Spelling Rules for Adding -ly

To form a regular adverb we simply add –ly to the corresponding adjective‏‎. slow > slowly woman > womanly autonomous > autonomously However in some cases adding –ly is not a straightforward matter and a few changes are required. Spelling Rules -ic With adjectives ending in -ic you need to […]

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Spelling in English Writing

Spelling is the order in which letters are put to make up words. Many languages have phonetic spelling, in other words, each letter represents a certain sound, however in English this is not the case. An English letter can have many different sounds. For example, the letter c can be […]

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Slang in TEFL

Slang is the use of informal words‏‎ and expressions to describe something or someone. Slang is vocabulary‏‎ that is meant to be interpreted quickly but not necessarily literally. Slang changes fast; here are examples of current 2015 slang which, could well be out of date by the time you read […]

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Puns in TEFL Teaching

Puns are ambiguous; they are words (or phrases) which sound the same but which have two very different meanings used for humorous effect. (A traditional explanation of a pun is a “play on words” but since this defines everything from puns to Spoonerisms to Malapropsims to Pig Latin it really […]

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Principle vs Principal

At the —– School of English, we believe in the principals of accuracy, hard work and having fun. I came across this snippet the other day whilst looking at a school website and it frightened me. If they can’t spell properly, how can they believe in the idea of accuracy? […]

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