to practice and develop the four skills but to focus primarily on speaking and reading. This book, which may require about 152 - 266 contact hours, is intended for the second level (elementary) of vocational school’s students whose TOEIC test score are between 305 and 450 to improve their oral as well as written performance. Ĭontextual English for Vocational Schools, Book 2, is compiled and modified from reliable references to meet with the need of sources for teaching and learning English in vocational schools, namely Business Management, Tourism, Social Work and Art and Craft, Pharmacy and Nursery programs. Giving and responding to compliments ……………īibliography. Talking about future plans and activities ………….Īsking for and giving suggestions and advice ….Įxpressing necessity and obligation ……….……. Talking about daily activities ………………………. SMK NEGERI 6 SMK PGRI 01 SMK IBU KARTINI SMK NEGERI 2 SMK NEGERI 6ĭiterbitkan oleh : Pemerintah Kota Semarang Dicetak olehĪcknowledgments ……………………………………………….
DYAH PRAMESTI YUSTINA EKO PURWANINGSIH, S.Pd SUHERMAWAN, S.Pd SRI MULYANI, S.Pd AHLIS QOIDAH NOOR, S.Pd That white butterfly was her sweet and loving soul.BUSINESS MANAGEMENT, SOCIALWORK, TOURISM, ART AND CRAFT, PHARMACY AND NURSERY PROGRAMSĬONTEXTUAL ENGLISH FOR VOCATIONAL SCHOOLSīUSINESS MANAGEMENT, SOCIALWORK, TOURISM, ART AND CRAFT, PHARMACY AND NURSERY PROGRAMS BOOK 2ĭra. When Takahama was dying, and he could no longer perform his loving task, Akiko came for him. Every day he went to her grave and prayed for her happiness, swept the tomb and set flowers there. For all these years he has remained faithful to his vow, and kept in his heart all the sweet memories of his one and only love. When Akiko left this world, your uncle resolved never to marry, and to live ever near her grave. "When your uncle was young he was betrothed to Akiko.
When the young man returned to the house he found that Takahama had passed away, and he returned to his mother and told her what he had seen in the cemetery. Though the tomb was covered with moss and must have been erected fifty years previously, the boy saw that it was surrounded with flowers, and that the little water tank had been recently filled. On examining the tomb the young man found the name "Akiko" written upon it, together with a description narrating how Akiko died when she was eighteen. At last Takahama's nephew chased it out into the garden, through the gate, and into the cemetery beyond, where it lingered over a woman's tomb, and then mysteriously disappeared. The young man tried to drive it away with a fan but it came back three times, as if loath to leave the sufferer. While they watched, Takahama fell asleep but he had no sooner done so than a large white butterfly flew into the room and rested on the old man's pillow. They both came and did all they could to bring comfort during his last hours. One summer day he became very ill, so ill, in fact, that he sent for his sister-in-law and her son. His madness, it would appear, entirely rested upon the fact that he had never married or evinced desire for intimate companionship with women. He was extremely amiable and generally liked by his neighbors, though most of them considered him to be a little mad. An old man named Takahama lived in a little house behind the cemetery of the temple of Sozanji.