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Has anyone tried to improve his/her English with something different from the usual courses created on purpose for them? I don't want one of them (they are simply lessons for lessons, but I already know how to teach, I've done it for more than 25 years!) What I need is simply a way to remember more words and expressions, which I keep forgetting a few minutes after reading them!!!! And I add that I've even written about 30 books in English! Is it only a matter of age or are there any tricks you've tried yourselves and they work? By the way, my native language is Italian but I like English so much I'm frustrated when there's an expression I don't know yet or I keep forgetting and can't use myself.Thank you so much.

2006-10-05 09:12:09 · 4 answers · asked by gardengate 4 in Society & Culture Languages

4 answers

A decade ago to learn English, you had to attend costly English classes or purchase course material like tapes and books. Now you can learn English for free from the comfort of your home using the internet. The BBC and the British Council offer a number of online courses which teach written and spoken English. You can also improve your English by watching television programs and reading English newspapers. For more information, visit http://tinyurl.com/qnzpt

2006-10-06 19:16:49 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

First of all: do not permit someone inform you that you don't have any proficiency in anything - no longer your household, and no longer your lecturers. Many of the finest writers in historical past had been informed this as pupils. Secondly, I'd love to factor out that your spelling and grammar is certainly 1000x bigger than such a lot individuals on Yahoo Answers! Reading does aid, however you need to ensure it is approximately anything you are excited by! And seeing that it will possibly many times be rough to encourage your self, why no longer prefer a guide that each you and a pal might be excited by and browse it in combination? Each of you learn a couple of chapters (by way of yourselves) after which join up as soon as every week to speak approximately the guide and what you suppose of it to this point. You gets a lot more out of it this manner! Do you have got your draft typed up? If you e mail it to me I'd like to learn it over and supply you a few extra suggestions :) It's simply rough to supply common suggestions if I do not truthfully recognise what your writing is like.

2016-08-29 07:22:57 · answer #2 · answered by liebermann 4 · 0 0

It sounds by "expression" that you may be having trouble with idioms. When I learned English, this was the hardest for me too since they are often not what they say. Here are some helpful websites (listed below) that deal with the subject.

http://www.geocities.com/Athens/aegean/6720/
http://humanities.byu.edu/elc/student/idioms/idiomsmain.html
http://www.goenglish.com/Idioms.asp

As to remembering things, if something is made "significant" in one's working memory (i.e. short-term memory), it has a greater chance of being transferred to the permament (i.e. long-term) memory. Try adding a tune or rhythm to phrases, relating them to something in your life, or categorizing certain ones so that one reminds you of another. You can do the same with words, not just with these phrases.

2006-10-05 09:23:11 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

If you really want to improve your English, try teaching/tutoring it.
I've taught English for over 25 years, and, boy, have I learned a LOT about it.

2006-10-05 09:24:09 · answer #4 · answered by johnslat 7 · 0 0

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