BBC Learning English

Posted by coll-abbe-pierre-english on 11 novembre 2010 in All Categories with Comments closed |

School subjects

Posted by coll-abbe-pierre-english on 11 novembre 2010 in 5èmes, All Categories, Reading, Vocabulary with Comments closed |

If you want to know more about English School Subjects :

Could you do it ? Listen to the conversation.

Posted by coll-abbe-pierre-english on 8 novembre 2010 in 5èmes, Listening with Comments closed |

There is a new student in class today. You start speaking together.

Cindy and Maeva

The Origins of Halloween

Posted by coll-abbe-pierre-english on 31 octobre 2010 in All Categories, Reading with Comments closed |

Halloween takes place on Allhallows Eve, on October 31st. It is considered as a children’s holiday. It is the feast of the souls and ghosts.

Halloween is a shorter form of All-Hallow-Eve, the eve of All Saints’ (since hallows comes from holy which means saint). In the old Celtic calendar the year began on November 1st, so that the last evening of October was “old-year’s night”. On this last night of October, the Celtic Druids also celebrated the day of Saman, or the end of the summer, when the Lord of Death called together the souls of the wicked who had died during the past year. Families would leave their doors open and set out food and drinks for the spirits.

People expected the witches, goblins and other mischievous beings to come, and they danced around bonfires in the hope of keeping them away, while asking the Sun to never stop burning. Even though Saman was a night of spriritual apprehension and danger, it was also a night where people tried to predict the future, tried to reveal who would marry, be successful or die. In the IXth century, the Church christianized the Celtic New Year into “All Hallows”.

The custom crossed the Atlantic Ocean with the pilgrims, and was enforced with the Irish immigrants in the XIXth century. In fact, the American “Jack-o’-lanterns” created with the New World’s pumkins replaced the Irish “Jack-o’-lanterns” cut into the turnips. The turnips, like the pumkins, were hollowed out and a candle was lit inside them. In the Irish tradition, a certain Jack wanders between heaven and hell with a lantern lit by glowing embers thrown by Satan.

Today, all the young children disguise themselves as ghosts or witches and knock on people’s doors. They say to them “Trick or Treat” : if the person says “treat”, they will give the children a treat (eg sweets, fruit, drinks, some money perhaps), but if they say “trick”, then that means that they refuse to give them a treat and the children therefore play a trick on them.

Bibliography :
Les Etats-Unis, Larousse
The Oxford English Dictionary
Rites et Traditions de par le Monde, Time-Life
Grand Dictionnaire Encyclopédique Larousse

Guessing Game 1

Posted by coll-abbe-pierre-english on 29 octobre 2010 in 4èmes, All Categories, Listening, Speaking with Comments closed |

Listen to Célestin and find his poster : Listening 1

1- 2- 3-

Choose Your School Club !!

Posted by coll-abbe-pierre-english on 24 octobre 2010 in 3èmes, All Categories, Reading, Writing with Comments closed |

Which one would you like to join ?


Help ! I Need some Help !

Posted by coll-abbe-pierre-english on 1 octobre 2010 in 4èmes, All Categories, Speaking with Comments closed |

Do you want to know more about Great Britain ?

Posted by coll-abbe-pierre-english on 26 septembre 2010 in 4èmes, 5èmes, All Categories with Comments closed |

Your Guide to
British Life, Culture and Customs

Woodlands Junior School, Hunt Road Tonbridge Kent

School Objects

Posted by coll-abbe-pierre-english on 20 septembre 2010 in 5èmes, 6èmes, All Categories, Vocabulary with Comments closed |

Game 1

Game 2

Talking about oneself

Posted by coll-abbe-pierre-english on 12 septembre 2010 in 4èmes, All Categories, Listening, Speaking with Comments closed |

Listen to Reuben : Activity 1 : easyversionless easy versionActivity 2

Listen to Alison : QCM in EnglishQCM in FrenchGap-filling activity : easy versionGap-filling activity : less easy version

Listen to Toby : QCM in EnglishQCM in FrenchGap-filling activity – Global listening : QCM in EnglishQCM in French – Detailed comprehension : fill in the gaps

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