Choosing the focus word

Seb Oliver / Getty Images 


Updated on August 04, 2019

Pronunciation can be improved by focusing on the right words. Knowing the difference between content words and function words is the first step. Remember that we stress content words in English as they provide the words that are most important to understanding a sentence. In other words, function words like the prepositions «at,» «from,» or «to» are not stressed, whereas content words such as the nouns «city» or «investment» and main verbs like «study» or «develop» are stressed because they are key to understanding.

Step 1: Find the Focus Word

Once you are familiar with using content words to help with stress and intonation, it’s time to take it to the next level by choosing a focus word. The focus word (or words in some cases) is the most important word in a sentence. For example:

  • Why didn’t you telephone? I waited all day!

In these two sentences, the word «telephone» is the central focus. It’s the key to understanding both sentences. Someone might answer this question by saying:

  • I didn’t telephone because I was so busy

In this case, «busy» would be the focus word as it provides the main explanation for someone being late.

When saying the focus word, it’s common to stress this word more than the other content words. This may include raising the voice or speaking the word louder to add emphasis.

Step 2: Change Focus Words to Move the Conversation Along

Focus words may change as you move through a conversation. It’s common to choose focus words that provide the next topic for discussion. Take a look at this short conversation, notice how the focus word (marked in bold) changes to move the conversation forward.

  • Bob: We’re flying to Las Vegas next week.
  • Alice: Why are you going there?
  • Bob: I’m going to win a fortune!
  • Alice: You need to get real. Nobody wins a fortune in Las Vegas.
  • Bob: That’s not true. Jack won a fortune there last year.
  • Alice: No, Jack got married. He didn’t win a fortune.
  • Bob: That’s what I call winning a fortune. I don’t need to gamble to win a fortune.
  • Alice: Looking for love in Las Vegas is definitely not the answer.
  • Bob: OK. What is the answer in your opinion?
  • Alice: I think you need to start dating girls from here.
  • Bob: Don’t get me started on girls from here. They’re all out of my league!
  • Alice: Come on Bob, you’re a nice guy. You will find someone.
  • Bob: I hope so…

Stressing these key words helps change the topic from a vacation in Las Vegas to finding someone to marry to solving Bob’s love life issues. 

Practice: Choose the Focus Word

Now it’s up to you to choose the focus word. Choose the focus word for each sentence or group of short sentences. Next, practice speaking these sentences while making sure to emphasize the stress word more. 

  1. What do you want to do this afternoon? I’m bored!
  2. Why didn’t you tell me she had a birthday?
  3. I’m hungry. Let’s get some lunch.
  4. Nobody’s here. Where has everyone gone?
  5. I think Tom should buy lunch. I bought lunch last week.
  6. Are you going to finish work or waste time?
  7. You always complain about work. I think you need to stop.
  8. Let’s get Italian food. I’m tired of Chinese food.
  9. The students are getting horrible grades. What’s wrong?
  10. Our class is going to have a test on Friday. Make sure you prepare.

The focus word for most of these should be clear. However, remember that it’s possible to change the focus word in order to bring out different meanings. Another good way to practice is to use sound scripting — the marking up of your text — to help you practice dialogues.

For years now, I enjoy a Word-for-the-Year.  This year it is “Community.”

This focus word is more like a road to travel than a destination.  Think of Robert Frost’s diverging road in the yellow wood.  Frost chose the road less travelled; his focus word could have been “adventure” or “beyond comfort zone” or “curiosity.”  Someone with an inclination towards “security,” “comfort,” or “one step at a time” may have followed the path well-trod.

 You and I face a TON
of decisions daily.  Research reveals the
debilitating impact of decision-overload. 
By the time 5 o‘clock rolls around, our brains are spent from making
choices as varied as which of the five cereals to eat for breakfast to allocating
resources to major business projects.

A focus word streamlines
decisions.  It’s a lens through which we
view the world.

Through the perspective of my focus word, community, it does not matter which cereal I eat so long as I breakfast with my kids.  In my business, I’m seeking partnerships.

Don’t you too wish to look back over the day or week or year
and assert with assurance that we lived One. Great. Time.

How will we measure “great”? 
Through the focus word!

The Focus Word vs. Chaos

People ask me, “But, isn’t this limiting?  One word for the entire year?!”

Science affirms that our natural tendency is towards chaos. 

An unkept gardens grows into a mini-jungle.  Without an agenda and a leader, a meeting can
oh-so-quickly degenerate into a griping session or a game of office politics.  No house-rules about eating invite snacking and
fewer sit-down family meals.

It takes effort to
keep chaos at bay.  Intentionality.   

You and I know that our energy is finite.  Effort is good.  Exhaustion isn’t helpful.  The
focus word helps set boundaries that are simultaneously clear and gentle.

The Focus Word & Barrier or Center-Orientation

A mentor speaks of two ways to define groups.  This can be applied to behaviors as well.

  • According to the barriers. 
    On one side people or actions are “in” and others are “out.” 
Star-belly Sneetches are “In”. Plain bellies are “out.”
Center is the focus
  • According to the center.
    Those whose life is most aligned with the center enjoy the greatest sense of belonging and stability.  The core is the key.

A focus word provides
a center-orientation to your day, week, and year.

Examples of Focus Words

The focus words frees us from guilt at having missed our goal or “crossed the boundary.”  Tomorrow we are presented with yet another opportunity to move closer to the center.

Here are some examples

Slow

Slow” was one of my previous words.  Changes abounded in personal and professional life and I felt confused and sometimes trapped.  Many circumstances lay outside of my control.  No matter how hard I pressed life’s accelerator, the situation did not move faster.

Slow meant

  • Give people space.  My concern lay foremost on my mind…not on everyone’s.  Respect their priorities too.
  • Grow in the waiting.  Consider this period of my life as a gift to me to prepare for an upcoming action-packed rhythm.  What can I learn about myself and others?  Where do I need to heal/grow/give/be silent?
  • Be vs. Do.  Love myself. Period. And allow others to be vs. trying to change them.  Sooo much easier said than done!

The “Slow” focus word impacted my daily routine (I integrated more time for thinking) and my attitude towards others (I would catch myself judging people and remember to listen and observe before jumping to conclusions). 

When waiting grew frustrating, I would take long walks to
review my life’s journey.  Five years ago,
I could not have imagined my current life!

Decisions

I worked with a woman who chose “Decisions” as her focus word. 

The word seemed obvious as she faced upcoming transitions.  She grew even more through the more subtle, daily decisions she learned to recognize and take

  • Her attitude in face of uncertainty
  • Her actions when others behaved inappropriately
    (according to her)
  • Her time management and priorities
  • The food she ate and her exercise practices

Fruitfulness

One woman chose to apply this Bible verse to her life, focusing
one of these fruit per year:

“But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, forbearance, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.” Galatians 5: 22-23

She was mature in years and experience and was going through the cycle again!  Her focus word impacted her behavior so powerfully that friends recognized when it was the year for joy or tolerance (forbearance) or gentleness.

Impact

A focus word has impact.  We grow both for ourselves and those with whom we work and live.  

I hope that at the end of this year, friends, colleagues,
and family will feel enjoyment  at being
together. ?

Choosing a Focus Word

How do we choose a focus word?  From the heart and soul, not the head.

Psychologists assert that our beliefs, not our intellectualization,
impact our behaviors.  A focus word that
sticks addresses our emotions and our vulnerabilities.  It goes beyond the rational.  We can be blind to those underlying
assumptions and mindsets.

Here are two ways I have found helpful to remove our
barriers and identify a focus word.

Ask

I was taught to ask in prayer.  The focus word is a spiritual exercise.  Do you believe in a higher being?  Ask for a focus word. 

Alternatively, petition trusted friends. “If you would give
me one word for the year, what would it be?”

When they answer, notice your physical reaction.  Does it hit you in the gut?  Are you comforted in your mind?  Do you feel embraced?

With that awareness, sit with the word for a week.  The initial reaction, whether positive or
not, is not always the last word.  Some
of us need a wake-up call.  Others crave
encouragement. 

To sit with the word, I put it on my calendar as an all-day
event that lasts a week.  I see it
everyday and let it ruminate.

You can ask me.  Send me a note.  It would be a delight to work together to identify
a focus word for the year…it’s a way to build community with you! 

Do the Pizza Plan

Another useful technique is the Pizza Plan.  This four-step process brings to focus important facets of your life (pieces of pizza) and your satisfaction in each (crust and goodies).  This funny-looking pizza gives insight into the challenges opportunities (!) for the upcoming year.

I created a free four video series for you.  Discover it here.

Get more clarity sooner.  Write me. I will walk you through the process and be a mirror for you.  It sure helps to gain fresh perspective!

Share your word in the comments below.  It’s great to hear from you…that’s community too.

I have already spoken in a previous post ‘Handy ways to get prepared for the new year ahead’ about why as a New Year begins, one of the things I choose to do instead of resolutions, is to choose myself a ‘Focus Word’ for the New Year instead. Choosing this ‘focus word’ makes you really zone in on the direction you feel you are going in or, the change of direction you wish to be going in instead!

This post will go into detail about how to choose the right ‘FOCUS WORD’ for yourself and ways in which you can then use this focus word to keep you fixed on your goals, resolutions and the path you wish to take.

Why use a ‘Focus Word’?

When a New Year is here, we may have a long list of goals, things we want to achieve to tick off our lists, places we want to go to, etc. However, choosing a ‘focus word‘ makes you break all those long lists down into a single word, that you want to specifically focus on the most. E.g: Happiness, Education, Rebuilding, Love, Business, Growth, Resilience, Consistency, Balance. Really this list of ‘focus word’ possibilities could go on and on and on.

However, the point is for you to choose just one word that is explicitly personal to you! Dig down deep, be honest with yourself and really own this choice of a word for your personal focus.

https://www.pinterest.co.uk/pin/333055334937956231/

How to choose the right ‘FOCUS WORD’ for the New Year ahead, to keep you fixed on your goals…

Questions to ask yourself when choosing a ‘Focus Word’ or expanding on last years word:

As you will see in the next section when I share my choices of ‘Focus Words’ for the past few years, that they too, as words, have been on a connected journey of progression just like my life journey. As each year I have asked myself the same important questions:

  • Where am I coming from?
  • Where am I now?
  • Where do I want to be in a year’s time?

Now, these questions can apply to any area of your life. Yes, you can look at the physical location you are in for each question, but deeper than that you can really ask yourself these questions for where you are emotionally, spiritually, carer wise, money wise, relationship wise, character wise, etc.

So take some alone time and really ask yourself where you were, are and want to be in life. Usually, the area of life that you want to be your main focus will be the area that comes to mind first when you are asked these questions. Or if you are writing down your answers, see which jumps out of the paper at you more when you look at all your answers.

How a focus word can keep you centred and fixed on your goals:

Let me share with you my ‘focus word’ for the past few years and also this year’s ‘focus word’ choice and also share the reasons why I chose them, in order to keep me on track, centred and fixed on my specific goal or focus for that year. This will give you an example of how I managed to choose just one word to focus on, from the endless list of possibilities. As well as how to also expand on your focus word year by year…

  • 2017 = ‘Escape’
    • 2018 = ‘Healing’
      • 2019 = ‘In-Bloom’

My word for 2017 I actually chose in the last quarter of the year, after getting out of a bad situation I should have got out of a long time ago. Hence my word for 2018 being ‘Healing’ which I whole-heartedly embraced, body, mind and spirit. So then when it came to choosing my ‘focus word’ for 2019 I assessed where I was after this journey of healing. I knew my days were full of so much more sunshine and I felt that during that year of healing so many seeds had been planted. So that by the end of the year when it came to choosing my focus word, those seeds had grown and had now produced buds that I felt were preparing to open and bloom when the time was right in this new year that was about to start. Therefore, I chose 2019’s focus word to be ‘in-bloom’.

Well those buds definitely progressed through last year and I feel like I bloomed in many areas in 2019. I recognised myself in photos again and knowing my smile was a genuine one. If you follow me on instagram @helens_journey then you will see that I love to pose for photos, esp with statues or anything I see that gives me a creative idea for a picture (come on I’m a Drama Graduate, I can’t help it! lol). So people probably see me as a right poser – which I am & I love it!😜 However, in each pose and picture I instead look at it and see my authentic self. I see strength, endurance, dignity, self-love, persistence, commitment, will power, recovery, improvement, healing, pain & Gods hand holding me up! I see the buds fully bloomed and I take pride in all it took me to get there.

How to expand on your previous years ‘Focus Word’ each year, to continue your personal progression journey…

So when It came to choosing my word for the next new year ahead, I decided to still choose a word that stems off this previous ‘year by year’ progression of focus words attached to my personal journey. I asked myself those questions mentioned above and decided that now I have bloomed, I feel it is the time to bear fruit. So the word I chose for 2020 was ‘FRUITFUL’.

This was inspired by the Biblical notion of us being like trees that need to bear good fruit to be healthy trees. After choosing this focus word I went to a church meeting and this very verse that inspired my focus word decision, was the verse the Pastor used in his discussion. I took it as a spiritual sign that I had chosen the right word for the next year in my journey. Here is the verse:

“So, every healthy tree bears good fruit, but the diseased tree bears bad fruit. A healthy tree cannot bear bad fruit, nor can a diseased tree bear good fruit. Every tree that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. Thus you will recognize them by their fruits.”

Matthew 7:17-20 ESV / 29

Using lessons from the past to help shape your future!

Trauma can definitely produce bad fruit on a diseased tree, such as; sadness, fear, guilt, anger, pain, hurt, revenge. Yet dealing with trauma, can then bring new life to a tree and help it grow new healthy shoots, such as; healing, closure, lessons, comfort, forgiveness, weightlessness, acceptance. These were the buds created in me in 2018 through my year of healing and these are what fully bloomed in me in 2019 to restore my tree to health with self-love, self-worth and self-value. So in 2020 I felt I then needed to see what fruit can be made from those things.

For example, in 2019 I supported fellow Birmingham creative Elishah StJuste as she set up a community organisation called FutureGen. I joined her in delivering a project working with a group of young females aged 11 to 16 years old, on a creative project called ‘SheRise’ covering different aspects of staying safe in an online world. You can find out more about the project on FutureGen’s Facebook page HERE.

One of the activities I ran was a drama and expressive art workshop with the young ladies covering issues of self-image and body-image. I see this as a good fruit that was bore out of going through my own journey of self-identity after getting out of a long term toxic relationship after all the negative things that person spoke over me and the names they called me, as well as how they ended up treating me. Those buds of self-value bloomed and my life and photos once again displayed that self-worth that I felt inside.

Then the next progression was the’ fruit’ – which to me is using that personal journey of my own, to now empower a younger generation of women in a world of false beauty, to identify their natural beauty and see their worth beyond Instagram likes and social media attention. I want a year full of these types of good fruits born out of the past dark sides of life, to bring light to 2020 for myself and for others….

Creating visual reminders of your New Year ‘Focus Word’ to display

If you have read my post ‘Spring: How to enjoy a season of renewed hope, new possibilities and a fresh perspective’ you’d know my talented Sister Libby, is an artist  @libby.artist who runs her own art business and gets commissioned to do personalised pieces of artwork for people all over the world. Well she took my 2019 focus word ‘IN-BLOOM’ and interpreted it artistically and created a customised piece of art for me shown below:

  • commissioned art piece by @libby.artist om Instagram, who did a personalised piece of art for my focus word for this year IN BLOOM

I hung it up and it was a really useful visual reminder of where I wanted my focus to be that year. So I encourage you to also have a visual reminder somewhere that will remind you each time you see it what you wanted to focus on and when you read the word it re-centres you once again to aline with the direction you wanted for yourself. There are lots of ways you can do this:

  • Have your focus word as your computer screensaver
  • have your focus word as the wallpaper background on your mobile phone
  • Have you focus word written on a post it note and put it in a place you look daily such as next to the kettle or where you keep your toiletries.
  • Write your focus word on the mirror with lipstick that you can wipe off and change each new year with each new focus word.
  • Follow my sister on Instagram @libby.artist and get a personalised piece of artwork made for your focus word 😉

So for 2020’s focus word I decided my visual reminder would once again be my Sisters artwork but instead of a physical painting to hang up like last year, I will instead have it as my background on my laptop. Here is the still life painting she did of an overflowing fruit bowl that to me represents all the fruits I’m trusting God will be produced in mass this year:

  • Why you should choose a FOCUS WORD for the year ahead and how you can use that FOCUS WORD to keep you centred and fixed on your goal by www.helensjourney.com (personalised painting by @libby.artist on instagram)

I hope this post has encouraged you to choose a focus word for this year or maybe choosing a new focus word each month would help you too. However, you want to choose your focus word, I hope you then use it to centre yourself when life can throw us off track and use it to fix your eyes on your goals and direction in life. Why not share your focus word choices with me in the blog comment section at the bottom of the post…

– Helen

I encourage you to read my post ‘Handy ways to get prepared for a New Year ahead’ to read all about using goal setting and making promises to yourself as a way to be prepared, focused and ready for all that’s ahead…

Why not also read my post Be ORGANISED & FOCUSED in life, with these TOP 3 ITEMS to keep you on track! about using a few different items such as a diary, journal and calendar, in order to keep yourself prepared and organised each day of the year.

ENJOY READING HELEN’S JOURNEY POSTS AND POEMS?

Then don’t miss out when new stuff is posted –Please click here to join my Email Mailing List to receive an email notification when a new blog is posted!

Why not come & follow my blogging footsteps on other Social Media Platforms(click on names to take you to the different media profiles):

Facebook Page / Bloglovin / Instagram / Twitter / Pinterest / YouTube / Tumblr

Facebook: Fibromyalgia Awareness & Chronic Illness Support Group

  • why you should use a focus word for the new year ahead and how you can use it to keep you centred and fixed on your goal


A Slice of Orange

I’ve written several posts about choosing a focus word each year and work hard (my word is WORK after all, this year) to find ways to study it, learn about it and share throughout the year. Over the past few years, I’ve had my word scream at me by the end of October. This year, it’s a little more subtle and I’m not sure what to choose. Have you picked your word yet?

Wood panels in background with the words Word of the Year 2023 and question marks supporting the question of what Denise M. Colby will pick for a focus word in 2023

How do you start to choose a focus word?

My word of the year journey began in 2015, when I decided to choose a focus word that I could cling to in my writing. I quickly realized that my word applied to all areas of my life, not just writing. And I have found it to be something I love to incorporate in my social media and discussions with people throughout the year.

You can introduce your word of the year in social media, take pics when you find your word, and share quotes and verses which include your focus word.

About a year ago I figured out each word builds on the previous word and a true indicator of my overall writing journey. Now I just have to figure out what my 2023 word will be. 

Here are the words I’ve selected since I’ve started.

  • 2015: Hope
  • 2016: Believe
  • 2017: Strength
  • 2018: Steadfast
  • 2019: Purposeful
  • 2020: Courage
  • 2021: Wisdom
  • 2022: Work
  • 2023: ???????

synonyms of wisdom block 1

I love to look at all the synonyms of my focus word to see different angles of how to apply it

I have a short list for next year already, I just want to look up verses and see if there’s enough quotes to support and encourage me throughout an entire year.

Do you have a process you use to select your word? Or if you haven’t ever chosen a word, I wrote this blog post on the Wisdom of Selecting a New Focus Word Every Year

If you’ve already chosen a word, I’d love to hear what it is and why you chose it. Please write in the comments so those of us who have not picked a word yet, can find some inspiration!

In the meantime, I wish you and your families a very Merry Christmas.

Blessings,

Denise


Author Bio

Although new to the writing fiction world, Denise Colby has over 20+ years experience in marketing, creating different forms of content and copy for promotional materials. Taking the lessons learned from creating her own author brand Denise M. Colby, Denise enjoys sharing her combined knowledge with other authors.

If you are interested in a marketing evaluation and would like help in developing a strategy for your author brand you can find out more here http://denisemcolby.com/marketing-for-authors/

  • I’ve written several posts about choosing a focus word each year and work hard (my word is WORK after all, this year) to find ways to study it, learn about it and share throughout the year. Over the past few years, I’ve had my word scream at me by the end of October. This year, […]

  • I’ve written several posts about choosing a focus word each year and work hard (my word is WORK after all, this year) to find ways to study it, learn about it and share throughout the year. Over the past few years, I’ve had my word scream at me by the end of October. This year, […]

  • I’ve written several posts about choosing a focus word each year and work hard (my word is WORK after all, this year) to find ways to study it, learn about it and share throughout the year. Over the past few years, I’ve had my word scream at me by the end of October. This year, […]

  • I’ve written several posts about choosing a focus word each year and work hard (my word is WORK after all, this year) to find ways to study it, learn about it and share throughout the year. Over the past few years, I’ve had my word scream at me by the end of October. This year, […]

  • I’ve written several posts about choosing a focus word each year and work hard (my word is WORK after all, this year) to find ways to study it, learn about it and share throughout the year. Over the past few years, I’ve had my word scream at me by the end of October. This year, […]

THE SHORT & SWEET OF IT: When the Right Word Is a Short Word

SHORT and SWEET’S FAMILY ALBUM

×

Although new to the writing fiction world, Denise Colby has over 20+ years experience in marketing, creating different forms of content and copy for promotional materials. Taking the lessons learned from creating her own author brand Denise M. Colby, Denise enjoys sharing her combined knowledge with other authors.

If you are interested in a marketing evaluation and would like help in developing a strategy for your author brand you can find out more here http://denisemcolby.com/marketing-for-authors/

Related

  • Looking forward to discovering your 2023 focus word.

  • Meta

    • Log in
    • Entries feed
    • Comments feed
    • WordPress.org

    Affiliate Links

    A Slice of Orange is an affiliate with some of the booksellers listed on this website, including Barnes & Nobel, Books A Million, iBooks, Kobo, and Smashwords. This means A Slice of Orange may earn a small advertising fee from sales made through the links used on this website.  There are reminders of these affiliate links on the pages for individual books. 

    Search A Slice of Orange

    Find a Column

    Find a Column

    Featured Books

    SEAGROVE SECRETS

    SEAGROVE SECRETS

    With Shayla Harrison’s dangerous ex leaving rehab and headed her way, she needs to find a safe house and fast.

    More info →

    Buy now!

    Newsletter

    Contributing Authors

    Search A Slice of Orange

    Find a Column

    Find a Column

    Authors in the Bookstore

    • A. E. Decker
    • A.J. Sidransky
    • Abby Collette
    • Alanna Lucus
    • Albert Marrin
    • Alice Duncan
    • Alina K. Field
    • Andi Lawrencovna
    • Andrew C Raiford
    • Angela Pryce
    • Aviva Vaughn
    • Barbara Ankrum
    • Bethlehem Writers Group, LLC
    • Carol L. Wright
    • Celeste Barclay
    • Christina Alexandra
    • Christopher D. Ochs
    • Claire Davon
    • Claire Naden
    • Courtnee Turner Hoyle
    • Courtney Annicchiarico
    • D. Lieber
    • Daniel V. Meier Jr.
    • Debra Dixon
    • Debra H. Goldstein
    • Debra Holland
    • Dee Ann Palmer
      • Carolina Valdez
    • Denise M. Colby
    • Diane Benefiel
    • Diane Sismour
    • Dianna Sinovic
    • DT Krippene
    • E.B. Dawson
    • Emilie Dallaire
    • Emily Brightwell
    • Fae Rowen
    • Faith L. Justice
    • Frances Amati
    • Geralyn Corcillo
    • Greg Jolley
    • H. O. Charles
    • Jaclyn Roché
    • Jacqueline Diamond
    • Janet Lynn and Will Zeilinger
    • Jenna Barwin
    • Jenne Kern
    • Jennifer D. Bokal
    • Jennifer Lyon
    • Jerome W. McFadden
    • Jina Bacarr
    • Jodi Bogert
    • Jolina Petersheim
    • Jonathan Maberry
    • Joy Allyson
    • Judy Duarte
    • Justin Murphy
    • Justine Davis
    • Kat Martin
    • Kidd Wadsworth
    • Kitty Bucholtz
    • Kristy Tate
    • Larry Deibert
    • Larry Hamilton
    • Laura Drake
    • Laurie Stevens
    • Leslie Knowles
    • Li-Ying Lundquist
    • Linda Carroll-Bradd
    • Linda Lappin
    • Linda McLaughlin
      • Lyndi Lamont
    • Linda O. Johnston
      • Lark O. Jensen
    • Lisa Preston
    • Lolo Paige
    • Loran Holt
    • Lyssa Kay Adams
    • Madeline Ash
    • Margarita Engle
    • Marguerite Quantaine
    • Marianne H. Donley
    • Mary Castillo
    • Maureen Klovers
    • Megan Haskell
    • Melanie Waterbury
    • Melissa Chambers
    • Melodie Winawer
    • Meriam Wilhelm
    • Mikel J. Wilson
    • Mindy Neff
    • Monica McCabe
    • Nancy Brashear
    • Neetu Malik
    • Nikki Prince
    • Once Upon Anthologies
      • Alice Black
      • Charissa Weaks
      • Dan Stout
      • Elizabeth Vaughan
      • Jodi Henry
      • Linda Robertson
      • Melinda S. Collins
      • Sara Dobie Bauer
      • Sybil Ward
    • Penny Reid
    • Peter Barbour
    • Priscilla Oliveras
    • R. H. Kohno
    • Rachel Hailey
    • Ralph Hieb
    • Ramcy Diek
    • Ransom Stephens
    • Rebecca Forster
    • Renae Wrich
    • Roxy Matthews
    • Ryder Hunte Clancy
    • Sally Paradysz
    • Simone de Muñoz
    • Sophie Barnes
    • Susan Squires
    • T. D. Fox
    • Tara C. Allred
    • Tara Lain
    • Tari Lynn Jewett
    • Terri Osburn
    • Tracy Reed
    • Vera Jane Cook
    • Vicki Crum
    • Writing Something Romantic
      • Angela Shelley
      • Barb DeLong
      • Jill Jaynes
      • Kathleen Harrington
      • Ottilia Scherschel

    Affiliate Links

    A Slice of Orange is an affiliate with some of the booksellers listed on this website, including Barnes & Nobel, Books A Million, iBooks, Kobo, and Smashwords. This means A Slice of Orange may earn a small advertising fee from sales made through the links used on this website.  There are reminders of these affiliate links on the pages for individual books.

    Copyright ©2017 A Slice of Orange. All Rights Reserved. ~PROUDLY POWERED BY WORDPRESS ~ CREATED BY ISHYOBOY.COM

    Educaplay

    Educaplay uses its own and third-party cookies for anonymous analytical purposes, save the preferences you select, personalize the advertising you see based on your browsing habits and for the general operation of the page.

    You can accept all cookies by clicking the «Accept» button or configure or reject their use by clicking the «Set up» button.

    You can obtain more information and reconfigure your preferences at any time in the Cookies policy

    If you are under 14 years old, ask your parent or guardian to read this message before continuing.

    (2)

    In this activity you must answer the differents questions about content words . Remember that you are an excellent student and all the time we must practice our English pronunciation. Enjoy it! Some of words have been taken of Pronunciation, Practice Activities, A resource book for teaching English pronunciation. Martin Hewings pág 59,60 Unit 8.




    Recommended age: 19 years old


    52 times made

    Created by

    Yeimi Carolina Farfan Cristancho

    1. 1

      Yeimi Carolina Farfan Cristancho

    2. 2

      hang

    3. 3

      Ying Peng

    Do you want to stay in the Top 10 of this activity? Log in to identify yourself.

    Create your own free activity from our activity creator

    Compete against your friends to see who gets the best score in this activity

    Понравилась статья? Поделить с друзьями:
  • Choosing one little word
  • Choosing language in word
  • Choosing from a list in excel
  • Choose word for the year
  • Choose which category each word belongs to skateboarding