PodParley PodParley

El ibuprofeno

An episode of the Magonia podcast, hosted by Magonia, titled "El ibuprofeno" was published on July 8, 2019 and runs 9 minutes.

July 8, 2019 ·9m · Magonia

0:00 / 0:00
Toni Garrido, J.M. Mulet, Tom Kallene y Luis Alfonso Gámez hablaron el 3 de julio de 2019 del ibuprofeno, en la trigésima cuarta entrega de la temporada de nuestra colaboración en 'Hoy por hoy', en la Cadena SER.
Benjamin Zephaniah

May 18, 2011 ·3m

Benjamin Zephaniah

May 18, 2011 ·3m

Colin Goh

May 18, 2011 ·2m

Colin Goh

May 18, 2011 ·2m

Derek Simpson

May 18, 2011 ·1m

Derek Simpson

May 18, 2011 ·1m

English: Personal Experiences - for iPad/Mac/PC The Open University How has the English language influenced your life? How would you define your relationship with English? In this collection these questions are explored by Poet Benjamin Zephaniah, writer Sindiwe Magona, and author Jung Chang amongst others. They discuss the impact of the language; and describe the part English has played in their life. For many of us the language can broaden experiences and opportunities, for others it can create obstacles and become a hindrance. How often do you change they way you speak to adapt to different environments or accommodate other peoples assumptions? Can we get an insight into who people are by how the use grammar and pronounce words? In a series of conversations we’re given access to the varying perspectives on the English language from a range of personal experiences.This material forms part of The Open University course U214 Worlds of English. English: Personal Experiences - for iPod/iPhone The Open University How has the English language influenced your life? How would you define your relationship with English? In this collection these questions are explored by Poet Benjamin Zephaniah, writer Sindiwe Magona, and author Jung Chang amongst others. They discuss the impact of the language; and describe the part English has played in their life. For many of us the language can broaden experiences and opportunities, for others it can create obstacles and become a hindrance. How often do you change they way you speak to adapt to different environments or accommodate other peoples assumptions? Can we get an insight into who people are by how the use grammar and pronounce words? In a series of conversations we’re given access to the varying perspectives on the English language from a range of personal experiences.This material forms part of The Open University course U214 Worlds of English.
URL copied to clipboard!