User:GeoffGleadall
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User:GeoffMGleadall is the Wikipedia username of Mr. Geoffrey M. Gleadall BA (Hons) CELTA (Cantab)
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[edit] Qualifications
Geoff has the following qualifications:-
- Cambridge University ESOL Certificate in English Language Teaching to Adults (CELTA).
- Bachelor of Arts with First Class Honours in French, German and linguistics.
[edit] Current Interests
Geoff is currently interested in the causes of typological markedness in the Basque language, in the evidence for the phonological word and in the etymology of theonyms in Celtic polytheism. He is also interested in proto-linguistics in general.
[edit] Work Experience
Geoff is currently an ESOL English teacher. Geoff has previous worked for:-
- Cambridge Education & Training School of English, Nizhnevartovsk, Siberia, Russia
- Inland Revenue
- Customs and Excise
- English Language Department, University of Bremen, Germany.
[edit] Personality
Geoff would describe himself as compassionate, sympathetic, sensitive, earnest, persevering, ambitious, bookish, academic, philosophical, expressive, constructive, diplomatic, affectionate, reasonable and appreciative of reasoning in others.
[edit] Pastimes
Geoff enjoys cycling, hiking, swimming, restaurants, alehouses and surfing the internet.
[edit] Upbringing
Geoffrey M. Gleadall was born in Doncaster, South Yorkshire, England in the United Kingdom in 1977 under the constellation of Virgo and was brought up in the parish of Loversall, at the 13th Century Anglican church where he was a chorister and lesson reader. With his mother being a supervisor for a national catering firm and his father being a bricklayer, he was brought up in a working class environment on a private housing estate as the only child of that marriage. He attended state schools and was taught privately by Mary Barton and Cary Williams in elocution, drama, literature, French horn and singing. From the age of ten, he was involved in pantomimes and drama festivals where he won several trophies for dramatic solo, poem-writing, prose-reading, bible-reading and poetic recital.
[edit] Sources
The article’s namesake.