This document provides a recipe for an apple pie. It lists the ingredients needed for the dough, including wheat flour, powdered sugar, eggs, margarine or butter, and baking powder. It also lists the filling ingredients of apples, cinnamon, and sugar. The instructions explain how to make the dough, divide it in half to form the bottom and top crusts, add the apple filling, and bake the pie at 180°C for 40 minutes.
This document provides a recipe for making croissants in 6 steps. It lists the ingredients needed as milk, sugar, flour, eggs, yeast, butter, and jam. The recipe instructs how to make the dough by mixing flour, salt, sugar, yeast solution, eggs and warm milk with butter. The dough is then kneaded for 10-15 minutes and left to rise for 45 minutes before being rolled out and cut into triangles. The triangles can be filled with apples, cheese or chocolate before being rolled up, placed on a baking sheet and left to rise for 20 minutes. They are then baked at 180 degrees Celsius for 18 minutes until golden brown.
This recipe provides instructions for making chocolate chip muffins using flour, baking powder, vanilla sugar, water, oil, sugar, eggs, and chocolate chips. The dry ingredients are mixed in one bowl and the wet ingredients are mixed in another before being combined. The chocolate chips are added and some are saved to sprinkle on top. The batter is poured into muffin molds and baked at 180 degrees Celsius until ready.
A young fisherman named Wars lived on the Vistula River and loved fishing. One night, he saw a beautiful mermaid named Sawa singing in the water. Wars fell in love with her and asked her to be his wife. Sawa agreed and turned into a human. They married and lived happily ever after. The capital of Poland, Warsaw, is said to derive its name from their names combined: Wars and Sawa. The mermaid is also featured on the coat of arms of Warsaw.
The document describes some of the plants and animals found in Bialowieza, including European bisons, lynxes, and deers. It also mentions that there is a museum in Bialowieza that provides information about the many plants, animals, and history of this place, and that the Bialowieza Forest contains the oldest trees in Europe.
In Poland, many people have pets like fish, dogs, cats, hamsters, and parrots. The document's author has a hamster and fish, and their grandfather has a dog named Misiek. Last summer, the author went to Kłajpeda in Lithuania and watched a dolphin show. Dolphins are mammals that live in the sea but have fins and tails like fish. They eat fish and like to play, jump, and even play basketball with their trainers. The author prefers safari parks to zoos because the animals are not in cages and live freely in fields and forests.
This document summarizes three traditional Polish instruments - the piano, flute, and violin. The piano is described as a stringed hammer keyboard instrument with vertically placed strings and many features in common with the modern piano. The flute is defined as a woodwind lipophone instrument typically made of thin hollow tube, including the piccolo and simple flute. The violin is introduced as the smallest string instrument currently used, known for its highest pitch.
This document provides a recipe for an apple pie. It lists the ingredients needed for the dough, including wheat flour, powdered sugar, eggs, margarine or butter, and baking powder. It also lists the filling ingredients of apples, cinnamon, and sugar. The instructions explain how to make the dough, divide it in half to form the bottom and top crusts, add the apple filling, and bake the pie at 180°C for 40 minutes.
This document provides a recipe for making croissants in 6 steps. It lists the ingredients needed as milk, sugar, flour, eggs, yeast, butter, and jam. The recipe instructs how to make the dough by mixing flour, salt, sugar, yeast solution, eggs and warm milk with butter. The dough is then kneaded for 10-15 minutes and left to rise for 45 minutes before being rolled out and cut into triangles. The triangles can be filled with apples, cheese or chocolate before being rolled up, placed on a baking sheet and left to rise for 20 minutes. They are then baked at 180 degrees Celsius for 18 minutes until golden brown.
This recipe provides instructions for making chocolate chip muffins using flour, baking powder, vanilla sugar, water, oil, sugar, eggs, and chocolate chips. The dry ingredients are mixed in one bowl and the wet ingredients are mixed in another before being combined. The chocolate chips are added and some are saved to sprinkle on top. The batter is poured into muffin molds and baked at 180 degrees Celsius until ready.
A young fisherman named Wars lived on the Vistula River and loved fishing. One night, he saw a beautiful mermaid named Sawa singing in the water. Wars fell in love with her and asked her to be his wife. Sawa agreed and turned into a human. They married and lived happily ever after. The capital of Poland, Warsaw, is said to derive its name from their names combined: Wars and Sawa. The mermaid is also featured on the coat of arms of Warsaw.
The document describes some of the plants and animals found in Bialowieza, including European bisons, lynxes, and deers. It also mentions that there is a museum in Bialowieza that provides information about the many plants, animals, and history of this place, and that the Bialowieza Forest contains the oldest trees in Europe.
In Poland, many people have pets like fish, dogs, cats, hamsters, and parrots. The document's author has a hamster and fish, and their grandfather has a dog named Misiek. Last summer, the author went to Kłajpeda in Lithuania and watched a dolphin show. Dolphins are mammals that live in the sea but have fins and tails like fish. They eat fish and like to play, jump, and even play basketball with their trainers. The author prefers safari parks to zoos because the animals are not in cages and live freely in fields and forests.
This document summarizes three traditional Polish instruments - the piano, flute, and violin. The piano is described as a stringed hammer keyboard instrument with vertically placed strings and many features in common with the modern piano. The flute is defined as a woodwind lipophone instrument typically made of thin hollow tube, including the piccolo and simple flute. The violin is introduced as the smallest string instrument currently used, known for its highest pitch.
The document contains Christmas greetings from pupils and staff at Primary School No 5 in Bielsk Podlaski, Poland. It includes messages wishing recipients a Merry Christmas, Happy New Year, Christmas filled with magic, wonder, love, peace and bliss. The greetings are provided in both English and Polish.
This document provides a glossary of various art forms and activities that were explored by students from several primary schools across Europe as part of an Erasmus+ arts project. The glossary includes visual art forms like painting, pottery, sculpture, and origami as well as performing arts like drama, dancing, singing, playing instruments, and outdoor activities like sand pictures and playing boomwhackers. The glossary was produced collaboratively by students from schools in Poland, Cyprus, Lithuania, Italy, Estonia, Slovakia, Greece, and Portugal.
The document discusses an Erasmus+ project called Arts@creativity.eu that showcases artworks by pupils and teachers at Vilniaus Pranciškaus vidurine mokykla, a school in Lithuania. The project shares creative works from students and instructors to promote arts education.
This short poem asks questions about different feelings like being happy, sad, tired or bad. It then notes that how one feels is often up to them, as they can choose to feel positive like pink or negative like deep blue. The poem ends by repeatedly asking "How are you today?" and "How are you keeping?," checking in on the reader's emotional state.
In Poland, people typically only dress up on a few occasions, such as during carnival time and Christmas caroling. For Christmas caroling, groups of carolers traditionally dress up in costumes depicting biblical and folklore figures and go from house to house singing songs. Some common costumes included King Herod, angels, devils, and characters like Turon, who was dressed as a wild ox. The carolers would entertain neighbors and receive food or money in exchange. There are various regional forms of caroling traditions in Poland involving performances of nativity scenes and songs telling the story of Christ's birth.
Leonardo da Vinci was an excellent painter, architect and inventor in the 15th-16th centuries who produced many studies and designs related to human flight, including early concepts of helicopters and hang gliders. While most of his flying machine designs were impractical, the hang glider design has been successfully reconstructed and flown. The first successful flights with humans aboard balloons and gliders helped progress the development of aviation in the 18th century. The Wright brothers' airplane, which incorporated a motor, achieved the first controlled, powered and sustained heavier-than-air human flight in 1903.
The Wright brothers were interested in flight from a young age after their father gave them a toy helicopter. They began experimenting with gliders to understand wing design and aerodynamics. Wilbur and Orville built a wind tunnel to study how air flows over wings. In 1903, they successfully tested their motor-powered airplane, called the Flyer, achieving the first controlled, powered and sustained heavier-than-air human flight. Their achievement at Kitty Hawk on December 17, 1903 marked a major breakthrough in aviation history.
An old, mean woman living alone was skeptical of a starving tramp who came to her door asking for food and water. He claimed to have a magic leaf that could make soup. She reluctantly allowed him into her kitchen and provided a pot of water and some spices. When the soup was ready and they sat down to eat, the tramp revealed the "magic" leaf was just a common bay leaf. The soup was delicious and the tramp had tricked the woman into showing kindness to a stranger through harmless deception.
Janosik was given magic gifts as a child from three witches - a shirt, belt, and alpenstock - that gave him super speed, strength, and bullet resistance. He used these powers to rob rich people with friends and give to the poor. However, the girl he loved betrayed him by destroying the magic gifts and reporting him to soldiers, leading to Janosik's capture and hanging.
The document contains descriptions of various places, songs, and dances. It provides clues for the user to guess the answers. The places described include landmarks and cities in Europe, such as Piazza San Marco in Venice, Tallinn, and Porto. The songs mentioned include "Let It Be" by The Beatles and a piece of music composed by Chopin. Dances described include the Sirtaki dance from Greece. The document is asking the user to guess the answers based on the clues provided in each section.
Anna Fuszara is an artist educator and cultural animator who was met by the 'Arts@creativity.eu' Erasmus+ project team on March 15, 2017 in Bielsk Podlaski, Poland. Her website is anna-fuszara.tumblr.com and she has created slideshows for the Arts@creativity.eu project.
Teresa Adamowska is a Polish painter who studied at the High School of Fine Arts in Supraśl and the Faculty of Fine Arts in Turuń. She is currently a teacher at the High School of Fine Art in Łomża, Poland. Over her career she has painted many paintings, illustrated books, and created scenographies. She often exhibits her artworks in galleries in Poland and abroad and has received several awards for her work.
The timple is a 5-string traditional Canarian instrument typically about 38-40 centimeters long. It is most commonly tuned to D, A, E, C, and G. Simon Morales Tavío of Lanzarote is known as the father of modern timples from the mid-20th century onward. The timple is usually handcrafted out of wood and features a characteristic hump on its back, earning it the affectionate nickname of "resounding little camel" in some island areas. Some of the most renowned timplists include Totoyo Millares, Domingo Rodríguez Oramas, Benito Cabrera, Germán López,
Three brothers named Lech, Czech, and Rus lived in villages that had become too small for their growing families, so they decided to travel in different directions to find new homes. After many days of traveling through mountains, rivers, forests and wilderness without finding any people, they separated at the top of a mountain. Lech came upon a meadow surrounding a small lake and saw a beautiful white eagle with golden tipped wings perched in a nest on a rocky crag, so he declared they would make their new home there and call it Gniezno, which means "the eagle's nest." Lech's people built many houses there and called themselves Polonians, making it the first historical capital of Poland under
Poland is located in central Europe between the Baltic Sea and the Carpathian Mountains. It has a population of nearly 2 million people. Warsaw is the capital and largest city of Poland, situated on the Vistula River. It contains many historical buildings and sites of interest that were rebuilt after being destroyed in World War 2. Another major tourist attraction is the Wieliczka Salt Mine, which contains sculptures carved from salt hundreds of meters underground. Famous historic Poles include Pope John Paul II, composer Frédéric Chopin, astronomer Copernicus, ski jumper Adam Małysz, and explorer Marek Kamiński.
Primary School in Bin Boćkioćki is located at 4 Dubieńska Street in the village of Boćki, Poland. It is named after Pope John Paul II and has 150 pupils and 20 teachers. The school day runs from 8am to 12:30pm, with three lessons before lunch and two or three after. Afternoon activities include sports teams, an English club, drama club, art and dance club, and scouting troop.
Jón Leifs was Iceland's greatest classical composer. He was born in Iceland in 1899 and studied and composed in Germany from 1916 to 1944, returning to Iceland for the rest of his life. Leifs composed about 70 works that drew from Icelandic folk songs and harmonic structures. His music reflected Iceland's history and struggle for independence. Some of his most famous works include the "Elegy" written for his mother, "Geysir" inspired by Icelandic geysers, and "Three Images" which depicts the Icelandic landscape. His "Saga Symphony" had five movements each dedicated to heroes from Icelandic sagas.
Manuel de Falla y Matheu was a Spanish composer born in 1876 who is considered one of Spain's most important musicians of the early 20th century. He moved to Paris in 1907 where he was influenced by other composers, before returning to Madrid where he composed his famous works, including the ballet El amor brujo from 1914-1915, which features the celebrated Ritual Fire Dance. El amor brujo uses distinctly Andalusian influences with songs in the Gypsy dialect and contains moments of remarkable beauty and originality.
This document outlines the history of currency introductions in Poland from 1367 to 1756. It notes that before money was introduced, people exchanged goods. It then lists the years that various coins and banknotes were introduced, including the Grosz of Cracow in 1367, the Red złoty in 1587, the Talar in 1565, the Copper Szeląg in 1659, and the Tymf in 1663. It also provides some additional context about fractional denominations like the Półtorak, Dwojak, and Trojak.
Rifat Bey was a Turkish composer born in Istanbul in 1820, whose father was a Tanburî master. He worked in an Ottoman palace and was greatly influenced by Mevlevi culture, composing works inspired by Sufi traditions before dying in Istanbul.
The document contains Christmas greetings from pupils and staff at Primary School No 5 in Bielsk Podlaski, Poland. It includes messages wishing recipients a Merry Christmas, Happy New Year, Christmas filled with magic, wonder, love, peace and bliss. The greetings are provided in both English and Polish.
This document provides a glossary of various art forms and activities that were explored by students from several primary schools across Europe as part of an Erasmus+ arts project. The glossary includes visual art forms like painting, pottery, sculpture, and origami as well as performing arts like drama, dancing, singing, playing instruments, and outdoor activities like sand pictures and playing boomwhackers. The glossary was produced collaboratively by students from schools in Poland, Cyprus, Lithuania, Italy, Estonia, Slovakia, Greece, and Portugal.
The document discusses an Erasmus+ project called Arts@creativity.eu that showcases artworks by pupils and teachers at Vilniaus Pranciškaus vidurine mokykla, a school in Lithuania. The project shares creative works from students and instructors to promote arts education.
This short poem asks questions about different feelings like being happy, sad, tired or bad. It then notes that how one feels is often up to them, as they can choose to feel positive like pink or negative like deep blue. The poem ends by repeatedly asking "How are you today?" and "How are you keeping?," checking in on the reader's emotional state.
In Poland, people typically only dress up on a few occasions, such as during carnival time and Christmas caroling. For Christmas caroling, groups of carolers traditionally dress up in costumes depicting biblical and folklore figures and go from house to house singing songs. Some common costumes included King Herod, angels, devils, and characters like Turon, who was dressed as a wild ox. The carolers would entertain neighbors and receive food or money in exchange. There are various regional forms of caroling traditions in Poland involving performances of nativity scenes and songs telling the story of Christ's birth.
Leonardo da Vinci was an excellent painter, architect and inventor in the 15th-16th centuries who produced many studies and designs related to human flight, including early concepts of helicopters and hang gliders. While most of his flying machine designs were impractical, the hang glider design has been successfully reconstructed and flown. The first successful flights with humans aboard balloons and gliders helped progress the development of aviation in the 18th century. The Wright brothers' airplane, which incorporated a motor, achieved the first controlled, powered and sustained heavier-than-air human flight in 1903.
The Wright brothers were interested in flight from a young age after their father gave them a toy helicopter. They began experimenting with gliders to understand wing design and aerodynamics. Wilbur and Orville built a wind tunnel to study how air flows over wings. In 1903, they successfully tested their motor-powered airplane, called the Flyer, achieving the first controlled, powered and sustained heavier-than-air human flight. Their achievement at Kitty Hawk on December 17, 1903 marked a major breakthrough in aviation history.
An old, mean woman living alone was skeptical of a starving tramp who came to her door asking for food and water. He claimed to have a magic leaf that could make soup. She reluctantly allowed him into her kitchen and provided a pot of water and some spices. When the soup was ready and they sat down to eat, the tramp revealed the "magic" leaf was just a common bay leaf. The soup was delicious and the tramp had tricked the woman into showing kindness to a stranger through harmless deception.
Janosik was given magic gifts as a child from three witches - a shirt, belt, and alpenstock - that gave him super speed, strength, and bullet resistance. He used these powers to rob rich people with friends and give to the poor. However, the girl he loved betrayed him by destroying the magic gifts and reporting him to soldiers, leading to Janosik's capture and hanging.
The document contains descriptions of various places, songs, and dances. It provides clues for the user to guess the answers. The places described include landmarks and cities in Europe, such as Piazza San Marco in Venice, Tallinn, and Porto. The songs mentioned include "Let It Be" by The Beatles and a piece of music composed by Chopin. Dances described include the Sirtaki dance from Greece. The document is asking the user to guess the answers based on the clues provided in each section.
Anna Fuszara is an artist educator and cultural animator who was met by the 'Arts@creativity.eu' Erasmus+ project team on March 15, 2017 in Bielsk Podlaski, Poland. Her website is anna-fuszara.tumblr.com and she has created slideshows for the Arts@creativity.eu project.
Teresa Adamowska is a Polish painter who studied at the High School of Fine Arts in Supraśl and the Faculty of Fine Arts in Turuń. She is currently a teacher at the High School of Fine Art in Łomża, Poland. Over her career she has painted many paintings, illustrated books, and created scenographies. She often exhibits her artworks in galleries in Poland and abroad and has received several awards for her work.
The timple is a 5-string traditional Canarian instrument typically about 38-40 centimeters long. It is most commonly tuned to D, A, E, C, and G. Simon Morales Tavío of Lanzarote is known as the father of modern timples from the mid-20th century onward. The timple is usually handcrafted out of wood and features a characteristic hump on its back, earning it the affectionate nickname of "resounding little camel" in some island areas. Some of the most renowned timplists include Totoyo Millares, Domingo Rodríguez Oramas, Benito Cabrera, Germán López,
Three brothers named Lech, Czech, and Rus lived in villages that had become too small for their growing families, so they decided to travel in different directions to find new homes. After many days of traveling through mountains, rivers, forests and wilderness without finding any people, they separated at the top of a mountain. Lech came upon a meadow surrounding a small lake and saw a beautiful white eagle with golden tipped wings perched in a nest on a rocky crag, so he declared they would make their new home there and call it Gniezno, which means "the eagle's nest." Lech's people built many houses there and called themselves Polonians, making it the first historical capital of Poland under
Poland is located in central Europe between the Baltic Sea and the Carpathian Mountains. It has a population of nearly 2 million people. Warsaw is the capital and largest city of Poland, situated on the Vistula River. It contains many historical buildings and sites of interest that were rebuilt after being destroyed in World War 2. Another major tourist attraction is the Wieliczka Salt Mine, which contains sculptures carved from salt hundreds of meters underground. Famous historic Poles include Pope John Paul II, composer Frédéric Chopin, astronomer Copernicus, ski jumper Adam Małysz, and explorer Marek Kamiński.
Primary School in Bin Boćkioćki is located at 4 Dubieńska Street in the village of Boćki, Poland. It is named after Pope John Paul II and has 150 pupils and 20 teachers. The school day runs from 8am to 12:30pm, with three lessons before lunch and two or three after. Afternoon activities include sports teams, an English club, drama club, art and dance club, and scouting troop.
Jón Leifs was Iceland's greatest classical composer. He was born in Iceland in 1899 and studied and composed in Germany from 1916 to 1944, returning to Iceland for the rest of his life. Leifs composed about 70 works that drew from Icelandic folk songs and harmonic structures. His music reflected Iceland's history and struggle for independence. Some of his most famous works include the "Elegy" written for his mother, "Geysir" inspired by Icelandic geysers, and "Three Images" which depicts the Icelandic landscape. His "Saga Symphony" had five movements each dedicated to heroes from Icelandic sagas.
Manuel de Falla y Matheu was a Spanish composer born in 1876 who is considered one of Spain's most important musicians of the early 20th century. He moved to Paris in 1907 where he was influenced by other composers, before returning to Madrid where he composed his famous works, including the ballet El amor brujo from 1914-1915, which features the celebrated Ritual Fire Dance. El amor brujo uses distinctly Andalusian influences with songs in the Gypsy dialect and contains moments of remarkable beauty and originality.
This document outlines the history of currency introductions in Poland from 1367 to 1756. It notes that before money was introduced, people exchanged goods. It then lists the years that various coins and banknotes were introduced, including the Grosz of Cracow in 1367, the Red złoty in 1587, the Talar in 1565, the Copper Szeląg in 1659, and the Tymf in 1663. It also provides some additional context about fractional denominations like the Półtorak, Dwojak, and Trojak.
Rifat Bey was a Turkish composer born in Istanbul in 1820, whose father was a Tanburî master. He worked in an Ottoman palace and was greatly influenced by Mevlevi culture, composing works inspired by Sufi traditions before dying in Istanbul.
6. Τι έγινε? Γιατί
είσαι φοβισμένη?
Μην φοβάσαι οι
ταινίες είναι
ψέματα!
Έχεις δίκιο δεν
θα
ξαναφοβηθώ
ποτέ από
ταινία!
Μπράβο!!!!!!
7. Γιατί είσαι
απογοητευμένη; Θα
μπορούσα να σε
βοηθήσω.
Μου έκλεψαν το πορτοφόλι
μου που είχε 20 ΕΥΡΩ και
ήθελα να πάρω ένα δώρο για
τα γενέθλια του αδερφού
μου!
Μη
στεναχωριέσαι! Ο
αδελφός σου θα
καταλάβει.
ΟΛΟΙ ΑΥΤΌ
ΛΕΝΕ…