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Chapter One) N; w! n) F1 Z8 d, P; X
7 t% K' ~+ N" o; g/ G When I first landed in Canada, the feelings of frustration always haunted me. Why? No one could understand my spoken English although I studied English for nearly 12 years in China and passed various exams with a high score. Still, you caught the big frown and constant “Pardon me?” from local persons. Those situations happened so often that I hesitated to open my mouth before others for a long time (except Chinese compatriots). However, silence is not a wise choice to survive in this English-spoken country, right? How could I deal with those awkward situations? Well, according to our so-called Chinese learning experience, we should fall back on all kinds of English books to supply ourselves with more “useful knowledge”. Ok, I began to recite the tons of vocabulary and phrases on TOEFL and GRE. What a time-consuming job and unreasonable practice it was at that time! When I recalled that period, a bitter smile always emerged on my face. , {: i- h* Z9 l1 I. x. \6 Z% I& |8 [
2 n9 n( R* A% [" J0 F/ u& a- } Five months past since I had landed in Toronto, my English level still stayed at a silent phase. At that time, I believed that as long as I prepared enough vocabulary, someday, I would be ready for any challenge of English. Well, this study focus was not wrong but what I emphasized was impractical. 8 r2 c1 r; |, L
2 I$ Z1 N$ b& x/ f E Let me explain to you in details(不要加s): what kind of vocabulary should we learn? Where can we find practical words to express ourselves? How should we learn those words? 7 B5 _% X- R; q& z3 ]2 u! J
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As you know, there are tons of words in English, before I came to Canada, we have had no chance to read the normal articles written by local authors. What we can get in China, it is classical English writings by some famous writers (those essay are hard to master to us, and they are more academic), or some so-called English articles that wrote by our Chinese experts in English (they failed to express their meaning in a Canadian way). I don't mean that those English articles are not good. What I thought is those articles are not good enough for us to learn.
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9 b6 p5 e% _0 m# g' U' G Every immigrant in Canada got this kind of experience: you looked up the dictionary and find a word or a phrase you want, when you communicated with local person by using this word, you got a confused face in front of you. Right? We spoke English but English-speaking people didn’t get what we were saying. For example, I want to use the fax machine once a time in the immigrant center without knowing how to say fax machine. After checking the electronic dictionary, I found a big word “facsimile”. Not to mention that my pronunciation was correct or not, I went around the whole office and kept saying ‘facsimile’ nobody could figure it out what I was looking for until I pointed it directly to them. What an embarrassment it is! |
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