Wylcomenetwork.com has available istudycards of some of the most common and well-known slang expressions in BRITISH English translated into American English.Also included are istudycards of some of the most frequently-used and familiar slang synonyms for many of the most common standard words or expressions in AMERICAN English translated into British English. (Contains 8 sets of istudycards)
Also, videos on more general discussions on pronunciation, metaphoric English, idiomatic expressions, grammar, collegiate vocabulary, prefixes, roots, suffixes and more, go to carralaficklin.com. At Carralaficklin.com you can also find video on Spanish, Spanish expressions, Spanish grammar, Spanish relationship with English and English relationship with Spanish and the other Latin-based languages. There even a discussion on verbs and the subjunctive mood in English versus Spanish.
I bet that if you are native, or non-native, speaker of AMERICAN English that you do not know what the following expressions mean: to be bladdered, to call after, dab in the hand, faddy or Joe Bloggs. Than there are those words which can be found in both American and British English but which have very different meanings. In American English, the word fag or faggot is used to insult. In British English, fag is a cigarette, a fag end is the butt of a cigarette, to fag away is to work hard at a tedious task and a faggot is either a ball of seasoned chopped liver or a bundle of iron bounds together to be made into bars. Wylcomenetwork has available istudycards of some of the most common and well-known slang expressions in BRITISH English translated into American English. Also included are istudycards of some of the most frequently-used and familiar slang synonyms for many of the most common standard words or expressions in AMERICAN English translated into British English. (Not American English: British Slang contains 8 set of cards)
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SKU: a128