Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Vocabulary Links

Link to idioms A to Z:

http://humanities.byu.edu/elc/student/idioms/idiomsmain.html

http://www.goenglish.com/Idioms.asp






By way of: http://wccniuesl.blogspot.com/2005/06/esl-vocabulary.html

ESL: Vocabulary
http://iteslj.org/links/ESL/Vocabulary/
Another compendium.
This is a sub-page of The Internet TESL Journal's TESL/TEFL/TESOL/ESL/EFL/ESOL Links and includes sites such as
Arabic Number to English Convertor (Requires JavaScript.)
Enter a number up to 999,999,999 and see it spelled out in English.
BBC News English - Words in the News
Read, listen and learn the English in this week's stories.
Common Errors in English (Paul Brians)
Words that native English speakers frequently find confusing.
Common Usage Problems (Vicki Jones and Ann Bertoldie)
Words that native English speakers frequently find confusing.
English for You - Visual Fruit (Donald Hennessey)
Pictures of fruit and their names in English
English for You - Visual Veggies (Donald Hennessey)
Pictures of vegetables and their names in English
Expanding your Vocabulary (La Trobe University)
Brief hints for advanced students.
Language Adventure - Picture Quiz
Easy. Click on the picture of the word you hear. (WAV files)
Megellan's Log - Pronunciation Pairs (Sentences Using Heteronyms) (Douglas Milburn)
We polish the Polish furniture every day. I did not object to the object. etc.
Nick Miller's EFL/ESL Resource Material - Street & Map Terms (Nicholas E. Miller)
A list of words with definitions.
QuiaCom - Matching Quiz - Countries and Nationalities [FRAME] (AH Syed)
Quia.com activity -Columns
specialist.hu - ESL Topics and Vocabulary [FRAME] (English Specialist)
True/false and multiple choice quizzes on basic exam topics and vocabulary
Testing Vocabulary
By S. Kathleen Kitao & Kenji Kitao
The Compleat Lexical Tutor (Tom Cobb)
Test your word knowledge, Learn words at your level, Read & Listen, ...
Vocabulary - Extended Family Chart
A detailed family tree chart: paternal uncle's wife, maternal cousin, ....
Vocabulary Self-Study Quizzes (The Internet TESL Journal)
See the answers right away. Produced by teachers around the world.
Vocabulary Vulcanizer [FRAME] (Paige Jaeger)
Study 'roots' to improve vocabulary: Phobia (=Fear) claustrophobia, xenophobia
Word Safari: vocabulary expeditions (Ruth Pettis)
For native speakers and advanced students. Expand your English vocabulary while surfing the Web
WordOrigins.org's List of Words and Phrases (David Wilton)
baker's dozen, kick the bucket, left wing, Kilroy was here, ...
http://www.antimoon.com/other/activevocab.htm (Tomasz P. Szynalski)
Why it is normal to understand more English words than you can use
http://learners.englishclub.com/esl-articles/200109.htm (Josef Essberger)
Gonna, Ain't, Gimme, Gotta, Kinda, Wanna, Whatcha, ...
http://vocabulary.englishclub.com/interjections.htm (Josef Essberger)
Charts with meanings and examples: Ah, Alas, Dear, Eh, ...
http://vocabulary.englishclub.com/cw_say-tell.htm (Josef Essberger)
How to use say and tell.
http://vocabulary.englishclub.com/time_tell.htm (Josef Essberger)
UK English: 'just gone three o'clock'; Others: 'a quarter past three' etc.
http://www.forumeducation.net/servlet/pages/vi/mat/voc.htm (Sven Cederberg)
300+ word formation exercises
http://www.forumeducation.net/servlet/pages/vi/mat/voc.htm#1 (Sven Cederberg)
Example of random generated test from huge database
http://www.googlefight.com/cgi-bin/compare.pl?q1=%22The+love+of+money+is+a+root+of+all+evil%22&q2=%22Money+is+the+root+of+all+evil.%22&B1=Make+a+fight%21&compare=1&langue=us (Create Your Own Vocabulary Study)
The love of money is the root of all evil. VS Money is the root of all evil.
http://www.learnenglish.de/vocabulary/buildings.htm#UsefulVocab
See pictures of vocabulary, a dialogue, crossword puzzles, dictation/spelling, .
http://www.learnenglish.de/vocabulary/rooms.htm#UsefulVocab
See pictures of vocabulary, a dialogue, crossword puzzle and jumbled words

I like to see specific categories of words (buildings, rooms, time, fruits and vegetables), and also idioms and informal contractions, which always confound students. There are a few that have online quizzes and pictures to help students understand better. Students who learned English the British way can find translations into American English, and even specific tools such as the Arabic Number to English convertor have a real value for students. Some of the sites are better than others, so if you find one particularly useful (or not at all useful), share it with your fellow bloggers.

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