We join in tulipomania

by on March 31, 2008
in gv

Far from being hypocritical, we’ve always been reluctant to follow any aggressive marketing strategies in order to churn out an immediate success. What particularly concerned us a few years ago was that market-borne tulipomania, whose promoters claimed the right to outline and guard standards in teaching English. Now that they no longer seem to raise these standards any higher and routinely make specials offers to buy them cheaply, we’re eager to help the tulip, their image, restore its tarnished reputation.
Late last summer Global Village planted at a secret location hundreds of tulip bulbs, hoping to put the flowers on display when they are in bloom. Several varieties have just begun to bloom. Tomorrow then we are showing them to the public. The exhibition opens at noon in front of Akcent bookshop in the square. Be there to admire the sheer beauty of the tulip. All exhibits will go for sale to support a good cause.

butt

Clara Butt variety

Earth Hour 2008

by on March 29, 2008
in gv, misc

Global against global warming

earthhour_logo.jpg

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(Maciek Żytowiecki, fat_fish group)

They come in clusters

by on March 16, 2008
in misc, weird words

Soft fruit, like grapes and blackcurrants. Flowers, like lilac. Trees, shrubs and smaller plants in a well-kept English country garden. Stars, galaxies and multiverses, something that few of us ever have a chance to inspect. Music comes in clusters, when a mad composer hits several keys of the piano with the palm of his hand to produce a mass of sound. Clubbers, when seized by hunger they flock to Bar Italia at five in the morning.
But for language learners and teachers more important are the mind-blowing facts, continually delivered these days through corpus linguistics – a language can be seen a universe of word clusters. These are 2 to 6-word units that we repeatedly stumble across in speech and writing. Clusters evidently escape simple grammar categorization and often pull down the barrier created between vocabulary and grammar. When naturally retrieved from memory, they define the boundaries of the speaker’s fluency.
The beauty of commonest English clusters is that they can be listed as ever changing charts, and like songs, are instantly recognizable.
A selection of spoken English clusters, ranging between 2 and 5 words: you know; I mean; sort of; and then; if you; you can; a lot of; you know what; I think it’s; a couple of; and it was; I thought it was; I don’t know if; I was going to; have a look at; you don’t have to; in the middle of; you know what I mean; the end of the day; this that and the other; to be honest with you; and all that sort of; an hour and a half; it’s a bit of a;

cluster

Star cluster

A thought for a lifetime

by on March 4, 2008
in music

still life

A thought for a night-time (mp3, 3MB)