Thứ Ba, 31 tháng 7, 2012

Collection of funny stories - Azit Nexin



Azit Nexin
My father, an Anatolian village boy, came to Istanbul at the age of thirteen. My mother, from another Anatolian village, also came to Istanbul as a very small child. They had to make this long journey, meet in Istanbul and get married so that I could come into the world.

The choice was not left to me, so I was born at a very unsuitable time--the bloodiest and most fiery days of World War I, in 1915. Again, the choice not being in my hands, my birth occurred not only at an unseemly time but also in an unfavorable place, on Heybeli Island. Heybeli lies offshore of Istanbul and was the summer residence of Turkey's richest people. And since the rich couldn't live without the poor--they had such a great need for them-- we, too, lived on the island.

I don't mean to imply with these remarks that I was unlucky. On the contrary, I consider myself as being quite fortunate in not coming from a rich, noble and famous family.

They named me "Nusret." In Turkish, this Arabic word means "God's Help." It was a name entirely fitting to us because my family, destitute of any other hope, bound all their hope in God.

Ancient Spartans killed, with their own hands, offspring who were born weak and puny, raising only the strong and healthy. This process of selection for us Turks is performed by nature and society. When I disclose that my four brothers died in infancy, unable to endure their hostile environment, you will easily understand how stubborn I was in surviving. And my mother, unable to endure beyond her twenty-sixth year, died, leaving this beautiful world, so worth living in, to those who were strong.

In capitalist countries the milieu is excellent for merchants, in socialist countries, most favorable for writers. That is, a man who knows his business must become a writer if he's in a socialist state, or a merchant if he's in a capitalist one. How contrary a man I was going to be was already evident in my childhood, for even at the age of ten, in a country like Turkey--a capitalist scrap pile--I'd determined to become a writer though no one in my family could read or write.

My father, like every good father who gives thought to his son's future, advised, "Forget this silly idea of writing and take a good honest job, one you can make a living at!" I was beyond listening to him.

My obstinacy didn't stop there. Although I wished to be a writer, yearned to take pen in hand, I entered a school where they would thrust a rifle in my hand.

During my early years I couldn't do what I liked, and didn't like what I did do. I wanted to become a writer, but became a soldier. At that time, the only schools where poor, penniless children could study free were military schools; therefore I was forced to enter a military boarding school.

In 1933 when the surname law was passed which directed every Turk to select a last name, people's secret feelings of inferiority surfaced: Some of the world's stingiest became known as "Eliachik" (Openhanded), the greatest cowards named themselves "Yurekli" (Stoutheart), and many of the laziest took the name ''Chalishkan" (Industrious ) . One of our teachers chose the surname of "Cheviker" (Dextrous) when he could barely sign his name to a letter. The rampant racism present caused people with mixed blood to grab for surnames which signified they were Turks.

Invariably I came last in any kind of scramble; I was no different in this one for nice surnames. No surname remained that I could take pride in, so I assumed the name of "Nesin" (What-are-you?). I wanted to think of what I was and pull myself together whenever anyone called "What-are-you? "In 1937 I became an officer, you know, a Napoleon. Well really, I was merely one of the Napoleons. Every new officer thinks himself Napoleon. Some of them never recover from this sickness; it lasts a whole lifetime. Others are cured after awhile. ''Napoleonitis'' is a dangerous and contagious disease. The symptoms are these: The victims think only of Napoleon's victories, never of his defeats; they are prone to tuck a right hand between jacket buttons; they stand before a map of the world, drawing arrows with a red crayon and, after subjugating and occupying the entire world in five minutes, regret that the world is so small. Victims of this disease rave as in a high fever. There are other dangers. In later stages, they may fancy themselves Tamerlane, Ghengis Khan, Attila, Hannibal, Moltke, even Hitler or others such as these.

As a fresh young officer, twenty-two or twenty-three, I conquered the world a few times on the map with a red crayon. My Napoleon complex lasted only a year or two. However, even during this malady, I never leaned toward fascism.

From childhood on, I desired to be a playwright. In the army were infantry, cavalry, artillery and tank corps, but no military playwright branch, so I looked for a way out and was discharged in 1944.

Even after becoming generals, some officers still had an ache in their craws to be poets or writers and wrote poems or novels, much to the amazement of everyone but themselves. Yet how nonsensical and comical it would seem to them if a fifty-year-old poet should want to become an army commander.

I began storywriting during my military service. Since in those times a soldier who wrote for the newspapers was looked upon with disfavor by his superiors, I didn't write in my own name but under my father's, Aziz Nesin. My real name, Nusret Nesin, was obscured by this first pseudonym and forgotten.

In those times they referred to me as the young writer. My father was a graybearded old man. When this graybearded old man had business in a government office and introduced himself as Aziz Nesin, nobody believed it and they gave him a hard time. My father persisted in trying to prove his identity as Aziz Nesin in various official bureaus until he died.

Years later, when my books were translated into foreign tongues, in order to collect my copyright royalties which had come to the bank in the name of Aziz Nesin, I fought to prove that I was Aziz Nesin although "Nusret Nesin" was written on my identity papers.

Like many others, I started my writing by composing poetry. Nazim Hikmet, while staging his hunger strike, advised me to give up poetry, that I wrote it badly, and that I should confine my writing to stories and novels. From these remarks I concluded that Nazim was jealous (!) of me. To those who've asked why I gave up poetry, I've replied that I abandoned it because one doesn't make money in Turkey as a poet. The truth of the matter is that, due to my great respect for poetry, I dropped it.

These days, many of those who claim the title of poet continue to think that what they produce is poetry, because they have no respect for poetry. I believe that poetry is a great art because many writers, being unsuccessful as poets, are pushed into becoming successful, famous writers. I'm not saying this about myself, for I won great popularity by showing just how badly poetry could be written. The large amount of interest shown in my published poems was not due to their beauty; it was because a woman's signature appeared at the bottom. My poems were published under a female pseudonym and stacks of love letters poured in addressed to that name.

From childhood on, it's been my ambition to set down words that would make people weep. I took a story, written with this intent, to a magazine. The editor-in-chief, who should have been sobbing as he read my story, showed such a lack of understanding that he laughed long and loud, then, wiping the tears of laughter from his eyes, said "Bravo! Very good. Write more stories like this and bring them to us."

This, my first disillusionment in writing, continues: My readers laugh at most of the things I've written to make them cry. Even when I became known as a writer of humor, I didn't know what humor was. I can't say that I really know now, but I can tell you as much as I do know. I learned humor by doing it. Often I'm asked what humor is made of, as if it were a recipe or formula. In summation of what I've learned about the subject, I'll give such a formula: Humor is a very serious business.

In 1945, when those in power incited several thousand reactionaries to demonstrate and demolish the Tan Newspaper, where I worked, I was left unemployed and could find no work with any paper. They would not accept any writing under my name. Thus it was that I commenced writing for newspapers and magazines under more than two hundred assumed names. These were writings of all types including editorials, anecdotes, reports, interviews, police novels and stories. Upon a newspaper owner's discovery that a pseudonym was mine, I invented a new one.

Many many mix-ups occurred because of these assumed names. For example, I published a monologue children's book under the name "Oya Atesh," a combination of my daughter's and son's names. Those in power were unaware I'd penned these monologues, and they were used in almost every elementary school in addition to being recited at evening entertainments. "Oya Atesh" was listed as a woman author in the "Bibliographie of Turkish Women Writers'' which was published later on.

Another story I wrote, which was published in a magazine under a French pseudonym, was accepted in an anthology of world humor as an example of French humor.

Still another of my stories, which I published under an invented Chinese name, later appeared in a second magazine as a translation from Chinese.

During the times I couldn't work as a writer, though I tried many jobs like grocer, salesman, accountant, newspaper peddler and photographer, I was a failure at all of them.

As a result of my writing I've been imprisoned five and a half years. Six months of those years were caused by King Farouk of Egypt and the Iranian Shah, Riza. King Farouk and Shah Riza claimed that I insulted them in my articles and through their ambassadors in Ankara had me brought into court, the end result being a six-month's jail sentence for me.

From my first wife I have two children, and two from my second--altogether, four children.

At my first arrest (1946), the question the police asked me continually for six days was this:

''Who is the real writer of these articles that came out under your name?"

They wouldn't believe that I wrote them.

Not long after this event--two years--the opposite occurred. This time the police claimed I wrote articles with other signatures. The first time I'd tried to prove I wrote, the second, that I didn't write. On one such occasion an expert witness testified that I'd written an article under another name, so I was imprisoned sixteen months for an article I didn't write.

My first wife and I were married and walked under the sabers of my officer friends as the orchestra played the tango, "Comparasita." I exchanged wedding rings with my second wife through the bars of the prison. You see that this was not a shining beginning.

I was thin. Languishing again and again in prison, I put on weight.

In 1956 I took first place at the International Humor Contest and won the Golden Palm. Newspapers and magazines which would not publish my writings with my own signature before my winning of the Golden Palm, hastened to do so afterwards. But this didn't last long.

Then once more writings under my own name were banned from the newspapers and I was forced to enter the contest again in 1957 to win another Golden Palm. After this, my name reappeared in newspapers and magazines. In 1966, at the International Humor Contest, held in Bulgaria, I took first place and won the Golden Hedgehog.

Upon the political revolution in Turkey on 27 May 1960, in my joy I donated one of the Golden Palms to the State Treasury. A few months after this event I was again thrown into jail. I'm saving the second Golden Palm and the Golden Hedgehog for future joyful days, saying to myself that they'll be needed.

People are amazed that to this date I've written more than two thousand stories. Really there is nothing surprising in this. If my family, whom I'm obliged to support, numbered twenty instead of only ten, I should have had to write more than four thousand stories.

I am fifty-three years old, have fifty-three books, forty thousand lira in debts, four children and one grandchild. I live alone. My writings have been translated into twenty-three languages, my books into seventeen; my plays have been performed in seven countries.

Only two things can I hide from others: one my fatigue, the other my age. Excepting these two, all of me is exposed and open. It's said that I look young for my age. It must be that I am so busy working I don't have time to age.

I'm not one who says, "Had I the chance to come to this world again, I would do the same things all over again." On my second coming I would want to do more than on my first, much much more and much much better.

If in the entire history of mankind had just one immortal been found, I would have looked to him for guidance and tried to achieve immortality too; but what am I to do without a model? It's not my fault--I'll die like everyone else.

I love humanity so much, so excessively, that I can even be angry with them.

This is my as yet unfinished story. I realize that readers are generally bored with long articles so I think the conclusion won't take long. The thing I am most curious about is the end of this story which I will never be able to learn.

Notes:
In 1972 the Aziz Nesin Foundation was brought into being by Aziz Nesin in order to enable children in need of to get a proper personal and professional education.

Nesin's outspoken atheism often made him a target of Islamic extremists. He most recently made international news by translating and publishing in a newspaper parts of Salman Rushdie's Satanic Verses. Muslim fundamentalists tried to kill him in an arson attack at a hotel in the Turkish town of Sivas in 1993. Nesin escaped the fire, which killed 37 writers, poets and intellectuals who had gathered to commemorate the death of a 16th-century poet hanged for his opposition to religious oppression.

Westlife - The No.1's Tour 2005



Track List:

  1. Uptown Girl
  2. Hey Whatever
  3. If I Let You Go
  4. Mandy
  5. Unbreakable
  6. My Love
  7. Swear It Again
  8. When You're Looking Like That
  9. Disco Inferno
  10. Pretty Woman
  11. I Feel Fine
  12. Don't Stop Till You Get Enough
  13. Footloose
  14. Ain't That A Kick In The Head
  15. Smile
  16. Mack The Knife
  17. World Of Our Own
  18. What Makes A Man
  19. Flying Without Wings

Westlife - The Greatest Hits Tour



Track List:

  1. When You're Looking Like That
  2. If I Let You Go
  3. Tonight
  4. Flying Without Wings
  5. My Love
  6. Bop Bop Baby
  7. Queen of My Heart
  8. To Be With You
  9. I Get Around
  10. Do You Love Me
  11. Twist and Shout
  12. Great Balls of Fire
  13. Kiss
  14. Fool Again
  15. Swear it Again
  16. Written in the Stars
  17. Unbreakable
  18. Uptown Girl
  19. What Makes a Man
  20. World of Our Own

Top Comments

So what am I supposed to do now that all my favourite bands are officially over? No more concerts to look forward to or new hits to expect. I wish I could just turn back time to my teenagehood, when problems were small, singers were actually talented.. and good looking!!! Will always miss those days, and Westlife of course.

by: liginhasn



yes thats true they are the number one boy band and successful boy bands on earth. Although they say goodbye their beautiful love songs will stay in our hearts forever.and as a simple souvenir I start downloading their videos and live concert here in youtube try to do it also for yourself avid fans......

arnelzon



westlife are THE BEST band in the world.. even though they ended, no one can take their place!

FOREVER A WESTLIFE FAN!!

rachrachel1

Westlife - Where Dreams Come True Tour



Track List:

1. Dreams come true
2. No no
3. If i let you go
4. Swear it again
5. Somebody needs you
6. Seasons in the sun
7. I have a dream
8. You make me feel
9. When you're looking like that
10. My love
11. More than words
12. My girl
13. Can't get next to you
14. Ain't too pround to beg
15. Baby i need your loving
16. What becomes of the broken hearted
17. Fool again
18. Uptown girl
19. What makes a man
20. I lay my love on you
21. Flying without wings

By: Jam Nguyễn

Westlife - For The Last Time

Westlife is an Irish pop group formed in July 3, 1998, its members were originally Shane Filan, Mark Feehily, Kian Egan, Nicky Byrne and Brian McFadden, the latter left the band in 2004. The band originally signed to Simon Cowell and are advised by music mogul Louis Walsh.



Top Comments:

I'm a straight guy, I have a girlfriend who also loves Westlife and we almost cry when we heard them were going to disband. And then, when I saw this video, I really dropped my tears :( I wonder if something like Justin Bieber could be disappeared in spite of Westlife. Westlife forever! :(
By: GokuTheGod0104

Im a str8 guy but i really felt bad when i heard they wont give us their music and great songs anylonger Its not fair, Bieber could disappear or any other puppet artist but not sucha band like W.L. I will miss them! :-(
By: Lechuzafeliz


Yes! Westlife is the greatest Boy Bands on earth compared to the other Boy Bands.Westlife they are very successful they have many beautiful songs that i love to listen all the time. i hope Westlife will come back soon complete 5 members and stronger never split anymore.
By: arnelzon


Top 30 Westlife Songs




This is a fan made video of what I think to be the best 30 Westlife songs, however I know I will have missed out some great songs that I haven't listened to, but I hope that people will appreciate their music and love it! The songs come from the albums throughout their 14 years in the music industry. Enjoy!

By: meaningfulmusic19

Thứ Hai, 23 tháng 7, 2012

Yesterday Once More | The Carpenters

The Carpenters


Birth name: The Carpenters
Born : - present
Country: Los Angeles, California,United States
Years active: 1969–1983
Record labels: A&M Records
See more on : Wikipedia





Gửi lời bài hát và bài dịch tại đây !


"Thuở xưa thơ bé"

Tôi thường háo hức chờ đợi
Được nghe những khúc ca yêu thích trên ra-đi-ô
Nhạc nổi lên, tôi cũng ngân nga hát theo
Môi tôi khẽ nở nụ cười

Quãng thời gian đó thật tươi đẹp
Và những ngày đó không quá xa vời
Tôi bâng khuâng thầm hỏi ngày thơ ấu giờ trôi về đâu
Nhưng rồi những ngày xưa đó đã quay về
Giống như một người bạn thân xưa cũ
Ôi, những bài hát tôi hằng yêu mến...

Từng câu hát "Sha-la-la-la"
Từng tiếng ngân nga "wo-wo-wo"
Vẫn bừng sáng
Từng lời ca "shing-a-ling-a-ling"
Mà họ đang bắt đầu hát
Thật hay....

Khi câu chuyện đến đoạn
Chàng trai làm tan nát trái tim cô gái
Khóe mắt tôi cay cay
Vẫn giống như ngày trước
Những ngày xưa ấy đã quay về một lần nữa

Nhìn lại những tháng ngày năm xưa
Và quãng thời gian tươi đẹp tôi có
Làm cho ngày hôm nay đượm chút trầm buồn
Mọi thứ đã thay đổi quá nhiều

Đó là những bài hát tôi yêu
Mà rồi tôi sẽ lại ca vang
Từng câu từng chữ khắc sâu vào tâm trí
Những giai điệu thân quen
Nghe sao tuyệt vời
Như hòa quyện với những tháng năm

Lặp lại (*)

Tất cả ký ức tươi đẹp nhất
Trở về trong tôi thật rõ ràng
Có những kỷ niệm khiến tôi khóc òa
Vẫn giống như xưa
Những ngày xưa ấy đã quay về một lần nữa

Lặp lại (*)

------------------------------


Yesterday Once More | The Carpenters

When I was young
I'd listened to the radio
Waiting for my favorite songs
When they played I'd sing along
It made me smile

Those were such happy times
And not so long ago
How I wondered where they'd gone
But they're back again
Just like a long lost friend
All the songs I loved so well

(*) Every Sha-la-la-la
Every Wo-wo-wo
Still shines
Every shing-a-ling-a-ling
That they're starting to sing
So fine

When they get to the part
Where he's breakin' her heart
It can really make me cry
Just like before
It's yesterday once more

Looking back on how it was
In years gone by
And the good times that I had
Makes today seem rather sad
So much has changed

It was songs of love that
I would sing back then
And I'd memorize each word
Those old melodies
Still sound so good to me
As they melt the years away

Repeat (*)

All my best memories
Come back clearly to me
Some can even make me cry
Just like before
It's yesterday once more

Repeat (*)


-----------------------------------

7 Rules For Excellent English Speaking

AJHoge - faculty with a Master of TESOL (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages) - has taught at many universities around the world. After years of teaching English to foreign students, he found that the majority of students do not encounter difficulties when learning English grammar, reading comprehension of them very well. They scored very high in grammar exam test. But when directly talking to the students, he found that the likelihood of them speak English, by contrast, is not good.

The phenomenon arises because of the learning methods current students focus too much on grammar. The English language teachers in the classroom and most are taught grammar, they only do each of the students correct the grammatical errors that do not focus on other skills. This has led students of a fear of gibberish when speaking English. Before speaking English sentences typically arrange their thoughts in mind, choose words and arrange them according to the rules of grammar, that they speak English is not natural.

To overcome this weakness to the students in particular and for people learning English in general. AJHoge has developed a learning method improves the ability to speak English. Methods This study focused on English language skills of listening. And when your listening skills improve, the ability to speak is also easy to grow. Learning method applies the approach of a child's language. It was heard before school. When you hear the English language becomes familiar, you would naturally say not to go through an intermediate step in translating them from the native language into English

AJHoge - một giảng viên có bằng Master of TESOL (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages) - đã từng giảng dạy ở nhiều trường đại học trên thế giới. Sau nhiều năm dạy Anh ngữ cho các sinh viên nước ngoài, ông nhận thấy rằng phần lớn các sinh viên đều không gặp phải khó khăn gì khi học ngữ pháp tiếng Anh, khả năng đọc hiểu của họ rất tốt. Họ đạt điểm ngữ pháp rất cao trong các kì thi kiểm tra. Thế nhưng khi trực tiếp nói chuyện với các sinh viên, ông phát hiện rằng khả năng nói tiếng Anh của họ thì ngược lại, không được tốt.

Hiện tượng trên phát sinh là do phương pháp học tập của các sinh viên hiện tại chú trọng quá nhiều vào ngữ pháp. Các thầy cô dạy Anh ngữ ở các lớp học cũng đa phần là dạy ngữ pháp, họ chỉ làm mỗi việc là sửa cho sinh viên những lỗi ngữ pháp mà không chú trọng tới các kỹ năng khác. Điều này đã khiến sinh viên mang một tâm lý sợ sai ngữ pháp khi nói tiếng Anh. Trước khi nói một câu tiếng Anh họ thường sắp xếp các ý nghĩ trong đầu, chọn lựa từ ngữ rồi sắp xếp chúng theo đúng các quy tắc ngữ pháp, khiến họ nói tiếng Anh không được tự nhiên.

Để khắc phục điểm yếu này cho các sinh viên nói riêng và cho những người học Anh ngữ nói chung. A.J.Hoge đã phát triển một phương pháp học tập giúp nâng cao khả năng nói tiếng Anh. Phương pháp học tập này tập trung nhiều vào kỹ năng nghe Anh ngữ. Và khi khả năng nghe của bạn được nâng cao thì khả năng nói cũng dễ dàng phát triển. Phương pháp học tập này áp dụng theo cách tiếp cận ngôn ngữ của một đứa trẻ. Đó là học nghe trước. Khi bạn nghe tiếng Anh trở nên quen thuộc, bạn sẽ nói ra một cách tự nhiên không phải trải qua một bước trung gian là dịch chúng trong đầu từ ngôn ngữ mẹ đẻ sang tiếng Anh


Effort English: Rule 1

Click: Rule 1
effortless-english

Effort English: Rule 2

Click: Rule 2

Effort English: Rule 3

Click: Rule 3

Effort English: Rule 4

Click: Rule 4

Effort English: Rule 5

Click: Rule 5

Effort English: Rule 6

Click: Rule 6

Effort English: Rule 7

Click: Rule 7


The Method Works !

“The method works, you just need to relax and enjoy. Remember: the only thing needed is patience. Listen, answer, and one day, your brain will make the miracle. We start to think in English, without translations.”

Vicente, Queretaro, Mexico

[Funy Stories] Women's Tear

Three husbands met each other. The first one who was a soldier said:

- Woman's tear is a classic weapon but very dangerous.

The second one who was a weatherforcaster said:

- Woman's tear is a light shower but it can become a flood that can dip many person's dead.

The third one who was a chemist said:

- Woman's tear is a special chemical that can ruin steely hearts.

Grammar notes:

- Đại từ quan hệ Who

Nó thay thế cho danh từ chỉ người hoặc động vật đứng trước nó và đóng vai trò chủ ngữ của câu phụ. Trong trường hợp này không thể lược bỏ who:

The man who is in this room is angry.

[Funy Stories] Heart Transplant

A man has a heart attack and is brought to the hospital ER. The doctor tells him that he will not live unless he has a heart transplant right away. Another doctor runs into the room and says,

"You're in luck, two hearts just became available, so you will get to choose which one you want. One belongs to an attorney and the other to a social worker".

The man quickly responds, "the attorney's".

The doctor says, "Wait! Don't you want to know a little about them before you make your decision?"

The man says, "I already know enough. We all know that social workers are bleeding hearts and the attorney's probably never used his. So I'll take the attorney's!"

Grammar notes:
Heart Transplant

- right away: ngay lập tức, ngay lúc đó
Unless he has a heart transplant right away.

- be in luck: có may mắn, gặp may
You're in luck.

- belong to: thuộc về, thuộc sở hữu của...
One belongs to an attorney and the other to a social worker

- make decision: ra quyết định
...you make your decision.

[Funy Stories] How to Make the Right Decisions

The other day I had the opportunity to drop by my department head's office. He's a friendly guy and on the rare opportunities that I have to pay him a visit, we have had enjoyable conversations. While I was in his office yesterday I asked him

"Sir, What is the secret of your success?"

"Two words"

"And, Sir, what are they?"
two-words

"Right decisions."

"But how do you make right decisions?"

"One word."

"And, sir, What is that?"

"Experience."

"And how do you get Experience?"

"Two words"

"And, Sir, what are they?"

"Wrong decisions"

Click to hear all

Grammar notes:

- drop by: thăm ai đó, có thể do nhân tiện, tranh thủ, tình cờ... không phải viếng thăm chính thức

The other day I had the opportunity to drop by my department head's office.

- pay someone a visit: tới thăm ai đó

I have to pay him a visit.

Thứ Bảy, 21 tháng 7, 2012

Follow Me - Advanced all in Video Show

Follow Me ! was a series of television programmes produced by the BBC in the late 1970s as a crash course in the English language. It was popular in many overseas countries as a first introduction to English.

*Dictionary online*
You just type new words and see their meaning.

Today e Tiến Anh@etienanh.blogspot.com introduce to you the next lesson beginner program follow me, this is the basic lessons to help beginners more manageable. Proceed to follow the lessons in the Follow Me - Advanced, includes 30 video lessons.

Here it is in our channel and we hope you find it useful.

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 1

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 2

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 3

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 4

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 5
Follow Me - Advanced
Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 6

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 7

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 8

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 9

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 10

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 11

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 12

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 13

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 14

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 15

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 16

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 17

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 18

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 19

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 20

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 21

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 22

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 23

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 24

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 25

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 26

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 27

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 28

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 29

Click: Follow Me - Advanced - 30

Follow Me - InterMediate all lessons in Video Show

Follow Me ! was a series of television programmes produced by the BBC in the late 1970s as a crash course in the English language. It was popular in many overseas countries as a first introduction to English.

*Dictionary online*
You just type new words and see their meaning.

Today e Tiến Anh@etienanh.blogspot.com introduce to you the next lesson beginner program follow me, this is the basic lessons to help beginners more manageable. Proceed to follow the lessons in the Follow Me - InterMediate, includes 30 video lessons.

Here it is in our channel and we hope you find it useful.


Follow Me - InterMediate

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 1

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 2

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 3

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 4

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 5

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 6

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 7

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 8

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 9

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 10

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 11

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 12

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 13

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 14

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 15

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 16

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 17

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 18

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 19

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 20

Follow Me - InterMediate
Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 21

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 22

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 23

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 24

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 25

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 26

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 27

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 28

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 29

Click: Follow Me - InterMediate - 30

Follow Me - Elementary all lessons in Video Show

Follow Me ! was a series of television programmes produced by the BBC in the late 1970s as a crash course in the English language. It was popular in many overseas countries as a first introduction to English.

*Dictionary online*
You just type new words and see their meaning.

Today e Tiến Anh@etienanh.blogspot.com introduce to you the next lesson beginner program follow me, this is the basic lessons to help beginners more manageable. Proceed to follow the lessons in the Follow Me - Elementary, includes 30 video lessons.

Here it is in our channel and we hope you find it useful.



Follow Me - Elementary
Follow Me - Elementary - 1

Follow Me - Elementary - 2

Follow Me - Elementary - 3

Follow Me - Elementary - 4

Follow Me - Elementary - 5

Follow Me - Elementary - 6

Follow Me - Elementary - 7

Follow Me - Elementary - 8

Follow Me - Elementary - 9

Follow Me - Elementary - 10

Follow Me - Elementary - 11

Follow Me - Elementary - 12

Follow Me - Elementary - 13

Follow Me - Elementary - 14

Follow Me - Elementary - 15

Follow Me - Elementary - 16

Follow Me - Elementary - 17

Follow Me - Elementary - 18

Follow Me - Elementary - 19

Follow Me - Elementary - 20

Follow Me - Elementary - 21

Follow Me - Elementary - 22

Follow Me - Elementary - 23

Follow Me - Elementary - 24

Follow Me - Elementary - 25

Follow Me - Elementary - 26

Follow Me - Elementary - 27

Follow Me - Elementary - 28

Follow Me - Elementary - 29

Think And Grow Rich - Napoleon Hill

Nghĩ giàu và Làm giàu

Tác giả: Napoleon Hill

Bí mật tư duy triệu phú của T.Harv Eker

Nguyên bản: Secrets of the Millionaire Mind
Tác giả: T.Harv Eker


Thứ Sáu, 20 tháng 7, 2012

5 Chiến thuật học ngoại ngữ hiệu quả

Dưới đây là video "Phương pháp học Tiếng Anh Hiệu Quả" của Anh Phạm Quang Hưng. Các bạn cùng theo dõi những trải nghiệm của anh.


IELTS introduction all in one video



An introduction to the IELTS exam explaining the listening, reading and writing sections of the Academic and General versions of IELTS with information on test questions.




IELTS speaking test - Part 3



3 sections:

+ Introduction and Interview:

lasts about 4-5 minutes and gives the examiner the chance to find out a little about you through some simple 'getting-to-know-you' questions.

+ The Long Turn:

exam you have to speak for between 1 and 2 minutes on a set topic based on information on a card the examiner will give you. You'll be a given a minute to prepare what you want to say - just enough time to jot down some ideas to help give your talk structure and interest.

+ Two-Way Discussion:

lasts between 4-5 minutes, you will participate in a discussion with the examiner based on the topic in Part 2. The examiner is likely to ask you questions based on your experience or opinion of the subject.

IELTS speaking test - 2



3 sections:

+ Introduction and Interview:

lasts about 4-5 minutes and gives the examiner the chance to find out a little about you through some simple 'getting-to-know-you' questions.

+ The Long Turn:

exam you have to speak for between 1 and 2 minutes on a set topic based on information on a card the examiner will give you. You'll be a given a minute to prepare what you want to say - just enough time to jot down some ideas to help give your talk structure and interest.

+ Two-Way Discussion:

lasts between 4-5 minutes, you will participate in a discussion with the examiner based on the topic in Part 2. The examiner is likely to ask you questions based on your experience or opinion of the subject.

IELTS speaking test - Part 1



3 sections:

+ Introduction and Interview:

lasts about 4-5 minutes and gives the examiner the chance to find out a little about you through some simple 'getting-to-know-you' questions.

+ The Long Turn:

exam you have to speak for between 1 and 2 minutes on a set topic based on information on a card the examiner will give you. You'll be a given a minute to prepare what you want to say - just enough time to jot down some ideas to help give your talk structure and interest.

+ Two-Way Discussion:

lasts between 4-5 minutes, you will participate in a discussion with the examiner based on the topic in Part 2. The examiner is likely to ask you questions based on your experience or opinion of the subject.

St: youtube.com

Tải tài liệu tiếng Anh cho các cuộc hội họp

English for Meetings is an ideal short course for professionals who need to participate in meetings in English. Overview English for Meetings teaches students the skills and language they need to participate in a meeting with confidence. The course gives students techniques and strategies to help them communicate in business meetings, using appropriate vocabulary, key expressions, and phrases. Each unit of English for Meetings addresses a different scenario which students may come across in a meeting. The course is suitable for those chairing the meeting, as well as for other participants. English for Meetings also covers other important topics surrounding the meeting itself, such as initial small talk, and how to follow-up on action points.

english-meetings

Link Download: English for Meetings_Kenneth Thomson


Tài liệu luyện thi IELTS

Dưới đây là một bộ tài liệu do bạn có nickname: Bear đã chia sẽ trên web, hôm nay e Tiến Anh@etienanh.blogspot.com mạn phép trích dẫn và chia sẽ link để các bạn cùng tham khảo nhé.

luyện thi IELTS

Cũng có 1 chút kinh nghiệm về kỳ thi IELTS, nên hôm nay chia sẻ cùng mọi người.
Muốn đạt điểm cao ở kỳ thi IELTS, có 1 điểm rất quan trọng mà Bear nghĩ ai cũng
biết: LUYỆN TẬP THƯỜNG XUYÊN.

Tuy nhiên, cũng có 1 điểm cực kỳ quan trọng mà đa số thường không chú trọng lắm.
Đó là phần từ vựng dạng ACADEMIC (học thuật).
Nên để đạt điểm cao trong kỳ thi IELTS, ôn luyện từ trong quyển 22.000 từ THI
TOEFL/IELTS của Harold Levine là cực kỳ cần thiết. Mỗi ngày chỉ cần học 3 từ, thì
lượng từ vựng của bạn sẽ tăng đáng kể.

Tài liệu luyện thi IELTS

Click link to Download: Tài liệu luyện thi IELTS

1100 words you need to know

A Barron's bestseller for years, this book is better than ever in a brand new fourth edition. In addition to its standard vocabulary lists, this edition includes a new section called Panorama of Words. In this feature, each of the 1100 words appears in a sentence selected from among well known novels, plays, poems, and even newspaper editorials and TV broadcasts. The book is a vocabulary builder aimed directly at college-bound high school students, as well as college students who need extra vocabulary help. Students will find word lists with definitions, analogy exercises, entertaining word games, and fascinating words-in-context exercises.

1100 words you need to know

Click to Download: 1100 words you need to know

St: tailieu.vn

Thứ Năm, 19 tháng 7, 2012

Health Report: Starting Younger to Prevent Dating Abuse

middle school
A middle school in Seattle, Washington
This is the VOA Special English Health Report.

Programs that teach young people how to avoid abusive relationships are generally for high school or college age. But new programs are being created for younger students because they too experience abusive dating relationships.

Earlier this year the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation released a study done in the United States. Fifteen percent of seventh graders in the study said they had been the victim of physical violence in a relationship with the opposite sex. Seventh graders are about twelve years old.
*Dictionary online*
You just type new words and see their meaning.



Listen | Click PLAY

Download PDF file:

Add on: 1tudien
Kelly Miller, a lawyer in the state of Idaho, directs a program called Start Strong Idaho. It started three and a half years ago. The goal is to help eleven- to fourteen-year-olds learn the skills to have healthy and safe relationships. For example, she teaches them to "wait a second and breathe" before they make a decision.

Ms. Miller says a big problem for young people is that television programs, video games and movies often show violent relationships. Mobile phones and the Internet can also create problems.

KELLY MILLER: "Now young people have access to one another 24/7, which I think really can complicate lives of young people that don't have the skills or boundaries or that ability to say, 'No I can't text you at two in the morning' or 'No, I really need to get to sleep by eleven because I've got a test tomorrow morning."

Kelly Miller says young people need adults to teach them what it means to have a healthy relationship. Several American cities have received money from the CDC, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, for programs to prevent abusive relationships.

A private organization called Men Can Stop Rape has groups for boys between the ages of twelve and fourteen. These Men of Strength, or MOST, groups teach boys that being a strong man is not always about physical strength.

They learn that if they respect themselves and others, they will be men of strength. They are also taught that they can be allies of girls and women. A CDC study showed that boys in these groups are more likely help a young woman who is being mistreated by another boy.

In Idaho, the state does a Youth Risk Behavior Survey each year. Ms. Miller says the number of high school students who say they have been physically hurt by a dating partner has dropped by six percentage points in the past six years.

KELLY MILLER: "So we're hopeful if we continue this work in really promoting healthy teen relationships and teaching those skills, that we can continue to impact the Youth Risk Behavior Survey question."

Next week, we look at some of the skills needed to build healthy relationships.

And that's the VOA Special English Health Report, available online at voaspecialenglish.com. Read, listen and learn English with our programs and activities. You can also find links to the Start Strong Idaho and Men Can Stop Rape websites. I'm Karen Leggett.

Thứ Ba, 17 tháng 7, 2012

Words and Their Stories: Money Talks

I'm Susan Clark with WORDS AND THEIR STORIES, a program in Special English on the Voice of America.

People often say that money talks. They mean that a person with a lot of money can say how he or she wants things done. But it is not easy to earn enough money to gain this kind of power.

Ask anyone in a business. They will tell you that it is a jungle out there. The expression probably began because the jungle is filled with wild animals and unknown dangers that threaten people. Sometimes people in business feel competing businesses are as dangerous as wild animals. And they feel that unknown dangers in the business world threaten the survival of their business.

People in business have to be careful if they are to survive the jungle out there. They must not be led into making bogus investments. Bogus means something that is not real.

*Dictionary online*
You just type new words and see their meaning.



Listen | Click PLAY

Download PDF file:

Add on: 1tudien
Nobody is sure how the word got started. But it began to appear in American newspapers in the eighteen hundreds. A newspaper in Boston, Massachusetts said the word came from a criminal whose name was Borghese. The newspaper said Borghese wrote checks to people although he did not have enough money in the bank. After he wrote the checks, he would flee from town. So, people who were paid with his checks received nothing. The newspaper said Americans shortened and changed the criminal's name Borghese, to bogus.

People trying to earn money also must be aware of being ripped off. A person who is ripped off has had something stolen, or at least has been treated very unfairly.

A writer for the magazine "American Speech" said he first saw the expression used in nineteen seventy-one. It was on a sign that a student carried during a protest demonstration at a university. The message on the sign was that the student felt ripped off, or cheated.

Perhaps the best way to prevent getting ripped off in business is to not try to get rich quickly. To be successful, a person in business works hard and tries to get down to brass tacks.

This expression means to get to the bottom or most important part of something. For example, a salesman may talk and talk about his product without saying the price. You get down to brass tacks when you say, "it sounds good, but how much does it cost?"

Word expert Charles Funk thinks the expression comes from sailors on ships. They clean the bottom of a boat. When they have removed all the dirt, they are down to the brass tacks, the copper pieces that hold the boat together.

So, if we get down to brass tacks, we can prevent ripoffs and bogus ways of earning money in that jungle out there. And, some good luck will help, too.

(MUSIC)

This WORDS AND THEIR STORIES was written by Jeri Watson. I'm Susan Clark

Words and Their Stories: Money (Part 3)

Now, the VOA Special English program WORDS AND THEIR STORIES.

A lottery winner leaves the Rhode Island Lottery headquarters in a limousine after being presented a check for $336.4 million

Most people enjoy working for several reasons. Their job might be fun, or they like their employer and the other people at work. Most people I know, however, work for the money. I do not know anyone who is loaded, or extremely rich. Most of my friends work to earn enough money to live. They have to make ends meet. They have to earn enough money to pay for the things they need. Some even live from hand to mouth.
They only have enough money for the most important things.


*Dictionary online*
You just type new words and see their meaning.



Listen | Click PLAY to hear report

Download pdf:
They struggle to earn enough money to bring home the bacon. It can be difficult to earn enough money for a family to survive. Sometimes, poor people even get caught short. They do not have enough money to pay for what they need.


Or they have to spend or lay out more money than they want for something. When this happens, poor people have to tighten their belts and live on less money than usual. I hate when I have to live on less money. It takes me longer to get back on my feet, or return to good financial health.


However, other people are on the gravy train. They get paid more money than their job is worth. These people make a bundle. They really rake in the cash. In fact, they make so much money that they can live high off the hog. They own the best of everything and live in great ease. Sometimes they pay an arm and a leg for something.


Because money is no object to wealthy people, they will pay high prices for whatever they want. Sometimes, they even pay through the nose. They pay too much for things.


I am not rich. I did not make a killing in the stock market when my stocks increased in value. Yet, I am not poor either. When I go out with friends, I do not want to shell out or pay a lot of money. Often, my friends and I will chip in or pay jointly for a fun night out. When we go to restaurants the meal is Dutch treat. Each person pays his or her own share.


Once, the owner of a restaurant gave us a dinner on the house. We did not have to pay for our meals. However, I admit that we had to grease someone’s palm. We had to pay money to the employee who led us to our table. The money was for a special request. Yes, it was a buy off. The employee put us at the top of the list for a table instead of making us wait like everyone else. We had a great time that night and the meal did not set me back at all. I did not have to pay anything.


Because of that experience, I will always remember that nice things still happen in a world that is driven by money. But, that is just my two cents worth. It is just my opinion.


(MUSIC)

WORDS AND THEIR STORIES, in VOA Special English, was written by Jill Moss. I’m Faith Lapidus.

Words and Their Stories: Money (Part 2)

Now, the VOA Special English program WORDS AND THEIR STORIES.

Printing Produces Millions of Dollars a Day
Many people believe that money makes the world go around. Others believe that money buys happiness. I do not agree with either idea. But I do admit that money can make people do strange things. Let me tell you about a person I once knew who liked to play card games for money. He liked to gamble.

My friend Bob had a problem because he liked to gamble at all costs. He would play at any time and at any price. To take part in a card game such as poker, my friend would have to ante up. He would have to pay a small amount of money at the beginning of the game.


*Dictionary online*
You just type new words and see their meaning.



Listen | Click PLAY to hear report

Download pdf:
Bob always played with cold, hard cash --only coins and dollar bills. Sometimes my friend would clean up. He would win a lot of money on one card game. He liked to tell me that one day he would break the bank. What a feeling it must be to win all of the money at a gambling table!

Other times my friend would simply break even. He neither won nor lost money. But sometimes Bob would lose his shirt. He would lose all the money he had. He took a beating at the gambling table. When this happened, my friend would have to go in the hole. He would go into debt and owe people money.

Recently, Bob turned to crime after losing all his money. In his job, he kept the books for a small business. He supervised the records of money earned and spent by the company. Although my friend was usually honest, he decided to cook the books. He illegally changed the financial records of the company. This permitted him to make a fast buck. My friend made some quick, easy money dishonestly.

I never thought Bob would have sticky fingers. He did not seem like a thief who would steal money. But, some people will do anything for love of money.

Bob used the money he stole from his company to gamble again. This time, he cashed in. He made a lot of money. Quickly he was back on his feet. He had returned to good financial health. His company, however, ended up in the red. It lost more money than it earned. The company was no longer profitable.

It did not take long before my friend’s dishonesty was discovered. The company investigated and charged him with stealing. Bob tried to pass the buck. He tried to blame someone else for the deficit. His lie did not work, however. He ended up in jail. Today, I would bet my bottom dollar that my friend will never gamble again. I would bet all I have that he learned his lesson about gambling.

(MUSIC)

WORDS AND THEIR STORIES, in VOA Special English, was written by Jill Moss. I’m Faith Lapidus.

Words and Their Stories: Money Talks - Money (part 1)

Now, the VOA Special English program WORDS AND THEIR STORIES.

Powerball Winners
Twenty Powerball Winners in Iowa will split a $241 million lottery windfall they won earlier this month


I think people everywhere dream about having lots of money. I know I do. I would give anything to make money hand over fist. I would like to earn large amounts of money. You could win a large amount of money in the United States through lotteries. People pay money for tickets with numbers. If your combination of numbers is chosen, you win a huge amount of money – often in the millions. Winning the lottery is a windfall.

*Dictionary online*
You just type new words and see their meaning.



Listen | Click PLAY to hear report

Download pdf:
A few years ago, my friend Al won the lottery. It changed his life. He did not have a rich family. He was not born with a silver spoon in his mouth. Instead, my friend was always hard up for cash. He did not have much money. And the money he did earn was chicken feed – very little.


Sometimes Al even had to accept hand-outs, gifts from his family and friends. But do not get me wrong. My friend was not a deadbeat. He was not the kind of person who never paid the money he owed. He simply pinched pennies. He was always very careful with the money he spent. In fact, he was often a cheapskate. He did not like to spend money. The worst times were when he was flat broke and had no money at all.


One day, Al scraped together a few dollars for a lottery ticket. He thought he would never strike it rich or gain lots of money unexpectedly. But his combination of numbers was chosen and he won the lottery. He hit the jackpot. He won a great deal of money.


Al was so excited. The first thing he did was buy a costly new car. He splurged on the one thing that he normally would not buy. Then he started spending money on unnecessary things. He started to waste it. It was like he had money to burn. He had more money than he needed and it was burning a hole in his pocket so he spent it quickly.


When we got together for a meal at a restaurant, Al paid every time. He would always foot the bill, and pick up the tab. He told me the money made him feel like a million dollars. He was very happy.


But, Al spent too much money. Soon my friend was down and out again. He had no money left. He was back to being strapped for cash. He had spent his bottom dollar, his very last amount. He did not even build up a nest egg. He had not saved any of the money.


I admit I do feel sorry for my friend. He had enough money to live like a king. Instead, he is back to living on a shoestring -- a very low budget. Some might say he is penny wise and pound foolish. He was wise about small things, but not about important things.


(MUSIC)

WORDS AND THEIR STORIES, in VOA Special English, was written by Jill Moss. I’m Faith Lapidus.

Kitchen Chemistry: The Science of Herbs and Spices

FAITH LAPIDUS: This is SCIENCE IN THE NEWS a program in VOA Special English. I’m Faith Lapidus

spice seller
A spice seller in Yemen
BOB DOUGHTY: And I’m Bob Doughty. Today, we will tell about herbs and spices, and some of their many uses.


(MUSIC)


FAITH LAPIDUS: People have been using herbs and spices for thousands of years. Generally, herbs come from the green leaves of plants or vegetables. Spices come from other parts of plants and trees. For example, cinnamon comes from the hard outer cover of cinnamon plants. The spice ginger comes from the part of the ginger plant that grows underground.


Some herbs and spices are valued for their taste. They help to sharpen the taste of many foods. Others are chosen for their smell. Still others were used traditionally for health reasons.

*Dictionary online*
You just type new words and see their meaning.



Listen | Click PLAY to hear report
Download pdf:
BOB DOUGHTY: Some herbs and spices may be gaining importance in modern medicine. For example, American researchers say red pepper could help people seeking to lose weight. They say this could be especially true for people who do not usually add spices to their food.


Researchers from Purdue University reported about the effects of red pepper in the journal Physiology & Behavior. They found that small changes in diet, like adding the pepper, may reduce the desire to eat.


FAITH LAPIDUS: The spice used in the study was dried and ground cayenne red pepper. Cayenne is a chili pepper. Most chili peppers contain capsaicin -- a substance that makes chili peppers hot. Other studies have shown that capsaicin can reduce hunger and burn calories, the energy stored in food.


Over six weeks, twenty-five people of normal weight took part in the study. Thirteen of them liked spicy food. The twelve others did not. The researchers decided how much red pepper each group would receive.


One and eight-tenths grams of the pepper was given to each person who liked spicy food. The others received three-tenths of a gram.


BOB DOUGHTY: The people who did not normally eat red pepper showed a decreased desire for food. That was especially true for fatty, salty and sweet foods.


Purdue University Professor Richard Mattes said the effect may be true only for people who do not usually eat red pepper. He said the effectiveness of the pepper may be lost if spices are normally part of a person’s diet. He said further study needs to be done. The goal is to learn how long the effect of red peppers will last and how to extend the effectiveness.


(MUSIC)


FAITH LAPIDUS: The spice turmeric comes from a tropical plant common to India. Research involving turmeric is not new. Scientists have been studying its medical possibilities for many years.


For example, researchers in Singapore completed one such study several years ago. The study was based on earlier evidence that turmeric has strong antioxidant and anti-inflammatory qualities. These qualities can help protect against damage to the body’s tissues and other injuries.


BOB DOUGHTY: The researchers said turmeric may reduce evidence of damage in the brains of patients with Alzheimer’s disease. For this reason, the researchers designed a study that examined results from a mental-performance test of older Asian adults. The study involved curry, which contains turmeric.


The adults were sixty to ninety-three years old. None had severe memory losses. Those who sometimes ate curry did better on the tests than individuals who rarely or never ate curry. This was also true of those who ate it often or very often.


FAITH LAPIDUS: The work of the Mayo Clinic and its medical experts is world famous. In its Health Letter several years ago, the Mayo Clinic provided more evidence that herbs and spices can aid health. Its experts said spices could reduce salt use for people with health conditions like high blood pressure.


The experts said some plant chemicals are high in antioxidants. In addition to turmeric, these include cinnamon, ginger, oregano, sage and thyme.


The experts also said antioxidants like garlic, rosemary and saffron have qualities that could fight cancer. They also said limited evidence shows that cinnamon, fenugreek and turmeric may affect blood sugar levels in people with diabetes.


(MUSIC)


You are listening to SCIENCE IN THE NEWS in VOA Special English. With Bob Doughty, I’m Faith Lapidus in Washington.


BOB DOUGHTY: Cooking meat at high temperatures in the open air is a favorite activity of many Americans. But the country’s National Cancer Institute warns that this kind of meat preparation creates heterocyclic amines, also known as HCAs.


Scientists say HCAs contain substances that probably can help cause cancer. These chemicals form when amino acids react with creatine, a chemical found in muscles. Meats from organs and non-meat protein sources have little or no HCA.


Research on HCAs has made some people afraid to cook meat on a barbecue grill. On a grill, the meat heats over coals or a gas or open fire. But studies have found that adding spices to meat before cooking at high temperatures may reduce harmful chemicals. This can be done by preparing a marinade and placing it on the meat before cooking. Marinades usually contain spices and herbs added to vinegar, wine or oil. This liquid mixture also softens the meat.


FAITH LAPIDUS: Researchers from Kansas State University experimented with marinades and meat in a study published in two thousand eight. The researchers placed some steaks in already prepared marinades.


The meat then was heated for five minutes on each side at a temperature of more than two hundred degrees Celsius. The researchers also cooked steaks marinated without spices, and steaks that were not marinated. They were prepared at the same temperature as meat with the marinade mixes.


The researchers compared levels of the HCAs in all the steaks. They found that the HCAs in the meat marinated in spices had decreased up to eighty- eight percent.


BOB DOUGHTY: Other unwanted substances, called PAHs, can be found in some meat cooked at high temperatures. The United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says these chemicals probably cause cancer. PAHs form when animal fat drops onto hot coals. The fat makes flames from the coals rise, leaving the PAHs on the meat.


Purdue University experts have a suggestion for preventing this. They advise people to use cooking tools that do not break the skin of the meat when turning it on the barbecue grill. And they say placing the meat in a marinade before grilling is helpful.


(MUSIC)


FAITH LAPIDUS: Herbs and spices are not used just to lessen unwanted chemical effects. They make food taste better. Some spices also destroy bacteria. Spices have long been used to keep food safe to eat. In the past, spices also helped to prevent the wasting away of dead bodies.


Herb and spice plants grow in many countries. For example, the Molucca Islands in Indonesia are famous for producing spices like cloves, nutmeg and mace. Vanilla comes from orchid plants growing in South America and other places with warm, moist weather.


BOB DOUGHTY: Spices have influenced world history. Ancient trade routes brought spices and silk to the Mediterranean Sea area beginning more than six thousand years ago. The Goth people of Europe defeated Roman forces in battle more than sixteen centuries ago. After the fighting ended, the leader of the Goths is said to have demanded five-thousand pounds of gold and three thousand pounds of pepper.


In later years, Marco Polo and Christopher Columbus discovered new lands while seeking to extend trade with spice-growing areas in Asia. The Italian cities of Genoa and Venice became powerful because they were at the center of the spice trade. The trade was so important to national economies that rulers launched wars in their struggle to control spices.


(MUSIC)


FAITH LAPIDUS: This SCIENCE IN THE NEWS program was written by Jerilyn Watson. Our producer was June Simms. I’m Faith Lapidus.


BOB DOUGHTY: And I’m Bob Doughty. You can find transcripts, MP3s and podcasts of our programs at voaspecialenglish.com. And you can find us on Twitter and YouTube at VOA Learning English. Join us again next week for more news about science in Special English on the Voice of America.