Lets Speak English Together
The original webcomic was hand-drawn and published online at during my stay as a teacher, and covers all kinds of topics - from dealing with language barriers to learning how to be an adult. The strip naturally ended with my return to America, and I'm finally ready to assemble my journey as a book. I had an amazing time in Japan with all my adorable students, but creating comics has always been my passion. Now that I'm back in the US, I'm making the transition to full-time comics work! This book will be one of my first big steps as a professional comic creator. So here it is, the 100-page(ish) softcover book of Let's Speak English! If we go beyond our goal of $10,000, we've got a few surprises in store with the Stretch Goals!
At $15,000: Fancy spot gloss will be added to the matte cover so the art pops like WHOA! You won't believe it! (You'll probably believe it.) At $20,000: I'll add additional content to the book! There's a lot of interesting stuff that happened during my trip that was hard to fit into the comics, so these would be extra pages of short stories with accompanying illustrations!
Lets improve speaking skills by talking with each other. View All; Comment Wall. Add a Comment. You need to be a member of Let's speak English to add comments! Let's Speak English is a Slice of Life Web Comic featuring Mary Cagle, the author of Kiwi Blitz and Sleepless Domain, and her adventures as an English.
At $25,000: Donations! Five copies of LSE will be donated to public libraries across the US. Beyond $25,000: For each additional $1000 we raise beyond 25k, we'll donate a copy to an additional library! We'll have a spot in the backer survey to suggest libraries for us to donate to:).
It’s every English student’s dream. Being able to speak and sound like a native speaker. If you would like to learn more, read on! A new way of learning English called the Lexical Approach has been helping students to speak more like real native English speakers do. Let’s see how it works! When you are speaking or writing in English, being grammatically correct is great.
But, if a native speaker would never say or write a sentence, then it will sound strange to them. So, what’s the answer? First, we should learn to use set phrases and collocations like native speakers do. Let’s look at an example now. The following text is from the first paragraph above. Take a close look at the items in brackets. [It’s every] English student’s [dream].
[Being able to speak] and [sound like a] native speaker. Download nero untuk windows 7 full gratis. [If you would like to] learn more, [read on!] Did you spot it? Lexical chunks: 1. [It’s every]. [Being able to speak.] 3.
[sound like a] 4. [If you would like to.] Collocations: 5.
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