105. Acquiring a verbal tense. Talking about the past
Shean, even though he had been teaching long, read attentively the email on the screen, which had been sent by the trainer of the school teachers,
"Hello there, Shean,
I suggest you here a method to make your students acquire (not only theoretichally learn) verbal tenses.
These verbal tenses are the skeleton of the messages we utter and listen, are like the pillars and basement of the fortress of the language.
Think of past simple: possibly the most often verbal tense we use.
To be honest, this method has turned out ok with my large regular classes, although not that good with smaller groups."
This is the first part of the email. Track down for the second part, next entry.
On the photograph you can see the castle of La Mota, in Medina del Campo, a town in the medieval kingdom of Castilla.
In this town, Enrique IV left in a bank a large amount of golden florines as his second wife's disposal, in case he would have to have this marriage veredicted also as not ratus et consummatus, like the first one.
He and his first wife had had no child.
After 13 years this marriage was veredicted as nullus.
This king was Isabel's half-brother, and prior as a candidate to the throne of Castilla, before Isabel in the succession.
This Isabel will be the wife of Fernando, and both, with the passing years, would be named as the Catholic monarchs.
This latter marriage finished the reconquest of Spain from the Moors.
The last event of the Spanish reconquest was the solemn entrance of this couple into the city of Granada, south of Spain, on May 2, 1492.
Picture from wmatem eis uva es
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