时间:2019-02-14 作者:英语课 分类:英语单词大师-Word Master


英语课

 Guest host Mike O'Sullivan talks with an author (familiar to our longtime listeners) whose newest books use fairy tales to teach foreign languages to American children.


David Burke is known as Slangman, and in his earlier books, he translated the language of American teenagers for an older generation, and deciphered American idioms for English language learners overseas.
His latest effort targets American children who know little of foreign languages. He has written a series of books based on the observation that fairy tales are widely known across cultures.
DAVID BURKE: "So I got this idea: What if I took a fairy tale, 'Cinderella'? We start it in the native language of the reader, so let's say in English for the American market. So we start in English, and as the reader moves forward, the story starts to morph into another language."ENGLISH-MANDARIN 1 INSTRUCTION: "Once upon a time, there lived a poor girl - nuhaizi - named Cinderella who was very pretty - pioaliang. The nuhaizi, who was very piaoliang, lived in a small house - fangzi."Burke has compiled books of fairy tales with accompanying CDs in Mandarin Chinese, French, Italian, German, Hebrew, Japanese and Spanish.
ENGLISH-SPANISH INSTRUCTION: "Once upon a time, there lived a poor girl - muchacha - named Cinderella who was very pretty - bonita."A separate Spanish-language version helps teach English to Latin American youngsters.
Young readers learn about 20 words at each level, then move to the next level as they read a different fairy tale.
DAVID BURKE: "For example, I've taken the story of 'Goldilocks,' and I bring back all the words the kids have learned in 'Cinderella,' and I add 20 more. And level three is 'Beauty and the Beast.' I bring back all the words from level one, level two, and add 20 more words. So by the end of the entire series, which will be level nine, that will be 100 percent in the target language."Burke says he has a series of comic books planned for teenagers.
DAVID BURKE: "That will have all the words they've learned in the series, plus more words we'll keep introducing. We'll also talk about events that pertain 2 to teenagers. So it will be in their context, but in the language that they've been learning."He says as parents and children read the books, both will benefit.
DAVID BURKE: "Under their radar 3, the kids are going to be learning foreign languages, and their parents too."Burke says students often think of language learning as dull, but it doesn't have to be.
DAVID BURKE: "What I always hear from students is, ugh, I've got to go take French class, I've got to take Spanish class. And that really is painful."Working with an illustrator, he designed his books with colorful cartoon-like illustrations that capture the young reader's imagination.
DAVID BURKE: "In 'Goldilocks,' of course, Goldilocks gets tired and she yawns. And in the book when she yawns, her mouth is as big as big can possibly be. So what we see, she's tired. She's cansada (in Spanish), fatiguee (in French), she's stanca, Italian."He says foreign language learning can become a daily habit.
DAVID BURKE: "When it's bedtime, time for storytelling, the parents can pop on the CD, open the book, and actually learn the foreign language with the child."He says many Europeans are known for their facility with languages, and people in other parts of the world often speak at least two. Americans have a different reputation.
DAVID BURKE: "There's a joke in the linguistic 4 world that's painful, and funny. It's, 'What do you call a person who speaks three languages? Trilingual. And what do you call a person who speaks two languages? Bilingual. And what do you call a person who speaks one language? American."Not all Americans are monolingual, of course. The country's many immigrants bring languages and cultures from all parts of the world. But Burke says too many Americans are fluent only in English, and he is working to change that.
And that's Wordmaster for this week. Archives are online at www.voanews.com/wordmaster and our e-mail address is word@voanews.com.

n.中国官话,国语,满清官吏;adj.华丽辞藻的
  • Just over one billion people speak Mandarin as their native tongue.大约有十亿以上的人口以华语为母语。
  • Mandarin will be the new official language of the European Union.普通话会变成欧盟新的官方语言。
v.(to)附属,从属;关于;有关;适合,相称
  • His remark did not pertain to the question.他的话同这个问题不相干。
  • It does not pertain to you to instruct him.你不适合教训他。
n.雷达,无线电探测器
  • They are following the flight of an aircraft by radar.他们正在用雷达追踪一架飞机的飞行。
  • Enemy ships were detected on the radar.敌舰的影像已显现在雷达上。
adj.语言的,语言学的
  • She is pursuing her linguistic researches.她在从事语言学的研究。
  • The ability to write is a supreme test of linguistic competence.写作能力是对语言能力的最高形式的测试。
学英语单词
abrasive for cutting and grinding wheels
agricultural fabric
antenna coverage
antibutyrylcholinesterasic
atom-like
audiler
beer-lambert's rule
Brea Reservoir
Cao Daist
chemical substances
Chile nitre
clearing summer-heat and tonifying Qi
coplanar force system
costopleural
count value
crystal bar photocell
current-conducting coating
cusped index
cut locus
cybister tripunctatus
daveyton
differential chain block
Diosma succulenta
direct picture television
discount rates
dowel rod
drift fisher
duplication of ureter
dyeing science
elephantine
epicurial
epoxyeicosatrienoic acid
external function call
familial polyposis coli
fastness to bleaching
fretts
full-scale experiment
glucosteroid antagonists
gundy-gut
have a bone to pick with sb
hemangiona of scrotum
homicide in self-defence
indenize
integrated injection logic processor
irons
isolated subsystem
kesterites
kick up its heels
lumbosacral cord
major route
make up pump
malarialist
master segment
master thesis
multi-fiber array
natural polymers
outline font
Panhard rod
paraisoes
permanent assets
phantasm
Plateaux, Rég.des
poreger
postulation
potassium arsenide
puggarees
rack-and-gear jack
radiculoneuritis
range finding
ratface
reemploy
reexport trade
regulation discharge of waterway
Reithrodontomys fulvescens
retrorectal
Rhododendron liliiflorum
ribbonbearers
rocket-assisted take-off gear (ratog)
Rosenheim's enema
runtime accumulator
salt stone
sitan
spit and polish
squamous cell papilloma of nose
subpyramidal
suck sb off
supergraviton
supreme council
target terminal
teledish
tetrabenazine
Thelypteris palustris pubescens
Torre do Terranho
twain
valve-seat
vaneless vaned diffuser
Vicovu de Sus
welt feather bending machine
wife-beater
wordless
working flux
Yomadji