I have noticed that I get a lot of hits from people searching "present simple" and "ESL," and assume that this is language teachers looking for ideas or lesson plans. The following links are good places to start.
This is a page specifically dealing with teaching simple present and present progressive. I have not tried any of these, but there are a lot of ideas here, and they look good. At the very least you will be inspired.
There is a shop upstairs from this sign called "Parrot." I do not know why it is called "Parrot." It is (I think, but am not sure) a second-hand clothes shop.
And it was, apparently, open at the time I took this picture.
This is, in fact, a brave and daring attempt at the use of the indefinite article, something my students find as baffling as this sign writer apparently does. And understandably so! I mean, would you rather have little money, or a little money?
Now try explaining the distinction to a person whose native language gets along perfectly well without using any articles at all, indefinite or otherwise.
3 comments:
LOL...surely they know what that appears to be.
Feeling too stupid for words, I beg you to tell me what it means--I want to send the post to a parrot-loving friend here.....
Happy New Year of the Ox (there isn't one for the parrot, is there....)
There is a shop upstairs from this sign called "Parrot." I do not know why it is called "Parrot." It is (I think, but am not sure) a second-hand clothes shop.
And it was, apparently, open at the time I took this picture.
This is, in fact, a brave and daring attempt at the use of the indefinite article, something my students find as baffling as this sign writer apparently does. And understandably so! I mean, would you rather have little money, or a little money?
Now try explaining the distinction to a person whose native language gets along perfectly well without using any articles at all, indefinite or otherwise.
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