Ciudad Rodrigo es un pueblo español descrito como uno de los más bonitos de España. Ubicado en la provincia de Salamanca, posee una impresionante arquitectura medieval y fortificaciones que datan de la Edad Media.
Este documento describe la localidad de La Alberca en la provincia de Salamanca. Detalla la arquitectura tradicional de las casas de La Alberca hechas de piedra y madera, así como varias tradiciones y lugares de interés como la Plaza Mayor, la Iglesia de Nuestra Señora de la Asunción y el Santuario de Nuestra Señora de la Peña de Francia. También habla brevemente sobre las localidades cercanas de Ciudad Rodrigo, Mogarraz y su arquitectura y tradiciones populares características.
BARCELONA 39 MONUMENTAL - BARRIO GÓTICO 2Manel Cantos
Este documento describe varios lugares históricos y monumentos en el Barri Gòtic de Barcelona. Incluye información sobre la Capilla de Santa Anna, la Basílica de Santa María del Pi, la Plaza Reial, el Palacio de la Generalitat de Cataluña y otros sitios importantes en el centro histórico de la ciudad. El documento proporciona detalles sobre la arquitectura, historia y características de estos lugares emblemáticos del barrio gótico de Barcelona.
The document summarizes a 3-day school trip to London, describing activities and sights seen each day. On the first day, the group visited Trafalgar Square, the National Gallery, Westminster, Buckingham Palace, and Covent Garden. The second day included a river cruise, the Tower of London, Southwark, St. Paul's Cathedral, and the British Museum. The final day was spent at the Natural History Museum, Camden Town, King's Cross station, Piccadilly Circus, Chinatown and Soho.
This document provides an overview of Australia, beginning with the ancient Aboriginal people who arrived thousands of years ago. It then discusses the arrival of Europeans in 1770, the establishment of colonies including the transportation of convicts, and the geography and climate of Australia. Key points include the Outback desert, major cities, and surrounding oceans. Subsequent sections cover famous places, animals, food, sports, famous Australians, holidays, inventions and a quiz about Australia.
This document provides an overview of witches and two famous instances involving witches - in Shakespeare's Macbeth and the Salem Witch Trials. It notes that witches were historically blamed for misfortune and discusses common stereotypes of witches like flying on broomsticks and having black cats. The passage from Macbeth where three witches stir a cauldron is cited as the origin of this stereotype. The Salem Witch Trials saw accusations of witchcraft in Massachusetts in 1692 leading to imprisonment, representing the dangers of mob mentality. The document concludes with a short quiz reviewing these details.
The black lady of bradley woods (Andrea y Cristina)temago
A woman's husband went off to war, leaving her and their son in the forest. While in the forest one day, soldiers took her son from her arms despite her pleas. Ever since, she wanders the forest dressed in black, hoping to be reunited with her husband and son. It is said that if you go into the forest at night you can see her figure still searching for her lost family.
This document lists Halloween-related words and asks if the reader knows their meanings, including bat, black cat, broom, candy, cobweb, costume, monster, mummy, pumpkin, skeleton, spider, trick or treat, vampire, and witch. The document provides a list of common symbols and elements of Halloween without further context or explanation.
Frankenstein's monster was created by a scientist named Frankenstein through assembling parts from dead humans and bringing it to life with electricity. Though the monster wanted to make friends, people were afraid of him because he looked different. The novel Frankenstein by Mary Shelley introduced this story of the scientist who created a monster in 1818 and sparked curiosity about the creature who had an aversion to fire.
Este documento describe la localidad de La Alberca en la provincia de Salamanca. Detalla la arquitectura tradicional de las casas de La Alberca hechas de piedra y madera, así como varias tradiciones y lugares de interés como la Plaza Mayor, la Iglesia de Nuestra Señora de la Asunción y el Santuario de Nuestra Señora de la Peña de Francia. También habla brevemente sobre las localidades cercanas de Ciudad Rodrigo, Mogarraz y su arquitectura y tradiciones populares características.
BARCELONA 39 MONUMENTAL - BARRIO GÓTICO 2Manel Cantos
Este documento describe varios lugares históricos y monumentos en el Barri Gòtic de Barcelona. Incluye información sobre la Capilla de Santa Anna, la Basílica de Santa María del Pi, la Plaza Reial, el Palacio de la Generalitat de Cataluña y otros sitios importantes en el centro histórico de la ciudad. El documento proporciona detalles sobre la arquitectura, historia y características de estos lugares emblemáticos del barrio gótico de Barcelona.
The document summarizes a 3-day school trip to London, describing activities and sights seen each day. On the first day, the group visited Trafalgar Square, the National Gallery, Westminster, Buckingham Palace, and Covent Garden. The second day included a river cruise, the Tower of London, Southwark, St. Paul's Cathedral, and the British Museum. The final day was spent at the Natural History Museum, Camden Town, King's Cross station, Piccadilly Circus, Chinatown and Soho.
This document provides an overview of Australia, beginning with the ancient Aboriginal people who arrived thousands of years ago. It then discusses the arrival of Europeans in 1770, the establishment of colonies including the transportation of convicts, and the geography and climate of Australia. Key points include the Outback desert, major cities, and surrounding oceans. Subsequent sections cover famous places, animals, food, sports, famous Australians, holidays, inventions and a quiz about Australia.
This document provides an overview of witches and two famous instances involving witches - in Shakespeare's Macbeth and the Salem Witch Trials. It notes that witches were historically blamed for misfortune and discusses common stereotypes of witches like flying on broomsticks and having black cats. The passage from Macbeth where three witches stir a cauldron is cited as the origin of this stereotype. The Salem Witch Trials saw accusations of witchcraft in Massachusetts in 1692 leading to imprisonment, representing the dangers of mob mentality. The document concludes with a short quiz reviewing these details.
The black lady of bradley woods (Andrea y Cristina)temago
A woman's husband went off to war, leaving her and their son in the forest. While in the forest one day, soldiers took her son from her arms despite her pleas. Ever since, she wanders the forest dressed in black, hoping to be reunited with her husband and son. It is said that if you go into the forest at night you can see her figure still searching for her lost family.
This document lists Halloween-related words and asks if the reader knows their meanings, including bat, black cat, broom, candy, cobweb, costume, monster, mummy, pumpkin, skeleton, spider, trick or treat, vampire, and witch. The document provides a list of common symbols and elements of Halloween without further context or explanation.
Frankenstein's monster was created by a scientist named Frankenstein through assembling parts from dead humans and bringing it to life with electricity. Though the monster wanted to make friends, people were afraid of him because he looked different. The novel Frankenstein by Mary Shelley introduced this story of the scientist who created a monster in 1818 and sparked curiosity about the creature who had an aversion to fire.
This document provides orientation for new learners at a school. It outlines learning objectives such as asking questions, having conversations, and overcoming fears of speaking English. Learners will become familiar with the school layout by matching names and pictures of locations and filling in blanks about where certain activities occur. Role plays are used to practice asking about locations. Learners are divided into groups to prepare questions on school rules, non-language subjects taught in English, and extracurricular activities, with support provided on useful vocabulary and phrases. Performance will be assessed based on resourcefulness, clarity, language use, and interaction.
This document provides instructions for playing a game of definition bingo using engineering tools as the vocabulary words. Players are given a grid to write 9 words chosen from a list of common tools. They then listen to definitions and try to cross out the words on their grid, saying "bingo" when they have crossed out all 9 words. The goal is to learn basic tool vocabulary through an engaging game.
Dolmens are ancient megalithic monuments made of large stone slabs. The most important dolmens near Plasencia are located in Montehermoso. The document welcomes readers to learn more about dolmens and stone structures at a local high school.
This document provides biographical information on several influential women throughout history:
- Florence Nightingale was a pioneer nurse who founded the first nursing school and inspired the Red Cross.
- Mary Quant popularized the mini skirt in the 1960s and helped shape 1960s fashion.
- Aung San Suu Kyi is a Burmese politician and activist who spent nearly 20 years under house arrest for advocating democracy.
- Coco Chanel revolutionized fashion in the early 20th century by abandoning corsets and creating a more casual style that expressed women's freedom.
- The document summarizes key events in the history of revolutions, liberalism, and nationalism between the 18th-19th centuries. It discusses the American Revolution, French Revolution, Congress of Vienna, liberalism, nationalism, revolutions of 1848, unification of Italy, and unification of Germany. The American Revolution established independence and a new constitution, while the French Revolution established republican rule and was later expanded by Napoleon's empire. The Congress of Vienna restored monarchical rule but also spread nationalist ideas. Liberalism advocated for individual rights and separation of powers. Nationalism united previously divided Italian and German states.
This document provides information about the author James Matthew Barrie and summarizes the book Peter Pan. It begins with details about Barrie's life and how he was inspired to write Peter Pan after meeting the Llewelyn Davies boys. It then summarizes the story in two sentences, describing how Peter Pan and Tinkerbell visit the boys one night and invite them to Neverland, warning them about Captain Hook. The boys are later captured by pirates but rescued by Peter Pan. The document ends with a short positive opinion of the book, recommending it for small children.
London is the capital of England and the UK, located on the River Thames. It has a history dating back over two millennia and contains several World Heritage Sites, including the Tower of London, Kew Gardens, Westminster Abbey/Palace, and Greenwich. Other notable London landmarks mentioned include Buckingham Palace, Westminster Abbey, Big Ben, Tower Bridge, the London Eye Ferris wheel, the National Gallery museum, St. James's Park, red double-decker buses, the London Underground metro system, and the Queen's Guard.
This document provides brief summaries of several famous London landmarks:
Primrose Hill is a 78-meter hill located in northern London that offers views of central London and is home to many notable residents. Tower Bridge spans the River Thames using a bascule pivoting mechanism housed in towers on each side. Tate Modern is London's national gallery of international modern art, located in the former Bankside Power Station with around 4.7 million visitors annually. Big Ben is actually the nickname for the great bell within the Elizabeth Tower at the Houses of Parliament. Trafalgar Square is a public space with Nelson's Column at its center and is used for political demonstrations. The London Eye is a giant Ferris wheel situated on the
This document provides information about several notable landmarks and locations in London, England. It describes London as the capital city of England and the UK, located on the River Thames. It then summarizes key details about Big Ben, the London Eye Ferris wheel, Buckingham Palace, St. Paul's Cathedral, Tower Bridge, Westminster Abbey, Trafalgar Square, the River Thames, the National Gallery museum, Piccadilly Circus, the Underground metro system, and the Greenwich Observatory and its role in astronomy and navigation.
Snow White lived with her evil stepmother, who was jealous of Snow White's beauty. When Snow White is deemed the fairest, the stepmother tries to have her killed. Snow White escapes into the forest and finds shelter in the dwarfs' cottage. She does chores for the dwarfs but grows tired and leaves for the castle, where she is accused of killing her stepmother and imprisoned.
Geppetto, a lonely old man, carved a puppet named Pinocchio. A fairy godmother brought Pinocchio to life but warned that if he lied, he would turn back into wood. Pinocchio disobeyed by going to the funfair instead of school and later lied about it, causing his feet to grow. For continued lying, the fairy turned him into a robot. When Pinocchio lied again about how he became a robot, the fairy turned him into a car so he and Geppetto could travel the world together.
Three little pigs leave home and build houses - a straw house, a wooden house, and a brick house. The wolf blows down the straw and wooden houses, but cannot blow down the brick house. The pigs hide safely inside the brick house from the wolf. Later, the smallest pig is shot and killed by the rebellious wolf, who is eventually caught by police and imprisoned.
Hansel and Gretel live with their poor woodcutter father and cruel stepmother. The stepmother convinces the father to abandon the children in the forest. Hansel leaves a trail of breadcrumbs to find their way home but birds eat them. They come upon a house made of candy and meet a kindly woman who is actually a witch. They present the witch to their father who leaves the stepmother and marries the witch, though all is not what it seems.
While British and American English share many core features, there are some minor differences in vocabulary and spelling between the two variants. British English is used in the United Kingdom and includes all dialects within that region, while American English is used in the United States and encompasses dialects spoken there. Key vocabulary differences include words like "aerial/antenna", "aubergine/eggplant", and "autumn/fall".
This document lists some words that have different spellings in British and American English, such as color/colour, center/centre, honor/honour, analyze/analyse, fulfill/fulfill, tire/tyre, labor/labour, favor/favour, and check/cheque. It shows the variations to highlight that some vocabulary differs between the two main variants of the English language.
The document compares vocabulary, grammar, and spelling differences between British and American English. For vocabulary, it provides examples of words with different meanings between the two versions such as bonnet/hat, caravan/trailer, and cinema/movies. For grammar, it shows differences in sentence structures and verb conjugations. For spelling, it lists words that are spelled differently like centre/center, fibre/fiber, and humour/humor.
The document discusses some key differences between American and British English grammar rules. Specifically, it notes that American English uses the simple past tense more often than British English in places where British English would use the present perfect tense, such as when describing an action with present implications or when using words like "already" or "yet". It also explains that in American English, collective nouns are always used with a singular verb, whereas in British English both singular and plural verbs can follow collective nouns depending on whether the group is viewed as a single entity or multiple individuals.
British and American English have some differences in spelling conventions. Words derived from Latin often end in "-our" or "-re" in British English but "-or" or "-er" in American English. Words derived from Greek can end in "-ise" or "-ize" in British English but favor "-ize" endings in American English, and can end in "-ogue" or "-og" with British English preferring "-ogue" and American English "-og".
British and american english pronunciation.ppt javiertemago
British and American English pronunciation differs, with British English following the Queen's English used by the upper class, while American English uses the pronunciation of educated Americans found on television and radio. The biggest difference between the two is in pronunciation.
Enganchados nº1_Fanzine de verano de junio de 2024Miguel Ventayol
Número 1 del fanzine de creación Enganchados.
Escrito e ideado por Miguel G. Ventayol.
Poemas, textos breves, narrativa y crítica literaria.
He escrito el primer fanzine para este verano de 2024, con la intención de que tenga continuidad en el tiempo.
Con una serie de poemas surgidos de diversas plantillas de CANVA, porque me pareció divertido trabajar sobre esas imágenes; así como poemas y algunos textos.
Algunos de ellos de experiencias personales, otros inventados.
Recuerdos de discos como el de Supersubmarina, Eels o Los Planetas
ÍNDICE
copiar. página 4
una cala frente al mar. página 5
una plaza en verano. página 6
tierra. página 7
échate unas risas, primo. página 8
palabras son solo palabras, a fin de cuentas. página 9
gírate. página 10
enganchados. páginas 11-13
luis, celine y la chica de ojos Bowie. páginas 14-15
crítica literaria. páginas 16-18
párate y mira. página 19
aniversario de super 8. página 20-22
échate unas risas, primo 2. página 23
FIN. página 24
This document provides orientation for new learners at a school. It outlines learning objectives such as asking questions, having conversations, and overcoming fears of speaking English. Learners will become familiar with the school layout by matching names and pictures of locations and filling in blanks about where certain activities occur. Role plays are used to practice asking about locations. Learners are divided into groups to prepare questions on school rules, non-language subjects taught in English, and extracurricular activities, with support provided on useful vocabulary and phrases. Performance will be assessed based on resourcefulness, clarity, language use, and interaction.
This document provides instructions for playing a game of definition bingo using engineering tools as the vocabulary words. Players are given a grid to write 9 words chosen from a list of common tools. They then listen to definitions and try to cross out the words on their grid, saying "bingo" when they have crossed out all 9 words. The goal is to learn basic tool vocabulary through an engaging game.
Dolmens are ancient megalithic monuments made of large stone slabs. The most important dolmens near Plasencia are located in Montehermoso. The document welcomes readers to learn more about dolmens and stone structures at a local high school.
This document provides biographical information on several influential women throughout history:
- Florence Nightingale was a pioneer nurse who founded the first nursing school and inspired the Red Cross.
- Mary Quant popularized the mini skirt in the 1960s and helped shape 1960s fashion.
- Aung San Suu Kyi is a Burmese politician and activist who spent nearly 20 years under house arrest for advocating democracy.
- Coco Chanel revolutionized fashion in the early 20th century by abandoning corsets and creating a more casual style that expressed women's freedom.
- The document summarizes key events in the history of revolutions, liberalism, and nationalism between the 18th-19th centuries. It discusses the American Revolution, French Revolution, Congress of Vienna, liberalism, nationalism, revolutions of 1848, unification of Italy, and unification of Germany. The American Revolution established independence and a new constitution, while the French Revolution established republican rule and was later expanded by Napoleon's empire. The Congress of Vienna restored monarchical rule but also spread nationalist ideas. Liberalism advocated for individual rights and separation of powers. Nationalism united previously divided Italian and German states.
This document provides information about the author James Matthew Barrie and summarizes the book Peter Pan. It begins with details about Barrie's life and how he was inspired to write Peter Pan after meeting the Llewelyn Davies boys. It then summarizes the story in two sentences, describing how Peter Pan and Tinkerbell visit the boys one night and invite them to Neverland, warning them about Captain Hook. The boys are later captured by pirates but rescued by Peter Pan. The document ends with a short positive opinion of the book, recommending it for small children.
London is the capital of England and the UK, located on the River Thames. It has a history dating back over two millennia and contains several World Heritage Sites, including the Tower of London, Kew Gardens, Westminster Abbey/Palace, and Greenwich. Other notable London landmarks mentioned include Buckingham Palace, Westminster Abbey, Big Ben, Tower Bridge, the London Eye Ferris wheel, the National Gallery museum, St. James's Park, red double-decker buses, the London Underground metro system, and the Queen's Guard.
This document provides brief summaries of several famous London landmarks:
Primrose Hill is a 78-meter hill located in northern London that offers views of central London and is home to many notable residents. Tower Bridge spans the River Thames using a bascule pivoting mechanism housed in towers on each side. Tate Modern is London's national gallery of international modern art, located in the former Bankside Power Station with around 4.7 million visitors annually. Big Ben is actually the nickname for the great bell within the Elizabeth Tower at the Houses of Parliament. Trafalgar Square is a public space with Nelson's Column at its center and is used for political demonstrations. The London Eye is a giant Ferris wheel situated on the
This document provides information about several notable landmarks and locations in London, England. It describes London as the capital city of England and the UK, located on the River Thames. It then summarizes key details about Big Ben, the London Eye Ferris wheel, Buckingham Palace, St. Paul's Cathedral, Tower Bridge, Westminster Abbey, Trafalgar Square, the River Thames, the National Gallery museum, Piccadilly Circus, the Underground metro system, and the Greenwich Observatory and its role in astronomy and navigation.
Snow White lived with her evil stepmother, who was jealous of Snow White's beauty. When Snow White is deemed the fairest, the stepmother tries to have her killed. Snow White escapes into the forest and finds shelter in the dwarfs' cottage. She does chores for the dwarfs but grows tired and leaves for the castle, where she is accused of killing her stepmother and imprisoned.
Geppetto, a lonely old man, carved a puppet named Pinocchio. A fairy godmother brought Pinocchio to life but warned that if he lied, he would turn back into wood. Pinocchio disobeyed by going to the funfair instead of school and later lied about it, causing his feet to grow. For continued lying, the fairy turned him into a robot. When Pinocchio lied again about how he became a robot, the fairy turned him into a car so he and Geppetto could travel the world together.
Three little pigs leave home and build houses - a straw house, a wooden house, and a brick house. The wolf blows down the straw and wooden houses, but cannot blow down the brick house. The pigs hide safely inside the brick house from the wolf. Later, the smallest pig is shot and killed by the rebellious wolf, who is eventually caught by police and imprisoned.
Hansel and Gretel live with their poor woodcutter father and cruel stepmother. The stepmother convinces the father to abandon the children in the forest. Hansel leaves a trail of breadcrumbs to find their way home but birds eat them. They come upon a house made of candy and meet a kindly woman who is actually a witch. They present the witch to their father who leaves the stepmother and marries the witch, though all is not what it seems.
While British and American English share many core features, there are some minor differences in vocabulary and spelling between the two variants. British English is used in the United Kingdom and includes all dialects within that region, while American English is used in the United States and encompasses dialects spoken there. Key vocabulary differences include words like "aerial/antenna", "aubergine/eggplant", and "autumn/fall".
This document lists some words that have different spellings in British and American English, such as color/colour, center/centre, honor/honour, analyze/analyse, fulfill/fulfill, tire/tyre, labor/labour, favor/favour, and check/cheque. It shows the variations to highlight that some vocabulary differs between the two main variants of the English language.
The document compares vocabulary, grammar, and spelling differences between British and American English. For vocabulary, it provides examples of words with different meanings between the two versions such as bonnet/hat, caravan/trailer, and cinema/movies. For grammar, it shows differences in sentence structures and verb conjugations. For spelling, it lists words that are spelled differently like centre/center, fibre/fiber, and humour/humor.
The document discusses some key differences between American and British English grammar rules. Specifically, it notes that American English uses the simple past tense more often than British English in places where British English would use the present perfect tense, such as when describing an action with present implications or when using words like "already" or "yet". It also explains that in American English, collective nouns are always used with a singular verb, whereas in British English both singular and plural verbs can follow collective nouns depending on whether the group is viewed as a single entity or multiple individuals.
British and American English have some differences in spelling conventions. Words derived from Latin often end in "-our" or "-re" in British English but "-or" or "-er" in American English. Words derived from Greek can end in "-ise" or "-ize" in British English but favor "-ize" endings in American English, and can end in "-ogue" or "-og" with British English preferring "-ogue" and American English "-og".
British and american english pronunciation.ppt javiertemago
British and American English pronunciation differs, with British English following the Queen's English used by the upper class, while American English uses the pronunciation of educated Americans found on television and radio. The biggest difference between the two is in pronunciation.
Enganchados nº1_Fanzine de verano de junio de 2024Miguel Ventayol
Número 1 del fanzine de creación Enganchados.
Escrito e ideado por Miguel G. Ventayol.
Poemas, textos breves, narrativa y crítica literaria.
He escrito el primer fanzine para este verano de 2024, con la intención de que tenga continuidad en el tiempo.
Con una serie de poemas surgidos de diversas plantillas de CANVA, porque me pareció divertido trabajar sobre esas imágenes; así como poemas y algunos textos.
Algunos de ellos de experiencias personales, otros inventados.
Recuerdos de discos como el de Supersubmarina, Eels o Los Planetas
ÍNDICE
copiar. página 4
una cala frente al mar. página 5
una plaza en verano. página 6
tierra. página 7
échate unas risas, primo. página 8
palabras son solo palabras, a fin de cuentas. página 9
gírate. página 10
enganchados. páginas 11-13
luis, celine y la chica de ojos Bowie. páginas 14-15
crítica literaria. páginas 16-18
párate y mira. página 19
aniversario de super 8. página 20-22
échate unas risas, primo 2. página 23
FIN. página 24
Las castas fueron sin duda uno de los métodos de control de la sociedad novohispana y representaron un intento por limitar el poder de los criollos; sin embargo, fueron excedidas por la realidad. “De mestizo y de india; coyote”.
-La adhesión entre los espermatozoides y las membranas plasmáticas de las células oviductales está asegurada por moléculas expuestas en la superficie rostral de los espermatozoides y capaces de unir carbohidratos en la superficie de las células oviductuales especifica para cada especie
-La adhesión entre los espermatozoides y las membranas plasmáticas de las células oviductales está asegurada por moléculas expuestas en la superficie rostral de los espermatozoides y capaces de unir carbohidratos en la superficie de las células oviductuales especifica para cada especie.
-Unas horas antes de la ovulación, los espermatozoides unidos comienzan a liberarse y progresan hacia la unión ampular/ístmica, donde el ovocito ovulado se detendrá para la fertilización.
Objetivo
-Revisar el conocimiento disponible sobre las moléculas involucradas en la selección, almacenamiento y liberación de espermatozoides del reservorio oviductal.
Este proyecto se enfoca en las artesanías y el arte de la región del Departamento de Nariño. ArtNariño es una iniciativa que busca crear una plataforma, donde los artesanos y artistas locales puedan publicar, explicar y vender sus obras, facilitando la conexión entre creadores y compradores según sus preferencias.