The Word On The Street is done for another Season, another Year.
Well Done, organizers, and, the Weatherman! ( Or shouldn't that be
"Weatherperson"?!) The rain held off, the auditory barriers were barely
successful, and readers of all persuasions were present on the promenade.
Now...., time to prepare for the upcoming Vancouver International Writers and Readers Festival
( http://www.writersfest.bc.ca/) Vancouver International Writers and Readers Festival.
" A World of Words".
The 23rd annual festival runs, primarily at Granville Island (Thank you, Ron Basford), from October 19th through to the 24th, 2010.
Sing in the sunshine, splash through poetic puddles, dress in layers, and
prepare for a rich feast of Literary Learning.
Listen up, and bring a notebook, or better yet, your Merriam-Webster app.
If this is your first festival, get to what calls to you and don't try to see everything all at once. Go lightly, and Listen, listen, listen.
You and your notebook can carry the new words home with you to explore at your leisure,
and to welcome them into their new home; your vocabulary!
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Is Everyone Speaking Too Quickly For You?
Slow Cooking.
Slow Food.
What about Slow Speech?
When you are learning English as a second language ( ESL ), it can be really frustrating to have to hear English speakers who omit consonants, never take a breath between words or phrases, and who just simply speak too quickly!
Here is a useful link for an affordable way to hear English spoken on a variety of interesting topics:
The Vancouver Institute
The Vancouver Institute provides Fall and Spring Saturday Lectures for the Public. Check out the topics planned for this season!
And, a word to the wise......bring a book to read while you are waiting. Leave home early and get to the lecture theatre well in advance of the starting time. Relax with your book, and when the room fills up around you, don't gloat! Just enjoy the Featured Speaker, and learn new vocabulary and phrases from an excellent source.
Slow Food.
What about Slow Speech?
When you are learning English as a second language ( ESL ), it can be really frustrating to have to hear English speakers who omit consonants, never take a breath between words or phrases, and who just simply speak too quickly!
Here is a useful link for an affordable way to hear English spoken on a variety of interesting topics:
The Vancouver Institute
The Vancouver Institute provides Fall and Spring Saturday Lectures for the Public. Check out the topics planned for this season!
And, a word to the wise......bring a book to read while you are waiting. Leave home early and get to the lecture theatre well in advance of the starting time. Relax with your book, and when the room fills up around you, don't gloat! Just enjoy the Featured Speaker, and learn new vocabulary and phrases from an excellent source.
Saturday, September 4, 2010
A Word To The Wise on Word On The Street.
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The folks at WOTS have alot to say when you ask "WOTS Up?!" If you've not been to a Word On The Street Festival in previous years, get yourself out to this one! Try it! You'll Like It! See you there, God, and the Weather willing. (Just Kidding, as there are plenty of tented and undercover (literally) events to liven up your literary juices. S.B.
Friday, September 3, 2010
Sleep By Any Other Name:In For a "Spell" of Bad Weather?
Sleep Shut-eye
Weary
Tired
Bagged Exhausted
Too tired to care? Time for rejuvenation. Rest, regenerate, and rise.
Vancouver weather, in our coastal climate, and so close to the Mountains, enjoys World Class status. - Weather from every part of the world, every day. (Hint: to reduce grumbling, hang the clothes in your closet by colour, not "season", and dress for your day by the best Weather Report.) What's this got to do with sleep?
High pressure ridges, and low pressure systems, humidity, aridity, sunshine, and rain. For certain people, all these changes, often occurring in short succession, find that their sleep patterns are affected. For example, when the weather is changing from high pressure (usually with clear skies), to a low pressure system (usually bringing clouds starting off at the mountains), the atmosphere can feel heavy, giving way to the expression "feeling heavy-lidded".
One may feel sleepy, even when having had enough rest, during the process of this change in atmospheric pressure.
Environment Canada has a report for Farmers that could help you plan your days in this regard. Unlike the normal weather reports, which are almost flippant in some mediums, the Environment Canada site Weather Office of Environment Canada Link gives the humidity percentage in the Farmers Weather Reports.
No amount of pressure, weather high nor low, seems to be able to provoke the mainstream stations into adding the humidity percentages into their reports.
In any case, the pressure is dropping, and sleep is at hand.
Weary
Tired
Bagged Exhausted
Too tired to care? Time for rejuvenation. Rest, regenerate, and rise.
Vancouver weather, in our coastal climate, and so close to the Mountains, enjoys World Class status. - Weather from every part of the world, every day. (Hint: to reduce grumbling, hang the clothes in your closet by colour, not "season", and dress for your day by the best Weather Report.) What's this got to do with sleep?
High pressure ridges, and low pressure systems, humidity, aridity, sunshine, and rain. For certain people, all these changes, often occurring in short succession, find that their sleep patterns are affected. For example, when the weather is changing from high pressure (usually with clear skies), to a low pressure system (usually bringing clouds starting off at the mountains), the atmosphere can feel heavy, giving way to the expression "feeling heavy-lidded".
One may feel sleepy, even when having had enough rest, during the process of this change in atmospheric pressure.
Environment Canada has a report for Farmers that could help you plan your days in this regard. Unlike the normal weather reports, which are almost flippant in some mediums, the Environment Canada site Weather Office of Environment Canada Link gives the humidity percentage in the Farmers Weather Reports.
No amount of pressure, weather high nor low, seems to be able to provoke the mainstream stations into adding the humidity percentages into their reports.
In any case, the pressure is dropping, and sleep is at hand.
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