Uploaded by Linguaspectrum on Oct 30, 2009
Extras: http://linguaspectrum.com/lessons/language_lessons/we_are_family/
We are all of us part of a family of one sort or another. Family members have various names in English and some of them like husband, wife, uncle, aunt, nephew and niece, are among the few English words that have gender. This video shows how the members of an extended family are related to each other. From grandfather and grandmother though parents - father and mother - to sons, daughters, brother and sister, grandchildren and cousins, this video gives you all the words you need to describe your own family in English. There is a fabulous new-style audio-visual quiz to go with this video. Find it at the links above and below. | http://linguaspectrum.com/lessons/language_lessons/we_are_family/
Learn English online using Skype: I also give online English classes by Skype. You can find out more by visiting http://linguaspectrum.com If you want to learn English quickly and easily, I invite you to take classes with me online using Skype.
You can improve your writing, too, with my English writing course. As a professional writer, I will guide you through the writing process, step by step, until you are able write with an effectiveness that will get you noticed. Improve your English writing and you improve your prospects of success in all areas of your life. The course is a series of writing assignments designed to take you through all aspects of writing in English. You will learn all about sentence and paragraph structure, punctuation, outlining, introductions and conclusions, topic sentences and more. By the end of the course, you will be writing high-impact prose that will help you achieve the success you deserve in your business or academic life.
Do you have a strong non-English accent when speaking English? Would you like to reduce your accent? I can help with your accent improvement or accent reduction and help you to improve your English pronunciation with my pronunciation course. This 60 part course takes you through every aspect of British English pronunciation. At the end of the course, you will have the understanding necessary to sound like a native British English speaker.
The Advanced Pronunciation Course is for students who have an upper-intermediate level of English or greater. The course begins with a comprehensive look at the varieties of English, the phonetic chart and regional accent variation. Subsequent classes introduce the student to all aspects of pronunciation including, consonant clusters, stress in words and phrases, stressed and unstressed syllables, fluent speech features, speech units, intonation, conversation management using intonation, and tonal modulation in formal settings.
By the end of the course, you will have a thorough understanding of why and how spoken English differs from written English and will be able to reproduce all English pronunciation features. Not only will you improve you pronunciation markedly, but you will also improve your ability to understand spoken English. You will fully understand linking sounds, ellipsis and near ellipsis, missing consonant sounds, syllabic consonants, weak and strong forms, and all other aspects of spoken English.
If you have an exam coming up, I can help you improve your chances of success. Whether it is one of the Cambridge English exams - KET, PET, FCE, CAE, CPE - or the IELTS or TOEFL, I can increase your familiarity with the exam requirements and prepare you for success. Conversation Classes with me using Skype give you an opportunity to practice your spoken English and your listening, while priming you with the vocabulary you need to pass your exams.
Linguaspectrum offers much more than I can possibly write here. There is a searchable grammar references that I add to every week and which will answer many of your English grammar questions. You will find comprehensive English level tests for all levels from Elementary to Proficient. There are thousands of phrasal verbs with definitions and examples in a searchable phrasal verb dictionary and in flashcards. Transitive, intransitive, separable and inseparable phrasal verbs (multi-part verbs) are all included. There are games, too, that will help your English studies. I even have over 32000 English quotations on every subject imaginable from thousands of famous and infamous people.
My Forum gives you the opportunity to ask me questions about English. I always give thorough answers the my students find invaluable. As a member, you will also have your own online learning diary and personal English dictionary (which can win you free classes online with me). There is an online voice recorder, too, that lets you compare your pronounciation with my pronunciation on my videos.
Category:
Tags:
- Vocabulary Builder
- family
- family members
- husband
- wife
- uncle
- aunt
- nephew
- niece
- grandfather
- grandmother
- grandparents
- son
- daughter
- father
- mother
- sister
- brother
- cousin
- marriage
- divorce
- separation
- learn English
- English lesson
- English pronunciation
- English vocabulary
- British English
- British accent
- Lesson
- Class
- Study
- Teacher
- ESL
- TEFL
- EFL
- IELTS
- TOEFL
- iBT
- Test
- Practice
- Preparation
- FCE
- CAE
- CPE
- PET
- KET
- Trinity
- CELTA
- DELTA
- instructional video
License:
Standard YouTube License
-
97 likes, 7 dislikes
Link to this comment:
Uploader Comments (Linguaspectrum)
All Comments (34)
-
I love your videos I'm gonna use this one with French beginners. Also, I prefer this one to the kitchen one for instance because the music in the other is just too much : too loud, too fast, too stressful!
guiguitte14 6 months ago
-
There are only 31 comments for such an amazing video lol
MrKevinb1989 7 months ago
-
i kike it a lot
kevinevans50 8 months ago
-
PERFECT!!!
Dei987 1 year ago
7:15
Why are Phonetics Important? | Learn English | Vocabulary.by Linguaspectrum226,115 views
10:00
At the Airport | Learn English | Vocabularyby Linguaspectrum370,101 views
10:01
Vegetables | Learn English | Vocabulary and Pronunciationby Linguaspectrum144,111 views
10:01
Clothes Alphabet | Learn English | Vocabularyby Linguaspectrum60,026 views
7:39
Enlish Lesson THE FAMILY membersby isaacsenglish220,525 views
5:42
my familyby dilomomo39,143 views
1:23
Family Members 1by cursosdeinglesats65,648 views
3:21
"We Are Family : A Musical Message for All"by WeAreFamilyFdtn199,050 views
1:04
The Finger Family (Daddy Finger) | nursery rhymes & children songs with lyrics | muffin songsby muffinsongs670,934 views
2:04
The Simpsons - Presenting the family/ Apresentando a familiaby matvideos16,424 views
2:46
Family Members Songby deejing4u124,385 views
0:57
Family Members 2by cursosdeinglesats16,791 views
55 videos

lesson3
1:58
Good Morning Songby megalynECE306,991 views
1:11
ABC Song, The Alphabet in AUTOTUNEby Qaziinc416,629 views
4:19
60 Minimal Pairs (English Pronunciation Practice)by InterestingThingsESL154,790 views
2:06
My First English Words, Familyby SuperMemoWorld443,472 views
1:49
My Family.wmvby deysyryna14,366 views
1:46
English Vocabulary - Airportsby Elanguest161,030 views
4:09
"We are Family" by All Stars - We Are Family Foundationby Frenchiic586,157 views
- Loading more suggestions...
MUY BIEN ... ... ..
michelesiddi 2 years ago
Thanks for commenting.
Linguaspectrum 2 years ago
Hello,
i think Scarlet is the Eldest and not the oldest.
Great Job anyway
vivitolo 2 years ago
Thanks for raising an interesting question.
In the case of Scarlet in the video we should use oldest not eldest because eldest is used attributively, that is before a noun, and we would have to say that "Scarlet is the eldest child".
However, "eldest" is only used when the person has two or more siblings; something Scarlet doesn't have.
We use "elder" when the person has only one sibling, like Scarlet, so I could have said that "Scarlet is the elder child." i.e. she is the elder of the two.
Linguaspectrum 2 years ago
HiRichard, so, I have two older brothers-really. Then, can I say either my oldest/eldest brother? And, according to this piece of information, "...I have two brothers, the oldest is ...."right? tks
silviajanette 2 years ago
Hi Silvia,
Yes, that's right. As you have more than one sibling, you can refer to the oldest as your eldest/oldest brother. Eldest is becoming less used and oldest is now the dominant form, especially among younger speakers. I think this "culling" of words happens in many cases where we have a choice of two words that can be used interchangeably. Language is in a constant state of change.
Linguaspectrum 2 years ago