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Communication Series – A Closer Look

01/17/2021 by admin Leave a Comment

The Kinney Brothers Publishing Communication Series is designed to extend students’ skills and interest in communicating in English. The four-book series includes Stories For Young Readers and Dialogues For Young Speakers. The textbooks work in tandem to provide students with exercises in reading, writing, listening, and speaking. Each textbook is detailed below with links for downloadable previews and purchase.

In Japan, The Stories For Young Readers series is published by Independent Publishers International (I.P.I.) and available through Nellies English Books and David Paul’s ETJ Book Service.

You’ll find an abundance of support materials for this series in our online store, Donald’s English Classroom.  Visit for downloadable audio files, Lesson Packs, and Teacher’s Answer Keys. You’ll also see links for Lesson Packs on Google Slides for online courses and Kindle Books for your digital library.

  • Preview Download
  • Kinney Brothers Publishing (Amazon)
  • Nellies English Books (Japan)
  • ETJ Book Service (Japan)
  • Donald’s English Classroom (pdf color and black & white)
  • Donald’s English Classroom (support materials)
  • Donald’s English Classroom Lesson Packs (pdf downloads) Free Sample
  • Donald’s English Classroom Lesson Packs (Google Slides) Free Sample
  • Kindle Books (Amazon)
  • Preview Download
  • Kinney Brothers Publishing (Amazon)
  • Nellies English Books (Japan)
  • ETJ Book Service (Japan)
  • Donald’s English Classroom (pdf color and black & white)
  • Donald’s English Classroom (support materials)
  • Donald’s English Classroom Lesson Packs (pdf Downloads) Free Sample
  • Donald’s English Classroom Lesson Packs (Google Slides) Free Sample
  • Kindle Books (Amazon)
  • Preview Download
  • Kinney Brothers Publishing (Amazon)
  • Donald’s English Classroom (pdf color and black & white)
  • Donald’s English Classroom Lesson Packs (pdf Downloads) Free Sample
  • Donald’s English Classroom Lesson Packs (Google Slides) Free Sample
  • Kindle Books (Amazon)
  • Preview Download
  • Kinney Brothers Publishing (Amazon)
  • Donald’s English Classroom (pdf color and black & white)
  • Donald’s English Classroom Lesson Packs (pdf Downloads) Free Sample
  • Donald’s English Classroom Lesson Packs (Google Slides) Free Sample
  • Kindle Books (Amazon)

Kinney Brothers Publishing offers a wide range of ESL textbooks including a Phonics Series that begins with your youngest students, an Easy Sight Words Series, and Trends for secondary and adult English language learners. If you’re looking for more support materials, be sure to check out Q&A, Cursive Writing!, and a treasure trove of games, charts, and flashcards in Donald’s English Classroom!

Filed Under: Kinney Brothers Publishing Tagged With: Dialogues For Young Speakers, Donald's English Classroom, ESL Activities, ESL Dialogues, ESL Flashcards, ESL Games, esl textbooks, ESL Worksheets, kids writing practice, kinney brothers publishing, Stories For Young Readers

Fun Facts About English #90 – Airport Codes

12/26/2020 by admin Leave a Comment

IATA Kinney Brothers Publishing
IATA

From 17,678 commercial airports worldwide on roughly 100,000 scheduled flights, about 6,000,000 passengers travel somewhere every day. Every day.

The International Air Transport Association (IATA), an airline trade association based in Montreal, Canada, assigns an airport code to each airport. Some airports, like LAX or JFK are known colloquially by these initials. The IATA codes are an integral part of the travel industry, its electronic applications, and essential for the identification of an airline, its destinations, its cargo, and travel documentation.

Airport coding first began in the 1930s, and airlines typically chose their own two-letter codes. This order only allowed for a few hundred letter combinations. By the late 1940s, as the number of airports grew, the system shifted to the three-letter code we know today. Several U.S. airports simply added an ‘X’ to their old code. The ‘X’ is a placeholder and has no meaning outside of this use. Los Angeles International Airport, for instance, was originally LA but became LAX in 1947. Other examples include Portland International Airport (PDX) and Northwest Arkansas Regional Airport (XNA).

The three-letter system allows for 17,576 permutations. To avoid running out of codes, only major airports use three initials and smaller airports often incorporate numbers, such as Osage City, KS (53K), and Cle Elum, WA (S93).

Some airport codes are easy to decipher. Miami International Airport is MIA; Athens International Airport is ATH. Other codes are a bit more difficult. Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport is MSY, an industry nod to pioneering aviator, John Moisant. Chicago O’Hare International Airport was assigned ORD, as it sits on what was previously known as Orchard Field.

Nav.com offers complete FAA (Federal Aviation Administration) airport details that include management, conditions, and ownership. For example, click here for everything you need to know as a pilot for Cle Elum (S93), a single public runway in rural Washington State.

With just three letters, it was inevitable that some codes would be… well, memorable.

  • LOL – Derby Field Airport in Nevada
  • OMG – Omega Airport in Namibia
  • PEE – Russia’s Bolshoye Savino Airport
  • POO – Brazil’s Poco De Caldas Airport.
  • BAD – Barksdale Air Force Base in Louisiana
  • GAG – Gage Airport in Oklahoma
  • DIE – Arrachart Airport in Madagascar
  • SUX – Sioux City, Iowa Gateway Airport

Sioux City has embraced its unfortunate assignation by partnering with a local retailer to offer a popular line of travel souvenirs with the slogan ‘Fly SUX!’ – turning a lemon into lemonade.

You might also be interested in reading about the explosion in the use of acronyms, who regulates the spelling of place names, or why the U.S. doesn’t have an official language!

Go to the previous or next Fun Facts About English.

Donald's English Classroom

A Telling Story Productions is the Kinney Brothers Publishing Youtube channel dedicated to classic and contemporary audio stories for young learners. The readings include fairy tales for younger audiences as well as short stories appropriate for junior high and high school classes. Stop by, give us a thumbs-up, and don’t forget to subscribe!

Filed Under: Fun Facts About English Tagged With: airport codes, esl, ESL Activities, ESL Flash cards, ESL Games, ESL teaching, esl textbooks, ESL Worksheets, kinney brothers publishing, LAX

Fun Facts About English #88 – Autology

12/26/2020 by admin Leave a Comment

autological Kinney Brothers Publishing

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, “autological” is from the rare 17th-century noun “autology,” meaning “self-knowledge or the study of oneself.” In the 20th century, we use it to describe a word having or representing the property it denotes, e.g., “noun” is a noun, “English” is English, and “pentasyllabic” has five syllables.

The dictionary’s earliest recorded use of “autological” is from a paper by F. P. Ramsey published in 1926 in Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society:

F.P. Ramsey Kinney Brothers Publishing

Since adjectives describe things, including words, most autological words are adjectives. Nouns and verbs can also be self-descriptive, such as “abbrv.” and “read” when read. Phrases can be autological as well, e.g., “three words long” is three words long.

A word’s status as autological can change over time. “Neologism” means “a newly coined word or expression” and is no longer autological as it was attested in 1772. “Olde,” on the other hand, will continue to be autological for the rest of time.

The opposite of autological, as Mr. Ramsey stated above, is heterological – a word that doesn’t express a property of itself, e.g., monosyllabic, yellow, or square.

Here is an entertaining short-list of autological words:

  • polysyllabic
  • CAPITALIZED
  • portmanteau
  • unhyphenated
  • prefix
  • real
  • visible
  • fifteen-lettered
  • numberless
  • typed
  • black
  • bold
  • link
  • is
  • readable
  • noun phrase
  • end

Finally, to confuse matters a bit, what’s known as the Grelling–Nelson paradox, emerged from the definitions of autological and heterological.

The question is asked:

“Is non-self-descriptive non-self-descriptive or self-descriptive?”

If it is self-descriptive, then non-self-descriptive is non-self-descriptive. But if non-self-descriptive is non-self-descriptive, then it does describe itself, so it must be self-descriptive.

That is the paradox.

If you enjoyed this post, you might check out these posts about contronyms, acronyms, eponyms, and capitonyms!

Go to the previous or next Fun Facts About English.

Donald's English Classroom

Check out all the Tic-Tac-Toe games in Donald’s English Classroom! When it comes to vocabulary-building activities, board games and puzzles are excellent for introduction, review, or just fun!

Filed Under: Fun Facts About English Tagged With: autological, esl, ESL Activities, ESL Flash cards, ESL Games, ESL teaching, esl textbooks, ESL Worksheets, kinney brothers publishing

Fun Facts About English #89 – Collective Nouns

12/22/2020 by admin Leave a Comment

Kinney Brothers Publishing nouns of multitudes

Collective Nouns

Collective nouns, also known as nouns of assemblage, nouns of multitude, group terms, terms of venery, and veneral nouns, are words used to define a grouping of people, animals, objects or concepts. We use many without a second thought:

An array of magazines.
A batch of cookies.
A crowd of people.
A bevy of options.
A collection of coins.
A bouquet of flowers.
A string of pearls.
A school of fish.

As perfunctory or generic as some may be, like group or bunch, many of the nouns used for collectives convey meaning. A batch, whether cookies or car parts, indicates something made or manufactured. A string of pearls, insults, or lawsuits suggests a number in succession. Cleverly assigned collectives such as “an idiocy of drunks” or “an embarrassment of teenagers” colorfully illustrate circumstance, behavior, or character. Creating apropos nouns of multitude has been the pleasure of writers for hundreds of years. Though some will find their place in dictionaries for future reference, most will not.

venery – “hunting, the sport of the chase,” early 14c., from Old French venerie, from Medieval Latin venaria “beasts of the chase, game.”

For animals, many terms of venery, like “a crash of rhinos,” date back to the 15th century. The longevity of these classifications rests in part on their repeated publishing over the centuries. Such terms have present-day authority in that they’ve been attested in numerous documents and dictionaries over time. They are not, however, compulsory. A “flock of crows” will (blandly) serve the collective-noun purpose if murder is not to your liking. When speaking of giraffes, there’s no sense in arguing whether a tower, a corps, or a herd should take precedence as all are acceptable.

The Legacy

English Timeline

In their original context, medieval vernery developed terms that had a very practical intent: to classify animals, their droppings, and the noises they make. The earliest known hunting treatise on these topics is from the mid 1200s by the Anglo-Norman writer, Walter Bibbesworth. The Venerie of Twiti is another Anglo-Norman treatise that named only three different terms for herds of animals.

Throughout the 1300s, veneral terms were translated from French into English and were intended as a mark of erudition for the English gentleman who used them correctly. It became a fashion in the courts to creatively expand the vocabulary. By the 15th century, this “fashion” had reached exaggerated and even satirical proportions.

Boke of Seynt Albans Kinney Brothers Publishing

It was in this period that Juliana Berners, a Benedictine prioress of the Priory of St. Mary of Sopwell, published the Boke of Seynt Albans (1486) and introduced “the compaynys of beestys and fowlys.” Her translations of French treaties on hunting and hawking included a whopping 164 terms of venery as well as humorous human classifications. The “boke” was very popular and became a requisite read for gentlemen of the nobility. Over the centuries, the title was repeatedly edited, printed, and scrutinized for authenticity. Five hundred years later, we still find great appeal in Ms. Berner’s “asylum of loons,” and “unkindness of ravens.” Her tongue-in-cheek human groupings, like “a sentence of judges,” “a blast of hunters,” and “a gaggle of women” continue to convey a sardonic medieval wit.

So, whether you’re writing for classification or fiction, one’s assemblages can be colorfully termed. The license of the poet is yours.

If you enjoyed this post, you might also be interested in reading about proverbs that are often misconstrued, the Power of X, or idiomatic phrases coined by famous writers!

Go to the previous or next Fun Facts About English.

Donald's English Classroom

Donald’s English Classroom is your one-stop shop for all your ESL classroom needs! Stop in for flashcards, charts, activities, and online resources. From preschool to high school, you’re sure to find resources to add to your classroom wish list!

Filed Under: Fun Facts About English Tagged With: collective noun, esl, ESL Activities, ESL Flash cards, ESL Games, ESL teaching, esl textbooks, ESL Worksheets, kinney brothers publishing

Fun Facts About English #94 – The Power of X

12/21/2020 by admin Leave a Comment

Kinney Brothers Publishing Power of X

When published in 1755, the letter X was left out of Johnson’s Dictionary with the claim that X “begins no word in the English language.” Historically, words like xylophone and xenophobia didn’t enter the English lexicon until the 19th century. Today, the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) contains about 400 words that begin with X. Compare this to the letter S with 79,900+ words! Nonetheless, where X may fall short in word count, it packs a punch as a symbol, a classifier, and in popular culture.

History and Phonology

Briefly, X is derived from the Phoenician letter samekh, meaning “fish” and denoted a hard /s/ sound. The Greeks borrowed the samekh, named it Chi, and used it for the digraph /ks/. The Romans took Chi from Greek alphabets for their letter X and the numeral “10.” Old English adopted the Roman alphabet where it eventually replaced the German runic alphabet around the 7th century. This orthographic relay spans about 1,800 years of history. Since the medieval period, we’ve been using X and the Roman alphabet for almost fourteen centuries.

Latin Alphabet

X is a bit of a phonetic chameleon when it comes to spelling and pronunciation in English. X is used for the digraph /ks/ in words such as wax and fox. In words like auxiliary and exhaust, the X changes to a /gz/ sound. X can also be a /z/ sound (xylophone), a hard /k/ sound (excite), and a /kzh/ sound (luxury). X can be silent as well, as in Sioux or the French loan-word faux.

The letter X is used in a variety of commercial, academic, social, and religious contexts. We rely on these contexts to tell us whether to engage with the letter as a sound, a classifier, or a symbol. Below is a long short-list that exemplifies the power of X.

Mathematics

  • An independent or unknown value in algebraic algorithms, x + 5 = 0, x = -5
  • The horizontal axis on a Cartesian coordinate system
  • Roman numeral for 10, e.g., LXII
  • Multiplication symbol; 3 x 5 = 15, pronounced ‘times’
  • Dimension; 3 x 5 card, pronounced ‘by’
  • Power; e.g., 50x telescope

Science

  • Botanical hybrids; iris x germanica
  • Out of, foaled by, as in “a colt by Secretariat x Merrylegs“
  • Non-binary gender; M/F/X
  • Chromosome provided by the female ovum; XX=female, XY=male
  • Stands for any halogen group in organic chemistry
  • Rx; prescription, Latin for “recipe”
  • Branding in pharmaceuticals; Sominex, Xylocaine, Xanax; Vitamin X (Ecstasy), a rave and dance-club drug
  • Indicates “experimental” in the aerospace industry and Google [x], an innovation arm of Alphabet, Inc.

History

  • Meaning ‘between’ in historical dating; 1483 x 1485

Sports & Gaming

  • A capture in chess
  • A strike in baseball and bowling
  • A defensive player on a football-play diagram
  • One of two players in tic-tac-toe, X and O
  • Indicating ‘extreme,’ as in X-Sports
  • Incorrect, missed, not allowed

Religion

  • Denotes “Christ” in Xtian and Xmas
  • Symbol of dark arts, black magic, witchcraft and occults

Commercial, Manufacturing & Branding

  • In advertising, a trade term for a generic version; Brand X
  • Denotes “trans” as in XMIT or XFER and “cross” in X-ing and XREF
  • Alcoholic strength, such as moonshine; XXX (150 proof)
  • Level of eroticism, violence, or offensive language, as in the movie rating, Rated X, and pornography
  • Indicating ‘extra’ in clothing sizes as in XXL, XS
  • Signifies excellence or precision; Jaguar X, Xbox, Model X
  • X-factor, entertainment industry term indicating star quality (now associated with the television musical talent show)
  • A placeholder in airport codes; LAX

Popular Culture & Social Contexts

  • Unknown or secret; Malcolm X, Project X, X-ray, X-files, Planet X, Agent X, Camp X
  • Generation X; 10th generation of Americans since 1776
  • A collaboration in arts or fashion; Smith x Brown
  • X ‘marks the spot’ for labeling a specific location or scene of a crime
  • Choice or position on a ballot, survey, or test with multiple options
  • Serves as a signature for illiteracy and a place marker for a signature or initials, x______________
  • To delete
  • A promise; crossed heart
  • A lie; crossed fingers
  • A “kiss” in correspondence
  • Indicates “no beer, no drugs, no promiscuous sex;” XXX
  • Denotes death or ‘out cold’ in cartoon drawings with X’s for eyes
  • Rebel, piracy, and a symbol of a skull and crossbones
Power of X Kinney Brothers Publishing

Not included in the above list are the myriad national flags, songs, bands, albums, books, advertisements, commercial products, paintings, and movies that have included X as part of their symbology.

If you enjoyed reading about X, you might also be interested in the surprising facts about S, Z, E, and the R sound in English!

Go to the previous or next Fun Facts About English.

Donald's English Classroom

Stories For Young Readers Lesson Packs, from Kinney Brothers Publishing, are complete downloadable lessons with stories, dialogues, grammar exercises, puzzles, answer keys, and audio files! Click here to learn more!

Filed Under: Fun Facts About English Tagged With: esl, ESL Activities, ESL Flash cards, ESL Games, ESL teaching, esl textbooks, ESL Worksheets, kinney brothers publishing, X

Fun Facts About English #86 – The English Language Academy

12/19/2020 by admin Leave a Comment

Kinney Brothers Publishing English regulators language academies

To the chagrin of some and the pleasure of many, English is lacking in any authority to direct its ever-expanding use and lexicon. L’Académie Française, based in Paris, is in charge of overseeing the French language. For Spanish, there is the Real Academia Española. German has the Rat für Deutsche Rechtschreibung. There has never been an equivalent academy for the English language anywhere or at any time.

Historically, there have been a number of outspoken and clearly distressed men of letters who believed that English, with all its unruliness, desperately needed a formal academy.

In the mid-17th century, John Dryden, a poet laureate of England, chaired a committee to create such an academy. Unfortunately, as Dryden was attempting to organize, the Great Plague struck London. A year later, the Great Fire of London razed central parts of the city. These events resulted in an equally great exodus from the capital and any hope for an academy was lost.

In the 18th century, Jonathan Swift, best known for his prose satire, Gulliver’s Travels, lobbied the crown for an academy. He stated, “Our Language is extremely imperfect… its daily Improvements are by no means in proportion to its daily Corruptions (and) in many Instances it offends against every Part of Grammar.” Queen Anne supported the idea but passed away before any formal decisions could be made.

In the U.S., a bill for the incorporation of a national language academy was introduced in congress in 1806 but was unsuccessful. During Quincy Adams’ presidency two decades later, an American Academy of Language and Belles Lettres was proposed and then abandoned after receiving little political or public support.

So… whatcha do?

Language references like the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) and style guides such as the New York Times Manual of Style and Usage are what many people consider to be at least semi-authoritative. Dictionaries are generally descriptive in that they reflect the organic usage and evolution of English but don’t set out to dictate how the language is to be used. Style guides, on the other hand, are prescriptive; an approach that recommends how the language should be used when composing documents.

Style Guides

A style guide establishes standard style requirements to improve communication by ensuring consistency within a single document and across multiple documents. A style guide may set out standards in areas such as punctuation, capitalization, citing sources, formatting of numbers and dates, and table appearance. A guide may outline recommendations in language composition, visual composition, orthography, and typography. For academic and technical documents, users often reference guides for best practices in ethics such as authorship, research ethics, and disclosure. In pedagogy, users look for guidance in exposition and clarity, or compliance, both technical and regulatory. Of course, all this will depend on the register of the user.

Register, in a general sense, refers to the language used by a group of people who share similar work, research, or interests, and the degree of formality of the language used when creating documents. Document requirements, though they often overlap, will differ by necessity between different groups, such as doctors, lawyers, journalists, and scholars.

English language style guides Kinney Brothers Publishing

For British English, style guides such as H. W. Fowler’s Dictionary of Modern English Usage and Sir Ernest Gower’s Plain Words: A Guide to the Use of English are very influential. The Modern Humanities Research Association Style Guide (MHRA) is mainly for writing theses. Judith Butcher’s The Copyeditor’s Handbook is a reference guide for editors and those involved in preparing typescripts and illustrations for printing and publication.

In the U.S., The Associated Press (AP) Stylebook contains commonly accepted journalistic standards most U.S. newspapers, magazines, and broadcast writers use as their go-to style guide. The Chicago Manual of Style is used by writers, editors, and publishers in fiction and nonfiction and often put to use in the arts and humanities for academic papers. The Modern Language Association’s MLA Handbook is mostly suited to the academic world. The Elements of Style is a writer’s companion and considered to be the grandfather of all style guides.

For those looking for humorous and unapologetically opinionated voices on the English language, there are many authors more than willing to assert their preferences, bemoan the inadequacies of our current authorities, and thoroughly berate speakers of the language. They include the Dictionary of Disagreeable English: A Curmudgeon’s Compendium of Excruciatingly Correct Grammar, The Big Book of Beastly Mispronunciations: The Complete Opinionated Guide for the Careful Speaker, and Eats, Shoots & Leaves: The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation.

For a fascinating look at the gargantuan effort of documenting a language, you may enjoy The Professor and the Madman: A Tale of Murder, Insanity, and the Making of the Oxford English Dictionary, and Defining the World: The Extraordinary Story of Dr. Johnson’s Dictionary.

If you enjoyed this post, you may also be interested in reading why Pikes Peak is spelled without an apostrophe by law! Check out the reason the U.S. doesn’t have an official language or how English became the official language of the sea and air!

Go to the previous or next Fun Facts About English.

Donald's English Classroom

Craft activities can be excellent hands-on learning tools! Whether you teach very young newcomers or secondary ESL students, Donald’s English Classroom has a variety of activities that your students are sure to enjoy. Check out the Seasons Tree Stand or House Activity Set for your younger students. For students learning community places, you’ll love using the Community Places Activity Set that includes game boards and flashcards. For older students, building Wall Maps are excellent activities to bring students together.

Filed Under: Fun Facts About English Tagged With: esl, ESL Activities, ESL Flash cards, ESL Games, ESL teaching, esl textbooks, ESL Worksheets, kinney brothers publishing, language-academy

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