like+bv+ing
Like + base verbale +ing
He likes singing.
He likes dancing.
She likes reading.
He likes writing and drawing.
He likes playing video games.
He likes listening to music.
He likes running.
He likes relaxing and doing nothing.
He likes resting.
She likes working.
She likes writing.
Superwoman is flying with [i] her car.
She is carrying her car and she is also flying.
Superwoman has got long, blond hair.
She is slim and tall. [o:]
Her eyes [ai] are blue.
She is wearing a strange suit.
[ei]
Her suit is blue.
She is wearing a strange blue suit for flying.[ai]
She is under the red car.
Groundhog Day on the 2nd of February
Groundhog Day takes place on the first or the second of February
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-16855797
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-38846745
A1-A2 Ici et ailleurs, modernités et traditions.
Where does it take place?
What can you see?
What can you hear?
What are people wearing?
What’s the name of the famous groundhog?
What can it predict?
Who are the members?
Do you like this tradition?
My toolbox of words:
top hats and a congregation of gentlemen
a suit= un costume
a tuxedo= une queue de pie
a tie=une cravate
a bow =noeud papillon
to wear = porter un vêtement
smart and traditional clothes,
it is freezing cold!
the shadow=l’ombre, many people, a lot of people,
the weather= le temps météorologique
a weather forecast= un bulletin météorologique
the best weather forecast, the dream, dreamers
very traditional
to see its own shadow =voir la projection de son ombre
funny and pleasant, to announce spring, to announce winter,
a very likeable animal
it is part and parcel of traditions=
one president= notre président
the tree-trunk= le tronc d’arbre
the hole= trou
to sleep=
to be sleeping=
to like folklore, not to like folklore,
to like and enjoy dreams and dreamers
Etymology
The etymology of the name woodchuck is unrelated to wood or chucking. It stems from an Algonquian (possibly Narragansett) name for the animal, wuchak. The similarity between the words has led to the common tongue-twister:
How much wood would a woodchuck chuck
- if a woodchuck could chuck wood?
-
A woodchuck would chuck all the wood he could
if a woodchuck could chuck wood![12]
[edit] In popular culture
- One of Robert Frost‘s best known poems is “A Drumlin Woodchuck,” in which he uses the imagery of a woodchuck dug in to a small ridge as a metaphor for his emotional reticence.
- A woodchuck figures prominently in the movie Groundhog Day.