Este documento resume as principais preposições em inglês e seus significados, além de explicar os diferentes tipos de pronomes em inglês, incluindo pessoais, possessivos, indefinidos, relativos, interrogativos e demonstrativos.
The document contains an English grammar test for students with multiple choice questions and fill-in-the-blank exercises about parts of speech, verb tenses, and holiday activities. It also includes short comprehension passages and questions to test reading skills. The test is graded on a 100 point scale and divided into multiple sections to thoroughly assess students' English grammar and language skills.
Este documento resume as principais preposições em inglês e seus significados, além de explicar os diferentes tipos de pronomes em inglês, incluindo pessoais, possessivos, indefinidos, relativos, interrogativos e demonstrativos.
The document contains an English grammar test for students with multiple choice questions and fill-in-the-blank exercises about parts of speech, verb tenses, and holiday activities. It also includes short comprehension passages and questions to test reading skills. The test is graded on a 100 point scale and divided into multiple sections to thoroughly assess students' English grammar and language skills.
The document is divided into 3 units that provide words related to different topics. Unit 1 includes words about friendship and social activities like having a barbecue. Unit 2 discusses words around the topic of success, including daily tasks, failing, spending time, and giving advice. Unit 3 focuses on improving one's appearance, listing various accessories, hygiene products, and hair care items. The document serves as a vocabulary list covering positive social interactions, personal growth, and physical presentation.
This document contains a list of Turkish words with their English translations. Some of the words describe personal traits like "cheerful" and "stubborn". Others relate to society and culture like "agriculture", "factory", "history", and "homeland". The list also includes words associated with crime and detection such as "gun", "prison", "fingerprint", and "detective". It concludes with terms for jewelry including "bracelet", "necklace", and "earrings".
This document contains a list of vocabulary words that are commonly found in detective stories, such as terms related to stealing, appearing and disappearing, innocence and guilt, valuable items, suspects, clues, evidence, crimes, and the legal system. It includes words like "stolen", "innocent", "wealthy", "suspect", "clue", "gun", "evidence", "murderer", "fingerprint", and "convince". The document serves as a vocabulary guide for writing or reading detective fiction.
The Greeks began the Olympics in 776 BC to honor Zeus and other gods, with competitions held exclusively for men in Olympia, a major religious site. The Olympics featured running races, wrestling, boxing, pentathlon, horse racing, and winners received only an olive branch as the games were about honor rather than money or prizes. The Olympics continued for over 1000 years until being ended by Emperor Theodosius in 391 AD.
This document lists 60 common irregular verbs in English along with their past tense and past participle forms. Each verb is displayed with an image to help illustrate its meaning. The verbs are organized alphabetically and include examples such as bite - bit - bitten, break - broke - broken, choose - chose - chosen, come - came - come, and write - wrote - written.
The document discusses various food and activity options and expresses repeated hunger, suggesting getting food from options like tea, tennis, cooking, going out, chess, cake, pizza, hamburgers, apples, or going to a restaurant.
The document discusses different countries and their associated flags, names, and nationalities. It provides examples of common countries like Turkey, Japan, Germany, Spain, Canada, France, and the USA, and states the flag, country name, and demonym for a person from that country. For instance, it notes that a person from Turkey is Turkish, from Japan is Japanese, from Germany is German, and so on. It concludes by thanking the reader and providing the name, surname, student number, and class of the author.
This slideshow introduces the presenter as being from Germany and asks where the viewer is from. It then provides images related to nature, landmarks, countries and their capitals, prepositions, classroom rules, and closes by identifying the presenter and class. The slideshow exposes the viewer to vocabulary around nationalities, geography, and classroom expectations through images and brief text slides.
This document contains vocabulary words in English and Turkish related to nationality, countries, continents, capital cities, and tourist attractions. It also includes words like application form, international, deep, mountain, volcano, river, beverage, and traditional. The document lists the teacher and student who prepared it, including the class, number, and subject of English. It concludes with a thank you for watching.
The document contains vocabulary words in English and Turkish across three units. Unit 1 includes vocabulary related to countries, nationalities, cities, geographical features, continents, and communication. Unit 2 focuses on geographical terms like regions, cities, lakes, valleys, and specific regions in Turkey. Unit 3 presents directional terms and places in a city like libraries, banks, cafes, and cinemas. The document aims to teach English and Turkish vocabulary across various topics.
The document appears to be a map showing the location of a student named Serhat Buğra Zeybek in class 5-C with student number 199. The map shows various streets and landmarks around the student's current location, including Eagle Street, Police Station, Cafe, Park, Park Street, Main Street, Hall Street, Bank, Library, Bookstore, Wells Street, Cinema, and Restaurant.
This document discusses whether technology is a friend or foe. It contains Turkish translations of words like "foe", "strange", "hate", and discusses both the cons and pros of technology, how it can support or disable people, and whether it is important and safe. The document was created by two 7th grade students as a school project.
The document is divided into 3 units that provide words related to different topics. Unit 1 includes words about friendship and social activities like having a barbecue. Unit 2 discusses words around the topic of success, including daily tasks, failing, spending time, and giving advice. Unit 3 focuses on improving one's appearance, listing various accessories, hygiene products, and hair care items. The document serves as a vocabulary list covering positive social interactions, personal growth, and physical presentation.
This document contains a list of Turkish words with their English translations. Some of the words describe personal traits like "cheerful" and "stubborn". Others relate to society and culture like "agriculture", "factory", "history", and "homeland". The list also includes words associated with crime and detection such as "gun", "prison", "fingerprint", and "detective". It concludes with terms for jewelry including "bracelet", "necklace", and "earrings".
This document contains a list of vocabulary words that are commonly found in detective stories, such as terms related to stealing, appearing and disappearing, innocence and guilt, valuable items, suspects, clues, evidence, crimes, and the legal system. It includes words like "stolen", "innocent", "wealthy", "suspect", "clue", "gun", "evidence", "murderer", "fingerprint", and "convince". The document serves as a vocabulary guide for writing or reading detective fiction.
The Greeks began the Olympics in 776 BC to honor Zeus and other gods, with competitions held exclusively for men in Olympia, a major religious site. The Olympics featured running races, wrestling, boxing, pentathlon, horse racing, and winners received only an olive branch as the games were about honor rather than money or prizes. The Olympics continued for over 1000 years until being ended by Emperor Theodosius in 391 AD.
This document lists 60 common irregular verbs in English along with their past tense and past participle forms. Each verb is displayed with an image to help illustrate its meaning. The verbs are organized alphabetically and include examples such as bite - bit - bitten, break - broke - broken, choose - chose - chosen, come - came - come, and write - wrote - written.
The document discusses various food and activity options and expresses repeated hunger, suggesting getting food from options like tea, tennis, cooking, going out, chess, cake, pizza, hamburgers, apples, or going to a restaurant.
The document discusses different countries and their associated flags, names, and nationalities. It provides examples of common countries like Turkey, Japan, Germany, Spain, Canada, France, and the USA, and states the flag, country name, and demonym for a person from that country. For instance, it notes that a person from Turkey is Turkish, from Japan is Japanese, from Germany is German, and so on. It concludes by thanking the reader and providing the name, surname, student number, and class of the author.
This slideshow introduces the presenter as being from Germany and asks where the viewer is from. It then provides images related to nature, landmarks, countries and their capitals, prepositions, classroom rules, and closes by identifying the presenter and class. The slideshow exposes the viewer to vocabulary around nationalities, geography, and classroom expectations through images and brief text slides.
This document contains vocabulary words in English and Turkish related to nationality, countries, continents, capital cities, and tourist attractions. It also includes words like application form, international, deep, mountain, volcano, river, beverage, and traditional. The document lists the teacher and student who prepared it, including the class, number, and subject of English. It concludes with a thank you for watching.
The document contains vocabulary words in English and Turkish across three units. Unit 1 includes vocabulary related to countries, nationalities, cities, geographical features, continents, and communication. Unit 2 focuses on geographical terms like regions, cities, lakes, valleys, and specific regions in Turkey. Unit 3 presents directional terms and places in a city like libraries, banks, cafes, and cinemas. The document aims to teach English and Turkish vocabulary across various topics.
The document appears to be a map showing the location of a student named Serhat Buğra Zeybek in class 5-C with student number 199. The map shows various streets and landmarks around the student's current location, including Eagle Street, Police Station, Cafe, Park, Park Street, Main Street, Hall Street, Bank, Library, Bookstore, Wells Street, Cinema, and Restaurant.
This document discusses whether technology is a friend or foe. It contains Turkish translations of words like "foe", "strange", "hate", and discusses both the cons and pros of technology, how it can support or disable people, and whether it is important and safe. The document was created by two 7th grade students as a school project.