Mets Team

July 30th, 2010 admin No comments

Mets Team

Park Dental, Mets Team Up

Dental offices are no longer the inhospitable, stark white, hard edged places of the past.  Gone are the cold, uninviting, potentially threatening, chairs that all but strapped you down, and spit sinks whooshing nearby.  No, dental office are now warm, welcoming, even entertaining places where patients can maintain oral health and improve smiles. 

Dental offices now include video screens and headphones so that the only sound patients hear is their favorite music.  Many dental offices offer a wide range of CD and DVD choices to suit any taste whether children and adults.  Patients can actually relax in ergonomic chairs designed for comfort and safety.  Gone are the spit sinks.  Sleep sedation dentistry is a solution for those who still dread dental procedures.  Don’t be surprised to find a beverage bar where early arrivals can enjoy a cup of coffee or tea or a glass of juice. 

Moreover, beyond cavity care, cleaning, and periodontal problems, services include porcelain veneers to create a bright, uniform smile, crowns for improved tooth strength and health, and implants.  Many offices have onsite oral surgeons, and  specialize in orthodontia, including Invisalign®; the new invisible was to align teeth. 

Additionally, dental offices are becoming more engaged with the surrounding community.  One example is a dental office in the New York and Queens area, Park Dental of Astoria, Family Dentist.  In August of 2009, this office is sponsoring fundraising event to support the battle against cancer.  The New York Mets are teaming up with the Philadelphia Phillies at Shea Stadium and will play for the Christine Caiafa-Guarino Memorial Scholarship Fund.  The following day, the Mets’ Xavier Nady will stop by t Park Dental Care to promote dental awareness between noon and 2 p.m.  Nady will be signing autographs and speaking with patients and guests.  Dr. Gene Caiafa, clinical director of Park Dental Care, will be offering free checkups for all adults and children as part of the dental awareness campaign. As well, patients will receive an in-depth oral cancer screening.   For those living in the area, check online for exact dates and times.  This is just one of many ways that dental offices are reaching out to neighborhoods and connecting with people to make mouth hygiene a comfortable and intricate part of their health care routine.

Dental care professionals understand the importance of both oral health and beautiful smiles.  Make an appointment today with your dentist.

About the Author

The Best Astoria Dentist is Just a click away. Dentist in Astoria is not so hard to find. Trust us! Astoria Family Dentist is just a click away. Find affordable Family Astoria Dentist right here!


Philadelphia Phillies Team Logo Lunch Bag


Philadelphia Phillies Team Logo Lunch Bag


$10.00


Take your favorite team to lunch with an officially licensed MLB soft lunch box. These lunch boxes feature a simulated baseball leather material around the perimeter and a pocket for a photo or trading card. Each lunch box features a logo on a baseball de…

New York Mets (Citi Field) Sports Poster Print - 34x22


New York Mets (Citi Field) Sports Poster Print – 34×22


$7.14


New York Mets (Citi Field) Sports Poster Print – 34×22…

Anaheim Angels Team Logo Lunch Bag


Anaheim Angels Team Logo Lunch Bag


$10.00


Take your favorite team to lunch with an officially licensed MLB soft lunch box. These lunch boxes feature a simulated baseball leather material around the perimeter and a pocket for a photo or trading card. Each lunch box features a logo on a baseball design on one side with a baseball diamond and team logo on the other. Availability: Usually ships within 1-2 business days….

Ny Mets: Songs & Sounds That Shake Shea


Ny Mets: Songs & Sounds That Shake Shea


$9.98


Songs Include……………………………….
1. Opening Montage

2. Rock This Town – Stray Cats

3. National League Eastern Division Champions

4. Higher Ground – Red Hot Chili Peppers

5. Pennant

6. Lunatic Fringe – Red Rider

7. Records and Milestones

8. Centerfield – Alphabet City All-Stars

9. Mike Piazza… New York Met

10. Bad to the Bone – George Thorogood & the Destroyers…


Mets All-Amazin' Team 40th Anniversary Commemorative Video


Mets All-Amazin’ Team 40th Anniversary Commemorative Video


$49.99


On August 17, 2002, the Mets’ 40th Anniversary All-Amazin’ Team was introduced during a special pre-game ceremony. This ceremony is captured on this limited edition home video, along with career highlights and interviews from many of the baseball greats who were honored by the fans that day at Shea….

Met-Rx Hardcore Amino 3000


Met-Rx Hardcore Amino 3000




MET-Rx - Tonalin CLA 1000mg - 90


MET-Rx – Tonalin CLA 1000mg – 90


$12.47


1000mg MET-Rx HARDCORE TONALIN CLA is a scientifically-based supplement designed for elite athletes, bodybuilders and anyone striving to get into peak condition. Use MET-Rx HARDCORE TONALIN CLA with your intensive training program to support your body-shaping goals.* Don’t accept imitations – MET-Rx utilizes the same form of CLA used in several clinical trials.Derived from all natural safflower oi…

MET-Rx Creatine Hardcore


MET-Rx Creatine Hardcore



“Creatine Hardcore Supports Muscle Strength and Recovery from Exercise! Dont trust your workout to anything less than MET-Rxs Hardcore Creatine Caps and Powder. Each serving contains HPLC Pure Creatine Monohydrate, the best source of creatine because it contains more creatine per weight of material than any other source. Check out these hard-hitting features: Met-Rx Creatine Hardcore supports lean…


New York Mets LED Team Logo Light


New York Mets LED Team Logo Light



Show off your team spirit with this New York Mets LED team logo light. The efficient LED lights form the Mets name in team colors. It’s approved for interior and exterior use, allowing it to be used as a wall and window light in your home, as well as a yard light inviting guests to come in and watch the big game. Includes wall and ground mounting hardware, along with a 6-foot power cord with inlin…


New York Mets Pro-Grip Hammer


New York Mets Pro-Grip Hammer


$42.95


This Pro-Grip Hammer Is A Great Gift Idea For Your Favorite Sports Fan. The Head Is Made Of Stainless Steel, Painted In Team Colors With Hard Fired Enamel Including Team Logo On Both Sides. The Body Is Fiberglass And Color Matched To Represent The Teams Colors, Which Also Has The Team Name Printed On Both Sides. Molded Rubber Grip Is Simulated Football Leather Complete With The Laces Facing Front….

Mets Therma

July 27th, 2010 admin No comments

Mets Therma

Ancient Rome: Fashion Accessories

Jewelry
In the early ages, jewelry worn by Romans was mainly made by Greek craftsmen and was in a predominately Greek style. They primarily worked with gold, glass and semiprecious stones. Specimens were enamelled, damas-quined or plated.

As the spoils of military conquest became greater, more sophisticated stones became available, including pearls, diamonds, sapphires, and emeralds. This luxury in jewels corresponded to the periods of Roman commercial expansion during the last two centuries BC and the first two of the Christian era. Although Rome was then an important manufacturing centre, Antioch and Alexandria rivalled her in the execution of fashion accessories in the Oriental taste. Gradually Roman artisans introduced not only their filigree and granulation techniques and their decorative motifs, but also their habit of piling on precious stones.

The tendency towards luxury became more marked in the third and fourth centuries AD, with a predominance of Syrian styles represented by large gems. This translated into heavy pendants, ear-rings or crotalia, and bracelets developed into multiple convolutions.

Footwear
Roman footwear did not differ much from that of their predecessors, the Greeks, the former having adopted the essentials of Athenian fashion. In terms of style, the footwear of both peoples exhibited a marked difference between the right and the left shoe. In terms of function, however, Roman footwear adopted a new meaning: certain types of shoes were a distinctive mark of a social class.

The first roman shoes were rather simple. Known as the carbantina, they were sandals held in place by a thong. The carbantina were replaced by the calceus, a low-cut shoe with a leather sole and thongs crossed tightly over the foot and up part of the leg. Only citizens were allowed to wear the calceus.

At first, the calceus senatorum was black, then, under the late Empire, became white. It was quite high, slit on the inside and fitted with a tongue. The red leather thongs muleus were reserved for the Emperor.

Emperors wore shoes in the current styles, but made of richer materials. Gallienus launched the zancha, a high leather boot fitting closely to the leg, imported from Armenia or the Crimea.

The pero was a light boot made of raw, natural hide. It reached to the calf and laced all its length. The pero was worn in the country.

In the house, Romans wore sandals, either the solea, whose sole was fastened on by cords over the instep, or thecrepida, which were leather espadrilles held on by a strap passing through eyelets, with a wide range of fastenings. Women wore the soccus, a s richly decorated slipper, or the calceoli, a term which seems to have been applied specially to shoes worn in the house. The upper of women’s shoes was not divided into two pieces, as was usual for men’s footwear, and women’s shoes were made in red, green or yellow as well as white.

The gallicae, originally from Gaul,  were closed boots, which appeared in Rome in the last century of the Republic.

Hair and headgear
During the Republic, hairstyles were simple. Roman women wore their hair parted in the middle and rolled in a chignon, or plaited it and then rolled it. There were variations as married women began to wear their hair coiled on the crown. By the time of the empire, hairstyles had become very sophisticated. The hair was still parted down the center but it could be waved, curled, or worn in a loose roll that sat low on the back of the neck. These complicated and often enormous arrangements, required the work of a hairdresser or ornatrix responsible for adjusting the false switches or wigs, or dye hair blonde or ebony black. Dyeing the hair was a common practice. Originally only prostitutes colored their hair yellow. But with time, women of all classes began to do so. Otherwise the Roman woman bound her hair with a simple red or purple vitta.

Men’s hairstyles were also rather simple and careless at first. They grew their hair and beard long only during times of mourning. Baldness was a deformity, so bald men wore wigs or false hair pieces glued to the scalp. During Hadrian’s time long hair and trimmed beards became fashionable and hair was crimped with curling irons.

There were several types of headgear. The galerus was a close fitted cap. The petasus, inherited from the Greeks, was a straw wide brim hat wore mostly by women, though senators were authorized to wear it at the Circus. The pileus was a men’s cap made from felt, it was round and brim-less, encircling the head. The cucullus was a simple hood, attached or not to a cape.

Make-up and grooming
The thermae were more than public baths. They were social places where men met. Women had their own separate baths or visited the public baths in the morning.

A visit to the bath lasted several hours and comprised four stages. It started with the sudatorium, where bathers could be massaged with scented oil followed by the calidarium, an even hotter chamber with a hot pool. A rest break followed in the tepidarium, a warm room, to prepare the body for the cold water treatment – the frigidarium.

After bathing, they exercised by training with weights, running, or playing sport games. The less active played board games.

Cosmetics, perfume, and skin care products were very popular. Like the Greeks, [removed][removed] women u [removed][removed] sed a toxic white foundation made of lead, honey, and fat to which they added a dye made from ocher, saltpeter foam, or wine dregs for color. Soot was applied to the lashes and brows . Face masks could be made from plant extracts, but sheep fat and breadcrumbs soaked in milk were also used. Spots were treated with butter and white lead, sores – with cow placenta.

About the Author

The author is the founder and owner of Adriana Allen LLC – a European fashion brand offering handmade and one-of-a-kind handbags and fashion accessories. You can learn more about world fashion, fashion’s history, and how to buy fashion accessories at our official blog


New York Mets Therma Base Track Jacket


New York Mets Therma Base Track Jacket



Look like a pro when jogging or warming up with the New York Mets Therma Base track jacket. Made of 100-percent polyester tricot, the zip-front jacket features a left-chest, self-fabric applique Mets logo, along with an embroidered Major League Baseball batter silhouette patch on the center back neck. The jacket’s Therma Base technology, meanwhile, combines with the rib knit collar, cuffs, and wai…


MLB New York Mets Adult Long Sleeve Therma Base Premier Jacket


MLB New York Mets Adult Long Sleeve Therma Base Premier Jacket


$120.00


Bundle up for cooler temps with the Mets Premier Elevation jacket from Majestic! The jacket boasts Therma Base technology featuring moisture-wicking fabric with four-way stretch for a windproof and waterproof experience!…

New York Mets Kids 4-7 Authentic Collection Therma Base Premier Jacket


New York Mets Kids 4-7 Authentic Collection Therma Base Premier Jacket


$60.00


From the bullpen to the dugout, put your little fan in exactly what the pros wear with this New York Mets Kids 4-7 Authentic Collection Therma Base Premier Jacket from Majestic. Features woven emblem authentic logo across chest and molded sleeve patch….
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Mets Official

July 26th, 2010 admin No comments

Mets Official

New York Mets Tickets And A Day At Citi Field

Established in 1962, the New York Mets is one of the most recognized names in baseball. Members of the National League since their formation and the National League East since 1969, blue, orange, white and black colors of the team are almost as famous as the team itself. Affectionately known by nicknames such as The Amazin’ Mets, The Amazins and The Metropolitans, the Mets have won 2 World Series titles, 4 National League Pennants, 5 East Division titles and 2 Wild card berths. Since their start, retired numbers include 14, 37, 41 and 42. Meet the Mets, the team’s signature song, was written in 1961; a year before the team was officially established.

The brief but colorful history behind the color choices for the Mets’ uniforms comes from the Brooklyn Dodgers whose colors were blue and white and the New York Giants whose colors were orange and black. Blue and orange are the flag colors for New York City as well. In 1957 both the New York Giants and the Brooklyn Dodgers pulled up stakes out of New York and headed to the east coast in California. New York did not have a baseball franchise in the National League at the time and thus the New York Mets were formed to fill the gap.

Just a few years into the major leagues, the Mets won their first World Series in 1969. Although the Mets have been in more World Series than any other expansion team, they have only added one other World Series win to their credit, which was in 1986. Up until 1999, the Mets also held the record for baseball attendance. In 1970, they garnered approximately 2.7 million fans to one game. For 29 years, the Mets held the attendance record until the Yankees broke the record themselves in 1999.

Although the Mets hold one of the worse records in major league history with a 40-120 for their 1962 playing, they have to their credit Hall of Famers like Tom Seaver, whom they acquired in a lottery. Most associate Seaver for his instrumental role in helping the Mets to win the World Series in 1969 against the Baltimore Orioles. Although it has been an off/on relationship with winning, there is no question that the Mets are a top notch team who can take it to the top of their game.

All home games for the Mets are currently held at Citi Field. Located at the corner of 126th Street and Roosevelt in Flushing, New York, Citi Field was first opened in 2009 with a college game that was held on March 29 of that year. Owned and operated by Mets, the playing surface is grass and the construction cost was $900 million to complete this ballpark that has a capacity for 42,000 fans. The design of Citi Field reflects New York itself at every turn with its Shea Bridge and Jackie Robinson Rotunda.

A wealth of eateries, excellent sites, FanFest area, museum, batting cage, dunk tank and New York Mets Hall of Fame plaques are all a part of the enjoyable experience one can have during at day at Citi Field to take in a Mets game.

About the Author

New York Mets tickets
offer access to enjoying a Mets game up close and personal. Ticket America can help take you there.
Citi Field
is an excitingly new venue with food options and plenty of amenities to enjoy.


NEW YORK METS OFFICIAL LOGO INSULATED LUNCH BAG LUNCHBOX


NEW YORK METS OFFICIAL LOGO INSULATED LUNCH BAG LUNCHBOX


$6.99


Soft-sided, insulated lunch bag shaped cooler. Keeps contents cool or hot for hours. Lunch Bag” sized. Holds a light lunch. Perfect for kids and light eaters. Measures when expanded 9″ tall x 7″ wide x 5″ deep. Convenient top-handle for carrying. Easy-to-clean vinyl construction. Cleans up quickly and easily. Velcro closure keeps contents inside. Collapses easily for storage when empty. Official t…

New York Mets 2 oz Square Shot Glass


New York Mets 2 oz Square Shot Glass


$7.49


You and your friends can enjoy a drink during the big game with these 2 ounce square shot glasses. They feature a photo quality domed team logo. These shot glasses make a great gift for collectible or using to mix a drink or take a shot of your favorite beverage. Most customers appear to purchase them for collectible for their sports rooms, officies, etc…Although they are made to actually drink …

New York Mets Mlb Baseball Collectible Gift Coffee Mug


New York Mets Mlb Baseball Collectible Gift Coffee Mug


$6.85


Relive the glory of a sunny Saturday afternoon at the ballpark! Old-time styling gives this officially-licensed 11 oz. mug the vintage appearance of a timeless treasure; proudly boasts the bold blue-and-orange and distinguished emblem of the fabled New York Mets. Ceramic. Microwave and dishwasher safe. 4 3/4″ x 3 1/4″ x 3 5/8″ high. – California Proposition 65 Notice: WARNING: This product contain…

2000 Official World Series Video - New York Yankees vs. New York Mets [VHS]


2000 Official World Series Video – New York Yankees vs. New York Mets [VHS]


$1.89


Following three world championships in four years, the New York Yankees’ dynasty was starting to show a little wear in 2000. Still, the Bronx Bombers managed to stumble into the playoffs and get past the Oakland A’s and Seattle Mariners. Meanwhile, the Mets disposed of the San Francisco Giants and St. Louis Cardinals, leading to the show everyone in New York wanted to see: Yankees vs. Mets in…

Special 30th Anniversary Edition of Look Who's Number One: The 1969 Mets Official Highlight Film


Special 30th Anniversary Edition of Look Who’s Number One: The 1969 Mets Official Highlight Film


$4.99


A great chronicle of the miracle campaign of 1969. Seaver, Agee, Bud Harrelson, Ed Kranepool. They are all here!…

Amazin' Again:the Official 1999 New York Mets Highlight Video


Amazin’ Again:the Official 1999 New York Mets Highlight Video



From spring training to the post season. Player interviews, it’s all here. Franco’s 400th save, Todd Pratt’s game winner in the Division Series. It’s all here….


MOUSESMART Official New York Mets Optical Mouse


MOUSESMART Official New York Mets Optical Mouse



USB / For Windows PC / Shaped like Baseball Cap with NY Mets’ Emblem…


1981 New York Mets Official Yearbook Magazine


1981 New York Mets Official Yearbook Magazine




New York Mets Official Yearbook


New York Mets Official Yearbook




The New York Mets 1980 Official Yearbook


The New York Mets 1980 Official Yearbook



Mets Metal

July 10th, 2010 admin Comments off

Mets Metal

What Is Bulk Metallic Glass?

Bulk metallic glass, a.k.a. amorphous metal, appears to have a very bright future. Being twice as strong as titanium, tougher and more elastic than ceramics, and having excellent wear and corrosion resistance makes them attractive for a variety of applications. It can even be cast in a mold to near net shapes.

Conventional Metals

In an ordinary metal the atoms of the metal arrange themselves into a repeating pattern of crystals or grains with different sizes and shapes upon cooling from the liquid state. Because metals typically do not solidify into single crystals, they have inherent weaknesses.

The boundaries between the grains are weak spots and under high enough stress and temperature the grains will slide past each other resulting in metal deformation. In addition, extra atoms are often present in grains causing planes of distortion called dislocations. Dislocations easily move through metal that is under stress, again causing deformation. Grain boundaries and dislocations greatly lower a metals strength compared to its theoretical maximum.

Casting of conventional metals also requires more manufacturing steps than bulk metallic glass. Conventional metals shrink significantly as they cool in the mold from liquid to solid form and often develop surface roughness. Secondary steps are usually required to get at the final product, such as grinding and polishing.

Bulk Metallic Glass

The structure of metallic glass is very different from that of conventional metals. Rather than arranging themselves into repeating patterns of grains, the atoms of metallic glasses are “frozen” in a random, disordered structure, similar to regular window glass. It even has a smooth surface like glass. So smooth, in fact, that paint does not adhere well to metallic glass. It is this amorphous structure, lacking in grain defects, that gives metallic glasses their strength, toughness, hardness, elasticity and corrosion and wear resistance.

First discovered by Pol Duwez in 1960 at Caltech, the technique to create metallic glasses required undercooling a molten metal uniformly and rapidly. Rapidly as in 1,000,000°C per second! The molten metal reaches its glass transition temperature without enough time or energy to crystallize, and instead solidifies as metallic glass. Because the material did not conduct heat well, only thin ribbons of metallic glass could be created because of the uniformity and speed of cooling that was required.

Around 1990 Akihisa Inoue and his team at Tohoku University in Japan discovered new alloys that could form thicker metallic glasses at cooling rates as low at 1°C to 100°C, as long as three conditions were met:

1) Use three or more elements in the alloy
2) The atomic size of the elements must differ from each other by at least 12 percent
3) Use elements that have a strong affinity for each other

Soon after, William Johnson and Atakan Peker at Caltech did the same. The lower cooling rates allowed for thicker materials to be created, up to four inches. These thicker materials are referred to as bulk metallic glass (BMG).

Currently available bulk metallic glasses are malleable at around 400°C, compared to over 1000°C for steel. This allows the material to be processed similarly to polymers, with high volume production via casting up to a thickness of four inches. The material has low shrinkage during solidification and can therefore be cast in near-net shapes with microscale precision. The smooth shiny surface eliminates secondary finishing processes. Scalpels made from bulk metallic glass come out of the mold sharp and ready to use.

Some Disadvantages

As with any material, BMG cannot be everything to every application. Its plastic like manufacturability also means that it cannot be used in high temperature applications, i.e., above 260°C, because it becomes soft and weakened. Pure bulk metallic glasses also exhibit cyclic fatigue from repeated stress. Because of their high elasticity and low plasticity, catastrophic failure occurs after only a small amount of plastic deformation.

BMG Composites

New developments in BMG composites are helping to reduce the limitations of the material. In a BMG composite the BMG is the matrix and a ductile crystalline-phase is the reinforcement material. The reinforcement can either be an added material, such as metal or ceramic fibers, or internally created by precipitating ductile dendrites within the BMG, yielding partial crystallinity. These composites combine the ductility, fracture toughness and plasticity of conventional metals with the high strength of pure BMG.

Applications

BMGs are being examined for or currently used in a wide variety of applications including:
– Industrial coatings for improved wear and corrosion resistance – As a replacement for depleted uranium in Kinetic Energy Penetrators for the military. – Casings for cell phones – Scalpels – Sporting goods such as bats and tennis racquets – Jewelry

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) also funding a three-year program called Structural Amorphous Metals (SAM). The aim of the program is to demonstrate the viability of BMG in structural applications. Specific applications being investigated include “corrosion-resistant, reduced magnetic mass hull materials; moderate temperature, lightweight alloys for aircraft and rocket propulsion; and wear-resistant machinery components for ground, marine, and air vehicles.”

U.S. Patent Situation

Upon examining several patents and class codes on amorphous metals it appears that the main U.S. patent classification codes for these materials are:

148/304 – Amorphous: Stock material which has no regular crystal structure but rather has a series of noncrystalline areas much like a glass.

148/403 – Amorphous, i.e., glassy: Stock material which has no regular crystal structure, but rather has a series of noncrystalline areas much like a glass.

148/561 – Passing through an amorphous state or treating or producing an amorphous metal or alloy: Process wherein a metal or metal alloy having no regular crystalline structure or periodicity (i.e., amorphous) in any amount is produced or treated by a process under the class definition or wherein a metal or metal alloy passes through a physical state having no regular crystalline structure or periodicity during the treatment of the metal or metal alloy.

Guideline examined patents assigned to these codes that were granted during the period from 1987 to 2003. We then compared the top patent holders for the above class codes in terms of number of patents published from 1987 to 2003.

Top BMG Patent Holders from ’87 to ’03

55 patents – YKK Corp.
43 patents – Honeywell
33 patents – Tsuyoshi Masumoto & Unitika Ltd.
26 patents – Akihisa Inoue
15 patents – Alps Electric Co.
14 patents – Koji Hashimoto
13 patents – California Institute of Technology
13 patents – Nippon Steel Corp.
11 patents – Hitachi Ltd.
11 patents – Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba

One method Guideline uses to compare patent holders is by calculating an index referred to as Technology Influence. Technology Influence represents how often an assignee’s patents from the previous five years (in this case, 1998-2002) are referenced by patents published in the year of comparison (in this case 2003). A Technology Influence value of 1 represents the average. This shows how much a patent holder’s past technology developments are influencing current development. From this analysis Guideline determined that Caltech’s work has been most influential as their Technology Influence value is 5.06, whereas the next closest value is only 1.46, held by Alps Electric.

Applied Science is another calculation used to compare patent holders. This refers to the average number of non-patent references cited by a patent holder’s patents, such as scientific papers from journals, conference proceedings, etc. This gives an indication of which companies are working on the leading edge. Again, Caltech stands out as a clear leader with an Applied Science value of 7.3. This makes sense considering that Caltech is known to be one of the leaders in developing this technology. As mentioned earlier, metallic glass was first discovered at Caltech.

An analysis of patent assignees and inventors revealed that Akihisa Inoue has done extensive work and collaboration. He is listed as an inventor or co-inventor on a little over 60 patents with about 120 other Japanese researchers. All of this work was done with the following Japanese organizations, and this is only in regards to U.S. patents.
– Tsuyoshi Masumoto and Unitika, Limited – Teikoku Piston Ring Company Limited – Alps Electric Co., Ltd. – YKK Corporation – Honda Motor Co., Ltd. – Yamaha Corporation – Japan Science and Technology Corporation – Unitika Ltd. – Toyota Jidosha Kabushiki Kaisha – Research Development Corporation of Japan – Japan Metals & Chemicals Co., Ltd. – Sumitomo Rubber Industries, Ltd. – Mitsubishi Materials Corporation

Indeed, Inoue led a five year project sponsored by the Japanese government (Inoue Supercooled Liquid Glass Project), which reported the development of a less expensive copper alloy based BMG with a tensile strength over 2 Gpa. Currently Inoue is leading a five-year project sponsored by the Japanese New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization.

Although Inoue has done the most extensive work in terms of U.S. patenting on amorphous and glassy metal technology, the work being done by William Johnson’s group at Caltech appears to be having a larger impact on the overall body of work in U.S. patents over recent years.

About the Author

Brian Reuter is Director of Product Realization at Guideline, Inc. Guideline provides research,
product realization
,
expert witness and consulting
services. Learn more at
www.intota.com
.


George Basch L Nevr-Dull Magic Wadding Polish


George Basch L Nevr-Dull Magic Wadding Polish


$4.40


Apply to surface to be cleaned and gently buff with a clean cloth. Removes rust and tarnish from any metal surface and leaves a high lustre and protective film. 5 oz….

Sandy Black Finish Metal Coat Rack w/Umbrella Holder


Sandy Black Finish Metal Coat Rack w/Umbrella Holder


$43.30


Sandy Black Finish Metal Coat Rack w/Umbrella Holder Bring an old world touch to your home with this amazing Satin Black Metal Coat Rack with Umbrella Holder. This piece features sturdy metal construction and quality surface finishes, as well as a curved metal design with 4 coat hooks and 4 umbrella holders. This is a new, innovative design that provides a unique ambience for any stylish room…

Queen Size Antique Gold Finish Metal Bed Headboard & Footboard


Queen Size Antique Gold Finish Metal Bed Headboard & Footboard


$217.83


Queen Size Antique Gold Finish Metal Bed Headboard & Footboard Dimension: 77″W 60″H (HB) 30″H (FB) Size: Queen Finish: Antique Bronze Material: Iron Queen Size Antique Gold Finish Metal Bed Headboard & Footboard This headboard and footboard features an elegant scroll design that will accentuate any room Mattress and accessories are not included Item requires simpl…

METROPOLIS 2006


METROPOLIS 2006



Sixteen track compilation, issued on Metropolis Records, 2006, # MET 9007….


FullBlackHabit


FullBlackHabit


$10.41



Trop Fou Pour Toi & Les Fils Du Met


Trop Fou Pour Toi & Les Fils Du Met


$20.07


Limited edition deluxe French-only two CD release, an installment in the Ax Killer Warrior Set series from the acclaimed Metal label. These double disc sets contain a pair of digitally remastered releases plus extended booklets that features biographies, rare photos and more. This double header from the French rockers contains their albumsTrop Fou Pour Toi and Les Fils Du Metal. Axe Killer. 2009….

Makita A-90532 12-Inch 60-Teeth Dry Ferrous Metal Cutting Saw Blade with 1-Inch Arbor


Makita A-90532 12-Inch 60-Teeth Dry Ferrous Metal Cutting Saw Blade with 1-Inch Arbor


$106.90


Eagerly tackles the toughest jobs. Blade Diameter (in.): 12…

New York Mets Tiffany Table Lamp


New York Mets Tiffany Table Lamp


$119.95


Fans of the New York Mets will win style points with this Tiffany-style table lamp featuring the baseball team’s logo on its hand-cut, colored glass shade. Base has brass patina finish with decorative detailing. Takes one 60 watt bulb (not included). Lamp measures 11″ wide and 23″ high; shade is 3 1/4″ across the top, 11″ across the bottom, and 10″ high….

Arlington Low-Profile Strain Relief Cord Connector


Arlington Low-Profile Strain Relief Cord Connector




Brass & Copper Polish


Brass & Copper Polish


$8.95


The MET-ALL non abrasive formula give brass and copper a deep, rich mirror-like brilliance and will not mar or scratch the finest finish. This polish removes oxidation and discoloration quickly and easily, then leaves a protective layer of anti-tarnish ingredients that lasts.

Suggested uses include antique brass and copper, brass musical instruments, candelabras, andirons, fireplace accessories,…

Mets-Shirt Medium

June 16th, 2010 admin Comments off

Shirt Medium

Relevance of the Study of Interlanguage to Teaching Efl at the Tertiary Level

Introduction

A second/foreign language learner takes a linguistic journey from his/her mother tongue to the target language and naturally constructs a personal linguistic system in the interim time. This individual system is termed ‘interlanguage’ (Selinker 1969, 1972), ‘approximative system’ (Nemser 1971), ‘transitional competence’ (Corder 1967), or ‘idiosyncratic dialect’ (Corder 1973). In a narrower sense, interlanguage refers to the intermediate status of the second/foreign language learner’s system between his/her mother tongue and the target language. In a broader sense, it stands for the second/foreign language learner’s present knowledge of the language he/she is learning (Spolsky 1989). In a general sense, interlanguage is defined as ‘the interim grammars constructed by the second-language learners on their way to the target language’ (McLaughlin 1987:60).

According to Selinker (1972), the development of interlanguage depends on five central cognitive processes involved in second/foreign learning ? first language transfer, transfer of training, strategies of second/foreign language learning, strategies of second/foreign language communication, and overgeneralization of the target language linguistic material. However, Adjemian (1976) contradicts Selinker (1972), and emphasizes the natural or universal aspects of interlanguage. Adjemian (1976) focuses on the dynamic character of interlanguage systems, that is, their permeability, and maintains that interlanguage is not stable, rather it is always in a state of flux. It signifies that a second/foreign language learner’s language constantly changes and/or develops. In this connection, we could consider Ellis (1994: 352) who clearly postulates ‘these mental grammars are perceived as dynamic and subject to rapid change’. It may happen due to having the linguistic influence of the learner’s first language or due to stretching, distorting or overgeneralization of the rules of the target language by the learner when he/she attempts to generate the intended meaning; or both may occur simultaneously.

That is, interlanguage is an individual, single and unique system (Adjemian 1976) which is yet to conform to the target language norms and evidently incorporates linguistic deficiencies or errors exhibiting the learner’s current linguistic level and implying what he/she need acquire to reach a standard of the target language. Notwithstanding, there exists a substantial degree of uniformity in the characteristics of interlanguage and in the types of errors of various second/foreign language learners. For instance, Bengali speaking learners commit a common error ( and/or make a common mistake) by missing the ‘-s’ to be added to the verb used in a sentence in the simple present tense and having a third person singular subject (Maniruzzaman 2006). Andersen (1978) and Hyltenstam (1977) rightly report the important character of interlanguage that there is individual variability within uniformity.

Furthermore, Tarone (1979) explains interlanguage as a set of styles dependent on the context of use. Research reveals that the utterances of the learner are systematically variable in at least two senses. Firstly, the linguistic context may have a variable impact on the learner’s use of related phonological and syntactic structures. Secondly, the task used for the elicitation of data from the learner may have a variable effect on the learner’s production of related phonological and syntactic structures. Tarone (1979) then concludes that interlanguage speech production varies systematically with the context and elicitation task. Mitchell and Myles (1998:11) consider Towell and Hawkins (1994: 5), and lend support to Tarone (1979)-

… learner language (or interlanguage, as it is commonly called) is not only characterized by systematicity. Learner language systems are presumably – indeed, hopefully – unstable and in course of change; certainly, they are characterized also by high degrees of variability.

In sum, interlanguage or the second/foreign language learner’s interim language is permeable, variable within uniformity, systematic as well as universal in nature. It is, therefore, assumed that the study of interlanguage can help determine what the learner already knows at a certain point of time and what he/she has to be taught when and how in a particular second/foreign language teaching programme. Based on this assumption, the present study has been designed to investigate and examine the relevance of the study of interlanguage to teaching English as a foreign language (EFL) to Bengali speaking learners at the tertiary level.

Method

Subjects

The study has been conducted with an experimental group and a control group, each of which consists of 21 tertiary level students learning English as a foreign language (EFL) in the Language Centre at Jahangirnagar University. The subjects possess several characteristics in common ? having the same mother tongue, belonging to the same age group, studying throughout in the Bengali medium, already receiving twelve years of formal instruction in EFL at the rate of about four hours per week, and having the same objective, that is, to achieve a good command of the basic skills of the target language.

To choose the subjects in both the groups, the simple random procedure has been applied since this type of sampling is easy and inexpensive for subject selection and data analysis (Sudman 1976). In the simple random procedure, a list of the total population members is arranged in a random order, and every nth name is then picked out. Every member of the population has an equal chance of being selected in the sample.

Instrumentation

The Oxford Placement Test being made up of two subtests ? Test of Grammatical Structures (Appendix-A) and Test of Reading and Listening Skills (Appendix-B) constructed by Allan (1985) coupled with a Free Composition Test (Appendix-C) and a Speaking Test (Appendix-D) designed by the present researcher has been employed to measure the pre-programme as well as post-programme linguistic level of both the experimental group and the control group. All the tests have also been used to analyze the interlanguage of the subjects of the experimental group.

Oxford Placement Test: The Oxford Placement Test is one of the most widely used measures of ESL/EFL proficiency in the UK. It has been reliably exploited for ascertaining English proficiency of the students entering undergraduate and postgraduate studies in British universities. Since the subjects of the present study are of the undergraduate level, the researcher deems that the Oxford Placement Test effectively and efficiently measures the subjects’ proficiency in writing, reading and listening. This test is constituted of two subtests:

a. Test of Grammatical Structures: This is a written multiple-choice test of grammatical structures of English covered by the vast majority of course books, whether functional or structural, in the range from elementary to advanced. The test has one hundred multiple-choice items, each carrying one mark. A time limit of one hour thirty minutes is set for the test.

b. Test of Reading and Listening Skills: This is a test of reading and listening skills consisting of one hundred multiple-choice items, each of one mark. In the test, the testee’s performance is dependent on the knowledge of the sound and writing systems of the English language and upon the ability to make use of this knowledge. The recorded material controls the time for the test.

Free Composition Test: This test is designed to assess the subjects’ linguistic competence in organizing and presenting relevant ideas in writing. Controlled compositions are error-provoking while free compositions are error-avoiding. In this investigation, spontaneous prediction procedure has been followed, and the subjects are asked to write a free composition on any one of the topics –‘Your Future Plan’, ‘Importance of English’ and ‘Family Life’. A time limit of one hour is set for the test, and it is marked in 20.

Speaking Test: This test is made up of the items supposed to determine the subjects’ ability to express different attitudes, feelings and emotions as well as their competence in communicating in real life situations. The subjects are required to answer the test in 45 minutes, and it is marked in 25.

Data collection and analysis

To ascertain the subjects’ current level of proficiency in the English language, the Oxford Placement Test, Free Composition Test and Speaking Test have been administered to both the experimental group and the control group prior to the start of their EFL programmes. The data collected from both the groups are checked and scored by hand; and their average proficiency before the start of the EFL programmes or the pre-programme linguistic level of each of the groups is computed.

Interlanguage has so far been studied by a good number of psycholinguists (e.g. Brown 1973, Dulay and Burt 1974) in two manners ? the morpheme studies and error analysis. However, error analysis has been adopted to serve the purpose of the present study, and is performed to detect the linguistic deficiencies or errors/mistakes in the data gathered from the experimental group before the start of the EFL programme. ‘Let the errors determine the categories’ approach (Norrish 1983) is used to group the errors (/mistakes) as they are basically related to particular grammatical, semantic, phonetic, phonological, lexical and comprehensive problems. This approach is employed since it has the advantage of allowing the errors (/mistakes) themselves to determine the categories chosen: by a process of sorting and resorting the categories will eventually define themselves.

Then both the groups have completed their respective EFL programmes, each of 72 contact hours. The control group has been taught according to the syllabus already designed by the Language Centre whereas the experimental group has been taught according to the syllabus designed by course teacher in the light of the results of the error analysis of the data collected from the subjects of this group before the start of the EFL programme. At the end of the programmes, the Oxford Placement Test, Free Composition Test and Speaking Test have again been given to both the groups, and their average proficiency after the completion of the EFL programmes or the post-programme linguistic level of each of the groups is computed. In addition, error analysis is again carried out to uncover errors/mistakes in the data gathered from the experimental group after the completion of the EFL programme.

Presentation and interpretation of the findings

The analysis of the data collected from both the experimental group and the control group by using the Oxford Placement Test, Free Composition Test and Speaking Test produces four types of findings.

Pre-programme linguistic level

The average marks secured by both the experimental group and the control group in the Oxford Placement Test, Free Composition Test and Speaking Test before their receiving any instruction in the EFL programme are shown in Table-1 below:

Proficiency Tests Experimental Group Control Group

Test of Grammatical Structures 40

41

Test of Reading and Listening Skills 33

31

Free Composition Test 6

6.5

Speaking Test 11.5

12

Table-1

The findings presented in Table-1 reveal that the average marks of the experimental group are a good approximation to those of the control group. While the experimental group secures 40, 33, 6 and 11.5 in Test of grammatical Structures, Test of Reading and Listening Skills, Free Composition Test and Speaking Test respectively, the control group gets 41, 31, 6.5 and 12 in the same tests respectively. That is, the pre-programme linguistic levels of both the groups are almost the same.

These results might be attributed to the fact that the subjects belonging to both the experimental group and the control group possess almost everything in common, such as the same mother tongue, the same age group, similar educational background, similar exposure to EFL, and the same objective of learning EFL. However, the insignificant difference between the scores of the two groups can be supported by the existing finding that there is individual variability within uniformity of interlanguage (Andersen 1978 and Hyltenstam 1977).

Pre-programme linguistic deficiencies of the experimental group

The linguistic deficiencies detected by the error analysis of the data collected from the experimental group prior to the start of the ELT programme are summed up and discussed as follows:

Test of Grammatical Structures: The Test of Grammatical Structures taken by the subjects of the experimental group exhibits that the subjects have considerable deficiency in linguistic competence as well as performance. They have committed both ‘errors of competence’, that is, failures in using appropriate and correct language forms and rules to transmit or perceive messages, and ‘errors of performance’, that is, mistakes occurring due to the subjects’ insufficient practice, indifference, fatigue, or anxiety. More specifically, the subjects have inadequate knowledge of and ability to use appropriate and correct count/non-count nouns, e.g. ‘information, homework’, determiners, e.g. ‘few, little, some’, relative pronouns, e.g. ‘that, which, where’, connectors, e.g. ‘since, because, or’, adverbs, e.g. ‘always, recently, hardly, scarcely, really’, modals, e.g. ‘could, will, shall, would, may, can, might, must, need’, verb forms and tenses, subject-verb agreement and prepositions. Moreover, they are found to have encountered difficulty in forming negative sentences, questions, passive sentences, reported speech, conditionals, tag questions, and the like.

The finding is consistent with those uncovered by Haque and Maniruzzaman (1993) and Maniruzzaman (2003), and can be thought over to be the outcome of the insufficient and defective input and formal instruction in the grammatical structures the subjects received before the start of the present EFL programme.

Test of Reading and Listening Skills: The Test of Reading and Listening Skills unfolds that the subjects lack proficiency in both reading and listening comprehension. Their skimming and scanning ability is very poor and reading speed so slow. Besides, they seem to have insufficient vocabulary and knowledge of sentence structures, and hence poor reading comprehension ability. Furthermore, the subjects confront much difficulty in listening to utterances since many English vowel and consonant sounds are unfamiliar to them. They face problems particularly with long monophthongs, diphthongs, labio-dentals, inter-dentals and sibilants. Moreover, they cannot cope with the effects produced by strong-weak forms, stress and intonation. As a consequence, their ability of listening to utterances and understanding information is very limited.

The findings could be attributed to several factors, such as defective and inappropriate teaching methods and techniques, inadequate and irrelevant material, the subjects’ lack of practice, uncongenial learning environment, mother tongue interference, and so on.

Free Composition Test: The Test of Free Composition reveals that the subjects face problems of constructing correct sentences and presenting ideas in a well-organized manner. This is due to their inadequate command of the uses of different grammatical categories, such as tenses, articles, demonstratives, possessives, quantifiers, subject-verb agreement, adjectives, adverbs, prepositions, passivization, and spellings as well as the usages of different of words. This finding again lends support to those uncovered by Haque and Maniruzzaman (1993) and Maniruzzaman (2003), and can be considered to be the outcome of the limitations in the whole teaching process encompassing the teacher, syllabus, teaching methods and techniques, materials, equipment and testing tools.

Speaking Test: The Speaking Test discloses that the subjects tremendously lack both linguistic and communicative competence since they have limited skills at using contractions, suprasegmental features ? stress, tone and intonation, appropriate words and utterances in an appropriate way with appropriate persons in appropriate situations. The result might be explained by the fact that the speaking skill is very much neglected in the ELT classroom in Bangladesh. And outside the classroom, the subjects hardly get any opportunity of (practising) speaking in the English language.

Post-programme linguistic level

The average marks secured by both the experimental group and the control group in the Oxford Placement Test, Free Composition Test and Speaking Test after their receiving instruction in the EFL programme are displayed in Table-2 below:

Proficiency Tests Experimental Group Control Group

Test of Grammatical Structures 81

55

Test of Reading and Listening Skills 78

49

Free Composition Test 14

8.5

Speaking Test 22

15

Table-2

The results showed in Table-2 disclose that the average marks of the experimental group are significantly much higher than those of the control group. The experimental group obtains 81, 78, 14 and 22 in Test of grammatical Structures, Test of Reading and Listening Skills, Free Composition Test and Speaking Test respectively whereas the control group gets 55, 49, 8.5 and 15 in the same tests respectively.

These findings can certainly be attributed to the fact that the subjects of the experimental group received instruction in the English language through the syllabus, teaching methods and techniques as well as materials designed, adapted and adopted on the basis of the study of the interlanguage of the subjects of this group; on the other hand, the subjects of the control group learned the English language in the pre-planned and pre-designed programme of the Language Centre having no link to the study of their interlanguage before the commencement of their EFL programme.

Post-programme linguistic deficiencies of the experimental group

The error analysis of the data collected from the experimental group after the completion of the EFL programme designed and conducted on the basis of the findings of the error analysis of the data gathered from the same group prior to the commencement of the EFL programme conspicuously shows that the subjects have had their linguistic level substantially improved since this time they have secured significantly higher marks in Test of Grammatical Structures, Test of Reading and Listening Skills, Free Composition Test and Speaking Test, as compared with those of the previous time. That is, they have now committed less errors/mistakes and prove to have acquired a good command of all the basic skills of the English language ? listening, speaking, reading and writing. This finding is due to the consideration and exploitation of the findings of the error analysis of the data gathered from the experimental group before the beginning of the EFL programme.

Conclusions and suggestions

The analysis and interpretation of the findings of the present investigation lead to two conspicuous inferences.

Firstly, the study of interlanguage helps determine the current linguistic level of the learner. As a result, it is possible to find out what the learner lacks and what he/she need learn to reach a standard of the English language. That is, the research into the learner’s interim dialect of the target language evidently demonstrates both the general and specific linguistic as well as communicative weaknesses he/she has, and indicates the future course of action.

Secondly, the EFL programme which is based on the study of the interlanguage of the learner is more effective and successful than that which is designed and implemented on the basis of theories, assumptions, experiences and predictions.

Therefore, it can be claimed that the study of interlanguage is substantially relevant to teaching English as a foreign language especially at the tertiary level.

Based on the conclusions of the current study, several linguistic and pedagogic recommendations could be made.

First, the learner’s interlanguage can be analyzed and investigated to select and sequence the contents or teaching/learning items of the syllabus. In other words, the results of the study of the interlanguage of the learner should be used to reveal what he/she need learn in which order to approximate a standard of the target language. In this manner, the study of the interlanguage of the learner might be exploited as an instrument complementary to needs analysis of the same learner.

Second, through the study of the interlanguage of the learner, the teacher should have a clear concept of the nature of the learner’s interim language. This knowledge might help the teacher feel more confident and become more competent than before in discovering the learner’s errors, the causes of the errors, and taking sufficient and suitable remedial measures to properly treat the errors.

Third, the study of interlanguage should be carried out so as to be aware of the individual variability within uniformity; and teaching methods, techniques and classroom activities should be planned, adapted, adopted and implemented accordingly.

Finally, the universality or common characteristics of interlanguage may be considered to choose and order the common contents of the syllabus and adopt some common steps to treat them appropriately and adequately in the classroom situation.

Works Cited

Adjemian, C. “On the nature of interlanguage system.” Language Learning 26 (1976): 297-320.

Andersen, R. “An implicational model for second language acquisition.” Language Learning 28 (1978): 221-282.

Allan, D. Oxford Placement Test. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1985.

Brown, R. A First Language: The Early Stages. Cambridge:, MA: Harvard University Press, 1973.

Corder, S. P. “The significance of learners’ errors.” International Review of Applied Linguistics 4 (1967): 161-169.

- – - . Introducing Applied Linguistics. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1973.

Dulay, H. C. and M. K. Burt. “Errors and Strategies in Child Second Language Acquisition.” TESOL Quarterly 8 (1974): 129-136.

Ellis, Rod. The Study of Second Language Acquisition. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994.

Haque, S. M. and M. Maniruzzaman. “The need for the study of language.” The Dhaka University Studies 50, 2 (1993): 100-114.

Hyltenstam, K. “Implication patterns in interlanguage syntax variation.” Language Learning 27 (1977): 383-411.

Maniruzzaman, M. “The rationale behind teaching language to students of literature.” The Jahangirnagar Review Part- C XIII & XIV (2001-2002 & 2002-2003): 235-249.

- – - . Introduction to English Language Study. Dhaka: Friends’ Book Corner, 2006.

Mitchell, R. and F. Myles. Second language Learning Theories. Great Britain: Arnold, 1998.

Nemser, W. “Approximative systems of foreign language learners.” International Review of Applied Linguistics 9 (1971): 115-123.

Norrish, J. Language Learners and Their Errors. London: Macmillan, 1983.

Selinker, L. “Language transfer.” General Linguistics 9 (1969): 67-92.

- – - . “Interlanguage.” IRAL 10 (1972): 209-231.

Spolsky, B. Conditions for Second Language Learning. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1989.

Sudman, S. Applied Sampling. New York: Academic Press, Inc., 1976.

Tarone, E. “Interlanguage as a chameleon.” Language Learning 29 (1979): 181-191.

Towell, R. and R. Hawkins. Approaches to Second Language Acquisitin. Clevedon: Multilingual Matters, 1994.

APPENDIX-A

Test of Grammatical Structures

Time- 90 Minutes

Look at these examples. The correct answer is underlined:

a. In warm climates people like likes are liking sitting outside in the sun.

b. If it is very hot they sit at in under the shade.

Now the test will begin. Underline the correct answers:

Today they are there are it is many millions of people learning English. 1 …

Some people study studies is studying English for a special reason. 2 …

They may need English for the job job their job . 3 …

Some of them need need to are needing speak to English people 4 …

The majority of learners of English has are having have other needs. 5 …

Most users of English use it

for talk that they can talk to talk to people who aren’t English. 6 …

It is There is There are hardly any parts of the world where English 7 …

is never spoken.

Most of The most Most people have heard some English at some time. 8 …

Very few people haven’t heard some the any English spoken at all. 9 …

English is undoubtedly the most the more a most widely-used language in the world. 10 …

For many years the Guinness Book of Records has been one of the most popular books

of in under the United Kingdom. 11 …

It has been was is first published in 1955 12 …

Since then it is was has been a regular bestseller. 13 …

Most of the records in it are changing have changed changed 14 …

many times in recent years.

In 1954, the year the first Guinness Book of Records was being compiled,

the world mile record could be was being was broken more than once. 15 …

The year before that, in 1953, it

had stood used to stand still was standing at over four minutes. 16 …

But in 1954 the four-minute barrier could was to should be broken several times. 17 …

Roger Bannister’s famous run was the first time anyone has had would even run so fast. 18 …

If Dr. Bannister had not been would not have been would not be 19 …

the first to run the mile in under four minutes he would not be so well known.

The record has been held by a great number deal many of runners since then. 20 …

This history of computer the computer a computer is really 21 …

a quite quite a quite long one. A computer is essentially an 22 …

efficient means of processing informations an information information . 23 …

For thousands of years a man man the man has been using 24 …

different types of instrument to overcome the problems caused by unwieldy number systems.

Early mathematicians had difficulty to use difficulties to use difficulty in using 25 …

the umber systems of their societies but succeeded

to develop in developing into developing personal number 26 …

systems in what where which to carry out their calculations. 27 …

The decimal number system, which we

are used to working used to work have been used to working 28 …

with for since during a long time now, and which is 29 …

such such a so common basis of calculation today, has not 30 …

ever still always been as widely used 31 …

like that as it is now. 32 …

Both number systems dependent from of on the notion 33 …

of zero were developed in some ancient societies in parallel with

mechanical aids to calculation. As long ago as 500 B.C. * in other words

for some 25 centuries some 25 centuries earlier some 25 centuries ago 34 …

* the abacus

were being was being has been used in China. 35 …

This aid to calculation, and the counting tables used by the Babylonians and the

Greeks, were the real forerunners of the ‘mainframes’ and ‘micros’ that are so

familiar today, of what which these we call a ‘computer’. 36 …

Over the centuries between the invention of the abacus and the production of

the first electronic digital computer in 1943 a vast number of different tools

and machines for calculating have been were has been 37 …

developed. Logarithms and ‘bones’ were both invented in the 17th century.

Before that, mathematicians and inventors

could develop have developed had developed many other 38 …

types of aid but with much fewer little less success. The 39 …

first slide rule was produced in 1621 and the first mass-produced multiplying

aid that same this same the next century, just 40 …

few a few not many years later. In 1642 the French 41 …

philosopher, Pascal, produced a mechanical calculator which could do all

what which that basic adding machines do today, but he 42 …

could not have make let it manufactured accurately enough 43 …

to make it reliable. It was a long time long time long before 44 …

manufacturing techniques improved and not until early in the 19th century

came the Arithmometer the Arithmometer came did the Arithmometer come 45 …

on the scene like as for the first commercially successful 46 …

calculator. Its producers could should couldn’t hardly have 47 …

imagined that by the 1980s technology

had advanced will advance would have advanced so far that 48 …

an instrument the size of a wristwatch would be many times more powerful.

True computers are only existing since have only existed for have only been existing for 49 …

forty years but the 1980s have seen a computer explosion. By the time we

will reach will have reached reach the end of the decade, all 50 …

our lives will be directly affected by computers.

One evening Sandra’s fiancé, John, tells her

he’s going he’d go he goes out for a drink with his friends 51 …

and she decides she likes she’ll like she’d like to go to 52 …

the college disco rather than stay in

on her own by her own hy her self . After a while she meets 53 …

Bob, an old boyfriend of her them hers and a friend of 54 …

John’s. At first she’s glad of his company, but then his attentions

become rather too few little much and she’s 55 …

no more no longer not any more enjoying herself. 56 …

Bob : Come on ? Shall Won’t Wouldn’t you have another 57 …

drink ? It won’t take a minute to get for getting get you one. 58 …

Sandra : No, really, I’d I I’ve had enough. 59 …

Bob :I’m sure it would make you feel to feel felling better. 60 …

Sandra No, honestly.

I’m feeling myself I feel myself I’m feeling fine, thanks. 61 …

Bob : Well, how about a what’s about a why not to dance ? 62 …

There’s no point sense need to be so unfriendly just because 63 …

you get you’re getting you’re to be got married. You 64 …

should could might as well enjoy yourself while you can. 65 …

Sandra : Actually, Bob, I think I I’ll I’d better be going now. 66 …

It’ll get It’s getting It gets on. 67 …

Bob : What ? Leave now ? It’s not hardly scarcely really got going yet. 68 …

Surely you

don’t have to go have not to go needn’t have gone just yet, 69 …

do you ? Is it because of me ?

Sandra : No, it’s not that, but I really ought to go home I’ve got

a homework some homeworks some homework to do. I 70 …

should have done it last week but

I’ve forgotten I’d forgotten I forgot 71 …

I needn’t mustn’t mightn’t stay any longer or 72 …

I’ll never get I never get I’d never got it done. 73 …

Bob : You could do it in the morning it.

you’ll get you’d get you got up early. 74 …

There’s not much point you try to try in trying to start 75 …

now. You may can could as well enjoy yourself now, then 76 …

get a good night’s rest and do it tomorrow. Come on, let’s have a dance.

Sandra : Look? I’ve I I’d already said I’ve got to 77 …

go and I’ll I I’d mean it. I 78 …

shall should go should have gone ages ago, in fact 79 …

I had rather I’d have rather I’d have preferred not come at 80 …

all. I really wish I wouldn’t have didn’t hadn’t now. 81 …

Bob : You might would may have told me you were in such 82 …

a lousy mood. I wouldn’t have bothered trying to be friendly.

Sandra : Come on, Bob? It’s time I left I’ll leave I leave and 83 …

that’s all there is to it.

Bob : In that case I’ll tell I tell I’m telling you what I could 84 …

do. I could offer you a lift. It’ll It’d This will be a lot 85 …

quicker than the bus.

Sandra : Oh yes ? By the time we’d go we’d been we go 86 …

round all the country lanes. Not on your life ?

I’ll I I’d rather walk. Goodnight *

87 …

Bob : What a night ? If only

I’d I’d have I’ve known in the first place. 88

That she doesn’t want anything to do with me any more ? well,

it’s the first time I’ve been I’m going I go to a disco for ages. 89 …

and after tonight it’d been it’d be it’ll be the last. Never again ! Or at 90 …

least not till next week !

Look at the following examples of question tags in English. The correct form of the tag is underlined :

a. He’s getting the 9.15 train, isn’t he hasn’t he wasn’t he ?

b. She works in a library, isn’t she doesn’t she doesn’t he ?

c. Tom didn’t tell you, hasn’t he didn’t he did he ?

Now underline the correct question tag in the following 10 items :

Perter’s due back tomorrow, wasn’t he hasn’t he isn’t he ? 91 …

It’s been ages since we last saw him, didn’t we hasn’t it isn’t it ? 92 …

I don’t believe you’d met before that, hadn’t you wouldn’t you had you ? 93 …

We’d no idea he was coming, had we did we hadn’t we ? 94 …

I guess he’s hardly likely to go out there again, do I isn’t he is he ? 95 …

Nobody has dinner there in the evening before ten,

have they has he do they ? 96 …

I guess you’d rather we didn’t eat too late tomorrow,

did we would you shouldn’t you ? 97 …

So you think he can get away with not going back till next year,

could he can’t he do you ? 98 …

I’d better give this a final read through before I hand it over,

shouldn’t I wouldn’t I hadn’t I ? 99 …

You’d no idea it was going to be as hard as this,

hadn’t you had you did you ? 100 …

APPENDIX-B

Test of Reading and Listening Skills

Look at the example below. Listen to the tape. You will hear the example once only. Decide which word you hear, ‘soap’, or ‘soup’:

a. Will you get me some soap soup at the supermarket ?

The word was ‘soup’, so ‘soup’ is underlined. Now look at these examples and listen to the tape again. This time, you underline the words you hear. For example, if you hear ‘shorts’ underline ‘shorts’ :

b. The team need new shirts shorts .

c. They’ve recently developed a new kind of vine wine around here.

The words on the tape were ‘shorts’ and ‘vine’, so the correct answers look like this:

b. The team need new shirts shorts .

c. They’ve recently developed a new kind of vine wine around here.

Now the test will begin. Listen to the tape and underline the words you hear:

1. Who’s paying playing tonight ?

2. She fell and hurt her chin shin .

3. Mr. Foot’s speech paid particular attention to the mounting

crisis prices we are now facing.

4. The appointment is almost certain to be vetted vetoed by the government.

5. Can you sew up soak the bottom of my jeans for me ? They’re in an awful mess.

6. For the third time this year Wembley has been filled with Tottenham tartan scarves.

7. There’s a Paul call for you on line one.

8. During the last couple of years there have been marked market

variations throughout Europe.

9. Sorry, John’s not at home. He’s out walking working at the moment.

10. She got it for her a friend.

11. He put all the things into in two bags.

12. He’s been having a lot of trouble with his ankle uncle recently.

13. I hear you’re going to Turkey Torquay for your holidays.

14. Simon’s Someone’s on the phone for you.

15. As with many poorer countries, it’s largely a problem of the distribution of

welfare wealth there .

16. If you’re looking for Andy, he’s out on the pier beer .

17. I must say I wouldn’t have thought he’d have taken it to heart too hard .

18. Has his chess chest improved at all recently ?

19. Because of his previous record he was given a light life sentence.

20. Don’t tell anybody but I I’d do it for nothing.

21. I love the smell of all spice Old spice but my wife can’t stand it.

22. Would you like another coffee copy ?

23. Let Susie play with it for now an hour . You’ve had a go.

24. Do you really think this action section is necessary ?

25. Are you going to Seapalling see Pauline today ?

26. Many of the passengers received fatal facial injuries.

27. He’s responsible for collating collecting information on market trends.

28. When I was at Cambridge the place was full of hearty arty people.

29. Unemployment on Teesside Deeside is running at over twenty per cent.

30. I hear that Connors has lost a game again .

31. Can you pick that pen pin up for me, please ?

32. I understand you’re very critical of the offer author .

33. Shares usually rise on the first day Thursday of budget week.

34. Despite what you say it’s really rarely a problem.

35. Though the scores were level the Welsh were right on top in terms of

position possession .

36. I gather you rang confirming concerning my flight to Athens.

37. If that’s so it’s more than likely unlikely he’ll have to leave.

38. She gratefully gracefully accepted their applause.

39. On one level the film can be seen as a savage betrayal portrayal

of his working-class background.

40. The country is now suffering from a shortage of farriers harriers .

41. Hoddle looks likely to win his third cup cap this year.

42. What’s that you’ve got on your list wrist .

43. Sunflowers Some flowers grow very tall in this part of East Anglia.

44. How soon will they be able to let us have a reply replay ? By the end

of next week ?

45. The government reported that the remainder of the Asians agents

had been deported.

46. He was late because he went the long wrong way.

47. I could manage a wee weak cup of coffee.

48. Do you know where ‘Classics’ Class six is today ?

49. I’m surprised they didn’t have any rum room at the pub.

50. The government insisted on preconditions three conditions

for the sovereignty negotiations.

51. When I told him he just said, ‘Oh, good ! ‘

‘Oh, God !

.

52. I just didn’t think he’d be armed harmed .

53. If you’re looking for the sherry it’s in the decanter under the counter .

54. There’s no need for him to be so big-headed pig-headed about it.

55. She goes out at nine night to her job at the factory.

56. Do you think she was responsible for enticing inciting him to do it ?

57. As I entered the house there was a lovely smell of bacon baking .

58. Can you let me have a black blank one ?

59. The new test material will probably be for the adopted adapted .

teacher’s courses.

60. Do you know if it’s been being done ?

61. There are many countries nowadays where private phone calls can be tapped taped .

62. We’ve gone through today’s two days money in less than an hour.

63. It wasn’t until some time after the accident that we found out he was’t injured insured .

64. If you do get her a racket for her birthday, get her a good wood one.

65. I’ll I’ve put the call through to him.

66. I much prefer squid when it’s fried in butter batter .

67. Martina lives in a great big freezing Friesian barn.

68. Your sister solicitor has just been on the phone.

69. The president omitted admitted the fact that unemployment was still rising.

70. We’ll have to see if we can present the information on a new news sheet.

71. It’s very difficult not to lose face faith in a situation like that.

72. There isn’t a lot of Joyce choice on this year’s syllabus.

73. Many of us have been heartened hardened by recent events.

74. I like it well-prepared unsalted well peppered salted and medium rare.

75. The criticisms were apparently unanimous anonymous .

76. I should imagine that the castle was quite unassailable unsaleable .

77. Are you going off to after the conference on Saturday ?

78. Are you intending to go to the Hull whole seminar ?

79. I believe they set sat that particular paper in June.

80. He appeared to be absolutely naked knackered .

81. In the last couple of years he’s been on all the Norfolk marshes marches .

82. I gather her husband roped wrote her into the play.

83. You have to go to the left lift first to get to Room 415.

84. He said we’d be fine fined with six in the car.

85. I’m not sure how the money is to be paid. Do you want a cheque to check ?

86. Do you know the riddle about the thirty sick thirty-six sheep ?

87. My son’s German pen-friend doesn’t know what he means when he

says, ‘Wanna bet ?’ ‘Wanna bat ?’ .

88. I’m afraid onion rings cooked in butter batter don’t agree with me.

89. There’s a lovely little takeaway round the corner where they do

salami on rye salami and rice specials.

90. If you have any problems, please contact the British Council Consul immediately.

91. It’s steep deep , isn’t it ?

92. I’m very glad you Hugh can come tonight.

93. I’ve got to go and lock unlock the car.

94. Watch What’s the time, love ! / ?

95. My daughter’s just got some Bally ballet shoes.

96. Have you got a ticket to take it to Cambridge ?

97. There’s a chapel on chap along our road might be able to help you.

98. If you’re asking if I want to go out with you, the answer is I don’t, no I don’t know .

99. The local garage is dirt-cheap garages do it cheap .

100. Forfar 4 East Fife 5 Forfar 5 East Fife 4 was the highest score of the day.

APPENDIX-C

Free Composition Test

Time- 1 Hour

Marks- 20

Write a composition of 400 words on any one of the following topics:

a. Your future plan

b. Importance of English

c. Family life

APPENDIX-D

Speaking Test

Time- 45 Minutes

Marks-25

1. Write what you say to- 1×10=10

a. request your friend for a pen.

b. enter your teacher’s room.

c. draw somebody’s attention.

d. disapprove something.

e. offer tea to a guest.

f. invite your friend to your birthday party.

g. prefer coffee to tea.

h. meet a person for the first time.

i. express regrets for some mistakes.

j. advise your younger brother against something.

2. Write a dialogue with each of the situations: 5×2=10

(a) You have met your school friend in a bus stop after many years.

(b) You and your younger brother are discussing a TV programme.

3. This is a dialogue between Rafit and a passer-by. Fill in what the passer-by says by reading Rafit’s replies: 1×5=5

Rafit: Excuse me. I wonder if you can help me.

Passer-by: ? ? ??

Rafit: I’m looking for GPO. I can’t find it.

Passer-by: ? ? ?.

Rafit: How much will it take?

Passer-by: ? ? ?.

Rafit: Can’t I go by rickshaw?

Passer-by: ? ? ?.

Rafit: Then it’s better to go by bus.

Passer-by: ? ? ?.

Rafit: I much thank you.

About the Author

MA in English Language and PhD in Applied Linguistics & ELT, currently Associate Professor in the Department of English, Jahangirnagar University, interested in phonetics, phonology, syntax, sociolinguistics, psycholinguistics, teaching methodologies, syllabus/materials design, and testing, and published 42 books and papers.


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