martes, 6 de diciembre de 2011

THE RIGHT WORD

The magic of words lies in the power they have, when properly chosen and arranged, to convey to other people what we wish them to know of what is in our minds.
Every word we write goes out on an errand. Skill in saying what we mean so as to get the result we desire is not a literary frill around the edges of business and social life. It is an essential part of life, our only means of intellectual contact with the world around us.
We have developed communication to a high technical standard. We can talk with someone at the other side of the world, and we can bounce a radar beam off the moon. But we may live to enjoy these luxuries only if we learn to converse more effectively with one another about such things as the atom bomb.
On the level of social and business life the ability to communicate freely and intelligently is needed if our important thoughts are to be well—formulated and carried into action. All of us have experienced the provoking state of knowing things of deep meaning but finding, when we came to express them, that we forgot the words.
How superior in its efficiency and attractiveness is the letter we receive from a man who uses dynamic words that give needed information by contrast with the letter we receive from a man who has the lazy habit of using limp words that leave us doubtful about his meaning and inspire us not at all.
The first question to ask one's self when starting dictation in the morning or sitting down to write to a member of the family is not "What words shall I use?" More pertinent questions are: "Why am I going to write this letter? To please myself?. So that the carbon copy will make a good impression on the man higher up? To carry a thought of mine to the person I am addressing?"
Words are a means of saying things. A sermon, an excuse for failure to do something, an essay like this, a legal decision or brief, a letter home, a tender for a million dollar order: what are these but words? But they are words that the writers have learned to put together in such a form as to accomplish the purpose they have in mind.

The best word

There are two ways of appraising the rightness of a word: by its effectiveness in saying exactly what we wish it to say, and by its sound or its appearance. Some words, though acceptable or passable in conversation, are not legal tender in writing; other words, properly and effectively used in writing, seem pretentious in conversation.
Quite often, the choice between a right and a wrong word is not dictated by a book of reference but by the writer's perception. Everyone of moderate education knows how words that are associated with the commonplace grate on the eye or ear when used in more formal or more tender communication. This sensitiveness to the rightness of words can be developed.
It would be a mistake to become over—dainty. While it is true that we benefit by knowing that words have ancestors - Greek, Latin, Anglo—Saxon, and all other sorts - it is not necessary to know a word's genealogical tree before using it. Does it say what we mean? Is it appropriate in its setting? Do we like it?
Our choice of words should not be dictated by hard—and—fast rules. Letters and articles composed by people who follow the book slavishly are likely to be accurately dull.
But it is well to have some rules. For example, the rule about preferring short words to long is a good rule for general occasions. When we have a choice between two words that convey our meaning equally well, we should use the short and familiar one. But the other word should not be rejected merely because it is long and unusual if it is more fitting in meaning. It is the inappropriate use of long words that causes trouble.
Good usage of words cannot be learned from dictionaries and grammars, still less from a brief essay like this. Language lives in use. To use a word well, and even forcibly, we do not need to "know what it means" in the sense of being able to say "this word means so—and—so." We do need more than casual acquaintance with good literature, so that an instinct toward the first—rate directs our choice.
Those who are interested in the structure of words and how they are built into correct sentences will find much that is useful in the Fowler books: H. W. and F. G. Fowler: The King's English, and H. W. Fowler: A Dictionary of Modern English Usage, published by the Oxford University Press.

About definitions

It has been remarked that some of our most exasperating controversies would cease at once if one of the disputants would take the time and have the courage to say precisely and briefly what he understands by the terms that are being used.
Is it not true that many an argument carried on face—to—face or by letter fizzles out when the parties get to know what each is talking about? So long as two people hold forth on the level of their own ideas and neglect to find out how these ideas mesh with the ideas of their opposition, just so long will they tire themselves out and wear down stenographers in futile disputation.
It isn't necessary to define everything, but only to define things that may not be clear to either party, and to draw pictures or plans when these will help both parties toward understanding.
Definition is not in itself a final argument. A definition is not true or false, except under the circumstances. An amusing example is given in C. J. Herrick's The Thinking Machine: "If I define a man as a biped without feathers, then a plucked chicken is a man."
Definitions are useful starting points. They help us to avoid fruitless argument. They restrain unintellectual people from making themselves pests, and when we use definitions in our thinking they help us to keep on the right track.

Broad vocabulary

The broader your vocabulary, the more deft you will be in expressing yourself in simple language, and the more readily you will pick up another's meaning without strain.
One does not need all the words in the language. Shakespeare used only twenty—five thousand, Milton was content with twelve thousand, and Chaucer had eight thousand: yet their plays and poems and stories live on as models of clear, picturesque writing.
Nor does one need great scholarship to give expression to what is in him. John Bunyan, whose only book of learning was the Bible, wrote The Pilgrim's Progress, which to this day, though written in the 17th century, has been one of the most widely read books. There is no "fine writing" in Bunyan's work: it is in the plainest of language, fitting to its purpose.
Words change, and we need to revise our word—habits from time to time if we are to keep pace with life and custom. If language did not change, if words did not take on new meanings, if events did not compel us to coin new words, we should all be at the far end of a dead—end street. You could not explain Einstein's theories to a university class in Aristotelian Greek, or issue orders for the running of a mechanized factory in Cicero's Latin, or apply for a line of credit in Molière's dramatic French. Words are instruments for the expression of current life—experiences, and vehicles for the communication of ideas.
Every word we use was at first a stroke of genius. Even the coldest, most matter—of—fact word of today was once a glowing metaphor. The words that seem odd to us because they are new will some day, if they are useful words, become commonplace.
Rules for making and using words are not immutable natural laws, but simply conventions among educated people. There is an accepted standard of good language, and the fact that it is always changing in keeping with changing social forces is no reason for abandoning it. We have to keep looking over our shoulder at the past if we are to retain our sense of direction through the morass of slang, jargon, and the crude lingo of newspaper headlines.
Two examples will show how words change under the impact of widening knowledge or under the capriciousness of lax use. Take "atomic". It means literally "indivisible" but has now completely reversed its meaning. When we talk of atomic energy we are thinking of nuclear fission. Thus we have, as Joshua Whatmough points out in Studies in Honour of Gilbert Norwood (University of Toronto Press), turned a negative into a positive, almost as if "no" had come to mean "yes."
As an example of how language becomes disordered without any apparent reason, consider the word "fact", a word called "slippery" by James Bryant Conant, President of Harvard. It came from the Latin, where its meaning was "a thing done or performed", and that is its meaning in the Oxford Dictionary. But "fact" has become so vague that it is no longer trusted alone, and has to be guarded and supported by other words such as "true, actual, real, honest". In common use, a satirical person might say, my opinion is a fact, while your fact is a theory.

Words are labels

Language is not knowledge, but merely a tool for learning. Words are not things, but labels we put on things for their ready identification.
In early days, words themselves took on magic power: like "Open Sesame" swinging wide the door of Ali Baba's treasure cave. In those days the link between a word and the person or thing designated by it was a real and substantial bond.
Today, those who seek mature ways of thinking and writing and speaking are continually aware of the dangers we encounter in accepting the label for the thing, in using the same label for two different things or ideas, or in using different labels for things that are, in their essence, alike.
Some, seeking to teach young children, have adopted the plan of saying "we call this" as a prefix to telling the name of something: "we call this a pin, but that we call a button." A moment's thought will convince us that such a statement is much more correct than: "this is a pin and that is a button."
A word is not a thing, but the name of a thing. The marks we make on paper are not motors, machines, desks, employees, sadness, and happiness, but merely the names by which we know these things. The thoughts we put on paper by the use of words are not our beliefs, but footprints in the sand by which a reader may see the way our minds go. The clearer we make our words, the greater chance there is of the reader following our footsteps closely.
Utility justifies our way of writing and talking, imperfect though it may be. We either label or remain ignorant. We must have names for things if we are to think of them. An essay in The Language of Wisdom and Folly (Harper and Brothers, New York) has this to say: "Can we be said to know what a pigeon is unless we know that it is a pigeon?...if we are not able to name it except vaguely as a 'bird', we seem to be separated from it by an immense distance of ignorance."
There are more than two billion beings on this earth to whom we apply the word "man." They have great variety of complexion, features, age, habits and knowledge, but they have similarities that make the word "man" appropriate to all. It becomes important, if we are to segregate one person or a group of persons, that we speak and write with some particularity. We name the person, as "John Jones", or we name the group, as "Eskimoes", or we differentiate in one way or another: by education, by religion, by profession, by ethical standards (good or bad). All these are useful, but we must keep in mind that they are only labels used for convenience; they must not be regarded as telling the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.

Style

One's style of putting words together should be one's own. As John Galsworthy, the English novelist, said in his foreword to W. H. Hudson's Green Mansions: "To write well, even to write clearly, is a woundy business, long to learn, hard to learn, and no gift of the angels."
The writer's purpose, whether he is composing an immortal ode or the reply to a letter from a critical customer, is to convey an idea with the smallest possible obstacle to the flow of thought between mind and mind.
When we succeed in making ourselves clear, that is splendid, but most of us will wish to do better: we should like to make our meaning clear in a pleasing way; to bring a certain sort of sunshine into our writing. We cannot do that by using dingy words.
The value of a piece of gold jeweller)" is made up of two parts, the value of the gold and the value of the workmanship. Similarly, the worth of a piece of writing is made up of its intrinsic material - the thought - and the skill with which the words describing it are put together. The skill is not skill in copying. We shouldn't try to write like Churchill, but we are quite justified in trying to write as effectively as Churchill would write if he were doing our jobs.
Don't polish too highly. There comes a point beyond which additional sandpapering merely weakens your words and sentences. The Pilgrim's Progress is composed in the lowest style of English. If you were to polish it you would at once destroy its reality. For example, to "polish up" the extract from Bunyan's book that is sculptured on the altar in the memorial chamber in Canada's Parliament Buildings would ruin it: "so he passed over, and all the trumpets sounded for him on the other side."

Three virtues

There are three qualities needed in words: accuracy, clarity and simplicity.
Having collected the best evidence to support what we are to write (for we cannot divorce accurate language from accurate thought) then we must take care to clothe our ideas and images in precise words.
The second quality is a "must". The more clearly we write, though at the expense of a little time and some pains, the more easily and surely we will be understood. If we flow muddily, too careless or too lazy to spend the time and endure the labour of clarifying our stream of thoughts, we must not expect our readers to catch all our intended meanings.
The core of what we wish to say may be eaten out by use of abstract words. Even if we have a soft spot in our hearts for abstract nouns like fraternity, peace, prosperity, and goodwill, we have to bring our letters and our talk within the bounds of people who are interested in realities.
We must write within the word knowledge of our audience, if we are to make sure of being properly understood. Edgar Dale, writing in The News Letter, published by the Bureau of Educational Research of Ohio State University, tells an amusing illustrative story: "A little girl told her mother that the superintendent of the Sunday school said he would drop them into the furnace if they missed three Sundays in succession. He had said that he would drop them from the register."
To take pains to write simply may seem to be catering to the indolence of the reader at the expense of the fatigue of the writer. But if the writer wishes to convey ideas satisfactorily, what other choice has he? And if he doesn't wish to convey ideas correctly, why write?
If you must use a hard word, make your context illuminate it. In both business and private life we are bound to come upon circumstances in which a complexity must be dealt with. Then is when you specially need to search your memory, and perhaps a book of synonyms, for words to make your meaning clear.
Many persons will learn with surprise the result of an inquiry by the Florida Health Officers Society into people's understanding of twenty words commonly used in health discussions. Of the 100 persons questioned, only 46 knew the meaning of "citrus fruit," only 33 knew the word "nutrition," and the word "maternity" meant nothing more than a kind of dress to most of the women patients.

Be specific and concrete

To be specific is to take a big step toward being understood. Make your nouns and verbs tell precisely what you are talking about and what action you expect.
So long as we prefer generalizations and abstractions to concrete words which lie as close to things themselves as our minds can reach, we will remain, says Sir Arthur Quiller—Couch in his book On the Art of Writing, at the best, writers at second—hand.
Sometimes we have no choice, but when we must use an abstract word it is nearly always possible to clarify it in nearby concrete words. "Observe," says Quiller—Couch, "how, when Shakespeare has to use the abstract noun 'concealment', on an instant it turns into a visible worm 'feeding' on the visible rose; how, having to use a second abstract word 'patience', at once he solidifies it in tangible stone." (Twelfth Night II iv 112)
Self—examination will reveal whether a tendency to use abstractions is caused by careless diction or by timidity. The vagueness of abstract words is one of the reasons for their popularity. To express one's thoughts accurately is hard work, and to be precise is sometimes dangerous.
Sir Ernest Gowers remarks in his ABC of Plain Words: "To resist this temptation, and to resolve to make your meaning plain to your reader even at the cost of some trouble to yourself, is more important than any other single thing if you would convert a flabby style into a crisp one."

On being workmanlike

Words are forceful or weak, judged by the accuracy with which they do their work. Not every occasion calls for a dynamic word. If you use too liberally words like vital, urgent, danger, crisis, disaster, fatal, grave, and essential, they lose their force. Then you are tempted to put "very" in front of some, and to telescope others nonsensically, like "urgently and gravely essential." Find the strongest word warranted by the occasion, and let it stand on its feet without adjectival or adverbial support.
Anyone seeking to write clearly, accurately, and with a touch of grace will avoid the use of superfluous adjectives. It is a good habit to go over a piece of composition and challenge every adjective: make it declare its usefulness.
Some business people who have been successful in promoting sales have found that a plain statement, seeming to lack sophistication, laughed at by competitors for its simplicity, has done its work effectively.
When we move from business to private life for examples, we see how much better a simple, known, word is than one that has a more lordly air: how much more at ease we feel after getting a hearty welcome than after being granted a cordial reception; how much more comfortable we are with friendship, rather than with amity, with love rather than with charity: how much happier we are with happiness than with felicity.
The most important question we can ask ourselves about a word is this: is it doing the job as efficiently and as brightly as another word might do?
Our letters and reports need not be literary masterpieces, but they must be workmanlike. Let us write in keeping with our theme and purpose, finding the right word to convey the meaning that is in our minds, avoiding exaggeration and over—emphasis. Let us remember that words are only labels and that these labels must mean the same to our readers as to us. Let us tell ourselves every morning at the beginning of dictation time that the many—voiced monotony of business letters and reports is unnecessary.

From: http://www.rbc.com/aboutus/letter/august1955.html
Download PDF version: http://www.rbc.com/aboutus/letter/pdf/august1955.pdf


SHAKESPEARE'S COINED WORDS AND IDIOMATIC EXPRESSIONS




One fell swoop: Suddenly; in a single action

In my mind’s eye: One's visual memory or imagination

A countenance more in sorrow than in anger: a person or thing that is viewed more with sadness than with anger.

To be in a pickle: In a quandary (dilemma) or some other difficult position.

Bag and baggage: All of one's possessions.

Vanish into thin air: Disappear without trace.

Not budge an inch: to refuse to change your opinion or agree to even very small changes that another person wants

Play fast and loose: Be inconstant and unreliable.

To be led down the primrose path:  idiom suggesting that one is being deceived or led astray, often by a hypocrite. The primrose path also refers to someone living a life of luxury apparently linking primroses to libertine indulgence.

The milk of human kindness: Care and compassion for others.

Remembrance of things past: records the decay of a society.

To thine own self be true: be true to yourself

Cold comfort: if something someone tells you to make you feel better about a bad situation is cold comfort, it does not make you feel better

To beggar all description: to defy description; to be unable to be described

Salad days: The days of one's youthful inexperience.

Flesh and blood: the quality of being alive; one's own relatives; one's own kin

Foul play: Dishonest or treacherous behaviour; also violent conduct.

Tower of strength: a person who can always be depended on to provide support and encouragement, especially in times of trouble

To be cruel to be kind: something that you say when you do something to someone that will upset them now because you think it will help them in the future

Eat (somebody) out of house and home: to eat most of the food that someone has in their house.

Pomp and circumstance: formal ceremony.

Foregone conclusion: Cliché a conclusion already reached; an inevitable result.

Full circle: Back to one's starting point

Method in the madness:
If there's method in someone's madness, they do things in a strange and unorthodox way, but manage to get results.

Neither rhyme nor reason: Cliché without logic, order, or planning. (Describes something disorganized. *Typically: be ~; have ~.)

It smells to (high) heaven: to smell very bad

A sorry sight: A regrettable and unwelcome aspect or feature. Now also used to mean something or someone of untidy appearance.

Strange bedfellows: unexpected partners.



JOKERMAN by Bob Dylan


Jokerman dance to the nightingale tune
Bird fly high by the light of the moon
Oh, oh, oh, Jokerman.


miércoles, 9 de noviembre de 2011

THE PROBLEM WITH SAINTS




I wish that Joan of Arc wouldn’t hang around the park
Pronouncing that she won’t get burned again
Her armour’s very shiny and her message is divine
But I wish she’d take a day off now and then
She said it clears your head when you come back from the
dead
With your sword as sharp as anything that cuts
And to prove it she bisected three young tourists from
Utrecht
Which rapidly displayed a lot of guts
She says we need to
raise a brand new army
And the flag of France
so proudly she unfurled
And the people that
she hated will be neatly bifurcated
And the British will
no longer rule the world
(She says) it was a mistake to let them burn her at the
stake
And she learned a lesson back there in the flames
So she’s going to kill the queen and then she’ll rescue Old
Orleans
And it’s really hard to hang around with saints
I think I ought to tell her that the English left in failure
And they don’t go back to France except on hols
But I saw her vivisect a man who wanted to correct her --
And the playground soon resembled grand guignol
She says we need to
raise a brand new army
And she marched us
round until we couldn’t stand
She says the nation
she abhors will soon be writhing on the floor
And the British will
no longer rule her land
And she’s waiting for the dauphin who will come across the
ocean,
And knows that God agrees with her complaints
So I’m hoping that she’ll ignore my English accent in her
war
‘Cause it’s really hard to hang around with saints
She says we need to
raise a brand new army
And the flag of France
so proudly she unfurled
And the people that
she hated will be neatly bifurcated
And the British will
no longer rule
the British will no longer rule
the British will no longer rule the
world!

martes, 8 de noviembre de 2011

MOLLY MALONE, performed by Sinéad O'Connor



In Dublin's Fair City
Where the girls are so pretty
I first set my eyes on sweet Molly Malone
As she wheel'd her wheel barrow
Through streets broad and narrow
Crying cockles and mussels
alive, alive o!
ChorusAlive, alive o!, alive, alive o!
Crying cockles and mussels alive, alive o!
She was a fishmonger
But sure 'twas no wonder
For so were her father and mother before
And they each wheel'd their barrow
Through streets broad and narrow
Crying cockles and mussels alive, alive o!
Chorus
She died of a fever
And no one could save her
And that was the end of sweet Molly Malone
But her ghost wheels her barrow
Through streets broad and narrow
Crying cockles and mussels alive, alive o!
Chorus

miércoles, 19 de octubre de 2011

ENGLISH VOCABULARY IN USE ELEMENTARY LEVEL TEST

1 I _________________ in my English lessons.
A got a good time B have got a good time C have a good time

2 You can _____________________ skiing, swimming, dancing and shopping.
A make B do C take D go

3 ‘What _______________________?’ ‘I’m listening to music’.
A are you doing B do you do C do you like doing

4 ________________________this morning.
A I did a coffee B I made a coffee C I’m doing a coffee

5 What time did you _____________________last night?
A come home B come to home C come back to home

6 How ______________________to get to the airport?
A long it is B much C long does it take D far

7 Please can you turn the TV ______________________? I can’t hear it!
A off B on C down D up

8 I ____________________ very well with my sister.
A get out B get on C get up D get over

9 He ____________________ goodbye.
A told B said me C said

10 You can ______________________train, plane and bicycle.
A catch B miss C go by

11 ______________________is the sixth month of the year.
A July B June C January D May

12 Laura’s _______________________at the moment but she’ll be back in ten minutes.
A out B abroad C here

13 The driver sits at the ______________________of the bus.
A side B beginning C middle D front

14 She drives _______________________.
A good B well C slow D fastly

15 ‘The weather’s nice today’. ‘Yes, it’s _________________________ .’
A terrible B lovely C dreadful

16 ‘Jacek is so easy-going’. ‘Yes, he’s always ________________________.’
A happy B lovely C relaxed D kind

17 This house is ______________________.
A very quite B very quiet C very quietly

18 ‘Kate has a husband now’. ‘Yes, she’s _______________________.’
A single B widowed C divorced D married

19 This is my niece– my _______________________.
A brother’s son B brother’s daughter C aunt’s sister.

20 Your ________________________is not part of your leg.
A thumb B toe C knee D foot

21 I’m ________________________a green shirt.
A wearing B having C carrying

22 He’s _________________________. He should eat more.
A too thin B slim C handsome

23 Take an aspirin for ________________________.
A headaches B asthma C hay-fever D vomiting

24 ‘Sad’ is the opposite of ______________________.
A hot B happy C ill D well

25 ‘I passed my exam!’ ‘_______________________ ’
A Bless you! B Good luck! C Cheers! D Congratulations!

26 Steffi is Swiss. She’s from ___________________________.
A Switzerland B Holland C Sweden

27 We saw some lightening, then we heard loud _______________________ .
A thunder B fog C snow

28 You can borrow books from the _______________________.
A post offi ce B bookshop C library D town hall

29 A _______________________has lots of trees.
A village B field C forest D river

30 ______________________live on a farm.
A Snakes B Sheep C Elephants D Fish

31 You see the word ________________________at the train station.
A check in B platform C boarding card D flight

32 ‘EXIT’ means ______________________.
A go out B go in C go up

33 _______________________is red and soft.
A A banana B An orange C An apple D A strawberry

34 You find _____________________in the kitchen.
A shampoo B saucepans C wardrobes

35 You find an alarm clock, wardrobe and chest of drawers in the ________________________ .
A bathroom B kitchen C bedroom

36 You keep books on a ______________________.
A bookshelf B sofa C armchair D dining table

37 A doctor works ______________________.
A in a shop B in an offi ce C in a factory D at the hospital

38 When you finish university you ______________________.
A give a lecture B do a course C get a degree D take notes

39 ________________________is not part of a computer.
A An email B A screen C A mouse D A keyboard

40 We want to take the car with us so we’re going by ______________________.
A plane B ferry C train

41 You go to the _____________________to buy lipstick, aspirin and toothpaste.
A book shop B butcher C toy shop D chemist

42 ‘Have you booked a room?’ ‘Yes, I _______________________.’
A have a reservation B would like a double room C checked in

43 ‘___________________________ ’ ‘Yes, I’ll have fish and salad’.
A What do you want? B Are you ready to order? C Is everything all right?

44 She plays _________________________everyday.
A swimming B karate C running D tennis

45 A _______________________is about ghosts or dead people.
A horror film B musical C comedy D western

46 Shall we ______________________a DVD tonight?
A see B listen to C watch D look at

47 A _______________________ attacked me in the street and stole my bag.
A terrorist B mugger C vandal D robber

48 A _________________________ is often on TV every day and is about people’s lives.
A talk show B cartoon C documentary D soap opera

49 Can you repair my TV? _________________________.
A It’s untidy B It isn’t working C It’s out of order D It’s crashed

50 A ________________________is a type of natural disaster.
A strike B hurricane C car crash D war