Very selective, as most Malvern people DO NOT speak like this!!! Malvern has 3 co-existing accents & to the outsider, the majority Malvernian accent would sound like a mild West Country twang. Elements of Black Country dialect also servive in local speak & we say, "bab" & NOT "babe". The third (minority) accent is the one you hear in this video with RP English influence.
With all due respect sir i have a doubt, shouldn't we use the type of the data along with the subject each time to describe a change? For example, From February to March the "percentage" of sales rose from 30,000 to 60,000 I am really confused about it. I will appreciate your guidance. Thank you in advance.
your videos are awesome but in this video when you give itunes example, i dont think we can give our opinion in the task 1, please let me know if i am wrong.
English does not come from Latin, but after the Norman conquest its vocabulary and structure was brutally modified. In a BBC report, the University of Oxford states the following: the English language is made up of this way: Vocabulary: 60% Latin, and only 28% Anglo-Saxon; grammar: 48% Anglo-Saxon structure, 39% Latin structure; the rest of the grammar structure comes from Celtic and Greek. For this reason philologists consider English a Hybrid, saying that English is a hybrid is the right thing to do.