without Borders or the Committee to Protect Journalists. Both groups fight for press freedom.
Pope Francis and the head of the United Nations Refugee Agency are also possible nominees for the prize.
The winner will be announced on October 11.
I'm Dorothy Gundy.
The Reuters news agency reported this story for VOA News. Caty Weaver adapted it for VOA Learning English. Ashley Thompson was the editor.

We want to hear from you. Write to us in the Comments section, and visit our Facebook page.

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Words in This Story

shaming – n. the activity of showing little or no respect for someone in public
aware – adj. showing knowledge or recognition
principle – n. a rule or way of doing things
constructive – adj. helpful to someone instead of upsetting and negative
burden – n. ​someone or something that is very difficult to accept, do, or deal with
dramatic – adj. sudden and extreme
consequence – n. something that happens as a result of a particular action or set of conditions
boundary – n. a point or limit that indicates where two things become different

journalist – n. a news reporter