English teachers
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English teachers
- ALynnPowers
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I am an English teacher! Well, sort of... technically, I am an EFL teacher, from America, living abroad in Japan. For the past six months, I have been teachers exclusively at preschools/daycares, but for the past 4 years, I taught all grades and adults as well. Before I came to Japan, I was a speech-language pathologist. That's not exactly an English teacher, but I was in the education field, and I taught English to kids with communication disorders. But since I've never been an actually "classroom teacher," I don't know much (i.e., anything) about classroom teaching.
- rssllue
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Sounds like a very cool career! Must be exciting doing it in Japan as well!ALynnPowers wrote:Wow, randomly clicked on page 5 of this forum and came across this thread! Sorry no one has responded to your message until almost 5 months later.
I am an English teacher! Well, sort of... technically, I am an EFL teacher, from America, living abroad in Japan. For the past six months, I have been teachers exclusively at preschools/daycares, but for the past 4 years, I taught all grades and adults as well. Before I came to Japan, I was a speech-language pathologist. That's not exactly an English teacher, but I was in the education field, and I taught English to kids with communication disorders. But since I've never been an actually "classroom teacher," I don't know much (i.e., anything) about classroom teaching.
I will both lay me down in peace, and sleep: for Thou, LORD, only makest me dwell in safety. ~ Psalms 4:8
- ALynnPowers
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- rssllue
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I will both lay me down in peace, and sleep: for Thou, LORD, only makest me dwell in safety. ~ Psalms 4:8
- fluidity
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Under the "Community & Off Topic" section I responded to the topic "Brainteaser" I answered one and then added one of my own which no one answered correctly yet...if there is an answer. Help me with this, here it goes - You have 2 pens and you give me 1. If I then ask you "How many PENS do you have?" most people will say "1". Is this response incorrect? Should you say "1 PEN" or "I have 1 PEN". I asked "How many PENS (plural) do you have?". It's grammatically incorrect (I think) for me to say "How many PEN (singular) do you have?", knowing you have only 1 PEN. Is the difficulty in how the question is asked or answered?
You can think of many other examples such as this.
How do the singular/plural English rules apply here?
- ALynnPowers
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This is my opinion on this:fluidity wrote:Calling All English Mavens!
Under the "Community & Off Topic" section I responded to the topic "Brainteaser" I answered one and then added one of my own which no one answered correctly yet...if there is an answer. Help me with this, here it goes - You have 2 pens and you give me 1. If I then ask you "How many PENS do you have?" most people will say "1". Is this response incorrect? Should you say "1 PEN" or "I have 1 PEN". I asked "How many PENS (plural) do you have?". It's grammatically incorrect (I think) for me to say "How many PEN (singular) do you have?", knowing you have only 1 PEN. Is the difficulty in how the question is asked or answered?
You can think of many other examples such as this.
How do the singular/plural English rules apply here?
In English grammar, is it necessary to always use the plural form when asking a question with "how many," regardless of the answer. So, you must ask, "How many PENS do you have?" even if you know the answer is a singular 1. The question "how many" requires a countable answer, so as long as the answer is given as a number, it doesn't matter if it is singular or plural. So it is NOT incorrect to answer "1" to any question starting with "how many," as long as it is the correct number to answer the "how many" part of the question. It's grammar, not semantics, that dictates the plural in the question.
- fluidity
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- ALynnPowers
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Hahaha! I almost said something to the effect of, "YOU SPEAK JAPANESE!" Which is the general response that I get whenever I say anything in Japanese... and then I'm like, "No, I just said one word!" hahahafluidity wrote:domo arigatou gozaimasu!

- rssllue
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I thought that was domo arigatou Mr. Roboto!fluidity wrote:domo arigatou gozaimasu!

I will both lay me down in peace, and sleep: for Thou, LORD, only makest me dwell in safety. ~ Psalms 4:8
- fluidity
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"domo arigatou gozaimasu" is just a more polite/formal way of saying "thank you very much".rssllue wrote:I thought that was domo arigatou Mr. Roboto!fluidity wrote:domo arigatou gozaimasu!
- ALynnPowers
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Yeah, super formal. I never even hear anyone saying the "domo" part.fluidity wrote:"domo arigatou gozaimasu" is just a more polite/formal way of saying "thank you very much".rssllue wrote:I thought that was domo arigatou Mr. Roboto!fluidity wrote:domo arigatou gozaimasu!