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JacksonFive's
Free "Path2English" Newsletter
Issue: 45    "Sounds that Bring English to Life!"    June 3, 2001
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Dear Reader,

    Do you anyone who enjoys working with foreigners and children?
    Someone who likes to be valued as a team player? Someone who
    likes to grow in one of the top English educational environments
    in Taichung? Someone who likes to be a "teacher/administrative
    assistant" for JacksonFive? If you know someone like this in
    Taichung, please contact me at (04) 2473-7578. We have a new
    career opportunity in June. Thanks.

    What is a JacksonFive Summer Camp? It isn't two months of high
    intensity, high pressure in-class English lessons. With all the
    pressure of schooling in Taiwan, kids need to relax and have fun
    sometimes. Don't you think so? We owe it to them to give them
    some fun childhood memories. They need to have fun while still
    learning in a western style environment.

    At JacksonFive Summer Camp, kids learn through hands-on activities
    that encourage their creativity, promote curiosity, and create
    self-confidence. All our activities are designed and lead by
    experienced foreign educators so the learning is continuous yet
    fun. My Summer Camp is designed for parents who need another
    great option besides sending their children abroad for English.
    If you want to give children fun summer-time memories, please
    contact Angel at (04) 2473-7578.
    http://www.jacksonfive.com.tw/Classes/SummerCamp.htm
  (889K MP3 recording,
    http://www.path2english.com/Reference/MP3-045-01.mp3 or
    http://home.pchome.com.tw/education/path2english/MP3-045-01.mp3)

    Recently, I have gotten some emails from readers. The content of
    some of these emails have been, "Who are you and how did you get
    my information?" These readers either have registered for our
    newsletter and have forgotten or their friends have registered for
    them and they forgot to tell them. I think a big reason for me
    getting these emails is because my "software" can automatically
    put your first name after the "Dear" salutation at the top. This
    "personal touch" can scare readers when they receive our
    newsletter for the first time. Therefore, don't forget to tell
    your friends when you register on their behalf. I don't want to
    get more "Who are you and why did you send this to me?" after
    this issue goes out ^_^

    We officially passed the 10,000-member milestone in our
    JacksonFive family. This means that we have more people in our
    family than most small towns in Taiwan. Another way to look at
    this is that .05% of all the people in Taiwan are readers.
    "Hooray! Break out the champagnes!"
  (622K MP3 recording,
    http://www.path2english.com/Reference/MP3-045-02.mp3 or
    http://home.pchome.com.tw/education/path2english/MP3-045-02.mp3)

                                                      See you in the next issue!
                                                      JacksonFive

    P.S. On the down side, it now takes more than 7 hours to send our
            newsletter out to all the readers ^_^ Please don't compound
            the problem by leaving me with an outdated email address ^_^
            So many bounced emails!

THIS ISSUES's FEATURED TOPIC:

    "Sounds that bring English to life!

  During my many years of teaching English, I noticed that Taiwanese
  students don't know about interjection. For example, my use of
  "hooray" above is an interjection.

  What is an interjection? Interjections are "sound-like" words that
  express strong emotions. They're used to make someone notice them
  and to show excitement.

  Interjections in real-life conversations are spoken almost by
  reflex. There is no need for native speakers to add it to their
  conversation "consciously" because they are used to express natural
  emotions (def: with thought).

  Before, I thought interjections were the same sounds in different
  languages because they were essentially sounds that express
  emotions. I was wrong. For example, once I accidentally dropped
  my AC remote control during a class and I said, "Oops!" without
  even thinking. I asked my students if they understood what "Oops"
  meant. To my surprise, they didn't. This brought to my attention
  the importance of teaching about these very common words, which are
  used to express emotion.

  The following are some common interjections, but there are also
  many others. Try sounding them out. You can also listen to these
  interjections at the end:
    Aha! ("understood")
    Alas! (relieved)
    Boo! (trying to scare someone)
    Brrrr! (feeling cold)
    Gee! (excited because of discovering something)
    Gosh! (excited because of discovering something)
    Help!
    Hey! (calling attention)
    Hurrah! (cheering)
    Mmm (thinking)
    Oops! (made a mistake)
    Ouch! (something painful)
    Ow! (painful)
    Shh! ("be quiet")
    Stop!
    Ugh! (something stressful)
    Uh-huh (that's it, now I understand)
    Umm (thinking)
    Well! (discover something)
    Wow! (excited!)
    Yay!
    YES!
    Yikes! (something bad just happened)
    Yippee! (excited from something exciting)
    Yoo-hoo! (calling something or cheering something)
    YOW! (something painful)
    Yuk! (taste bad)
    Yummy! (taste good)
  (816K MP3 recording,
    http://www.path2english.com/Reference/MP3-045-03.mp3 or
    http://home.pchome.com.tw/education/path2english/MP3-045-03.mp3)

  Interjections In Action:
    Interjections are usually followed by and exclamation point (!) or
    sometimes a comma.

    Ouch! Stop pinching me.
    Yes, she did win the game.
    Wow! That's a surprise.
    Ouch, that hurt!
    Oh no, I forgot that the exam was today.
    Hey! Put that down!
    Oops! I spilt my glass of milk.
    Brrrr! It's freezing in here!

  Online Interjection Quizzes:
    http://www.aitech.ac.jp/~iteslj/quizzes/9807/mn-interjections.html

    Hey! Add emotion and life to all your future English conversations
    and writings with interjections.

    Do you know any other fun interjections?

NEXT ISSUES's FEATURED TOPIC:

    "Ships afloat"

(If you benefited from this newsletter, please share it with a friend.)
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