Napoleón fue un militar y gobernante francés que se convirtió en general republicano durante la Revolución Francesa y el directorio. Luego dio un golpe de Estado en 1799 que lo convirtió en el primer cónsul de la República Francesa. Más tarde se convirtió en cónsul vitalicio y luego emperador. Se adhirió a los ideales de la Revolución Francesa y defendió la convención. La ciudad española de Zaragoza sufrió asedios durante la guerra de independencia española contra los ejércitos de
Mardi Gras is a famous celebration that originated from French Catholic traditions, marking the start of Lent. Known as "Fat Tuesday", Mardi Gras features feasts, parades, and festivities, most notably in New Orleans, Louisiana, where participants celebrate with beads, feathered masks, and colorful floats down Bourbon Street. The two biggest parades, Rex and Zulu, end at Canal Street and are accompanied by New Orleans jazz bands, zydeco music, and Cajun sounds. Traditional Louisiana foods like gumbo, jambalaya, and king cake are also part of Mardi Gras festivities.
Thanksgiving is celebrated annually on the fourth Thursday of November in the United States and Canada. It originated as a harvest festival celebrated by Pilgrims and Native Americans in 1621. The traditional Thanksgiving meal features turkey, stuffing, mashed potatoes, cranberry sauce, and pumpkin pie. People gather with family and friends over a potluck meal to give thanks for blessings received throughout the year.
Christmas is celebrated on December 25th in the UK and US, where most people are Christian. Christmas Eve and Boxing Day on the 26th are also celebrated. Families gather for Christmas dinner which typically includes roast turkey. Decorations include Christmas trees, candles, balls and paper chains. Santa Claus brings gifts that children leave out in stockings. Shopping has become an important tradition as most people buy presents for family and friends, beginning with Black Friday in the US.
Thanksgiving is a harvest celebration where people in the US, Canada, and some other countries have a feast and say what they are thankful for. The first Thanksgiving was in 1621 when the Pilgrims and Wampanoag Native Americans shared a feast. Today, Thanksgiving is celebrated on the fourth Thursday of November in the US and the second Monday of October in Canada. Common Thanksgiving activities include watching football, parades, cooking, and spending time with family.
This document discusses typical foods, activities, and traditions associated with Halloween. It mentions common Halloween foods like candy apples, caramel corn, and candy corn. It also discusses carving pumpkins into jack-o-lanterns and children going trick-or-treating until around age 12. Finally, it lists some Halloween terms like werewolf, bat, ghost, and zombie that are often featured in costumes, movies, and decorations during the spooky holiday.
The document provides information about Halloween, including its origins in Celtic traditions, common symbols like jack-o-lanterns and monsters, and popular Halloween activities such as pumpkin carving, wearing costumes, trick-or-treating, lighting bonfires, and telling horror stories. Basic Halloween vocabulary is also listed.
Napoleón fue un militar y gobernante francés que se convirtió en general republicano durante la Revolución Francesa y el directorio. Luego dio un golpe de Estado en 1799 que lo convirtió en el primer cónsul de la República Francesa. Más tarde se convirtió en cónsul vitalicio y luego emperador. Se adhirió a los ideales de la Revolución Francesa y defendió la convención. La ciudad española de Zaragoza sufrió asedios durante la guerra de independencia española contra los ejércitos de
Mardi Gras is a famous celebration that originated from French Catholic traditions, marking the start of Lent. Known as "Fat Tuesday", Mardi Gras features feasts, parades, and festivities, most notably in New Orleans, Louisiana, where participants celebrate with beads, feathered masks, and colorful floats down Bourbon Street. The two biggest parades, Rex and Zulu, end at Canal Street and are accompanied by New Orleans jazz bands, zydeco music, and Cajun sounds. Traditional Louisiana foods like gumbo, jambalaya, and king cake are also part of Mardi Gras festivities.
Thanksgiving is celebrated annually on the fourth Thursday of November in the United States and Canada. It originated as a harvest festival celebrated by Pilgrims and Native Americans in 1621. The traditional Thanksgiving meal features turkey, stuffing, mashed potatoes, cranberry sauce, and pumpkin pie. People gather with family and friends over a potluck meal to give thanks for blessings received throughout the year.
Christmas is celebrated on December 25th in the UK and US, where most people are Christian. Christmas Eve and Boxing Day on the 26th are also celebrated. Families gather for Christmas dinner which typically includes roast turkey. Decorations include Christmas trees, candles, balls and paper chains. Santa Claus brings gifts that children leave out in stockings. Shopping has become an important tradition as most people buy presents for family and friends, beginning with Black Friday in the US.
Thanksgiving is a harvest celebration where people in the US, Canada, and some other countries have a feast and say what they are thankful for. The first Thanksgiving was in 1621 when the Pilgrims and Wampanoag Native Americans shared a feast. Today, Thanksgiving is celebrated on the fourth Thursday of November in the US and the second Monday of October in Canada. Common Thanksgiving activities include watching football, parades, cooking, and spending time with family.
This document discusses typical foods, activities, and traditions associated with Halloween. It mentions common Halloween foods like candy apples, caramel corn, and candy corn. It also discusses carving pumpkins into jack-o-lanterns and children going trick-or-treating until around age 12. Finally, it lists some Halloween terms like werewolf, bat, ghost, and zombie that are often featured in costumes, movies, and decorations during the spooky holiday.
The document provides information about Halloween, including its origins in Celtic traditions, common symbols like jack-o-lanterns and monsters, and popular Halloween activities such as pumpkin carving, wearing costumes, trick-or-treating, lighting bonfires, and telling horror stories. Basic Halloween vocabulary is also listed.
The document contains a Halloween trivia quiz with 36 multiple choice questions about various aspects of Halloween traditions and culture. Some key details covered include that Halloween is typically celebrated at the end of October, pumpkins and the colors orange and black are strongly associated with Halloween, and activities like trick-or-treating, carving jack-o-lanterns, and visiting haunted houses are common Halloween practices in many places. The largest pumpkin on record weighed over 1,190 kilograms.
El documento resume los temas que se abordarán en una visita sobre sexualidad y salud reproductiva, incluyendo los órganos reproductivos masculinos y femeninos, métodos anticonceptivos, infecciones de transmisión sexual, orientación e identidad sexual, transexualidad e intersexualidad, relaciones afectivas y partes del cuerpo. También incluye enlaces a recursos adicionales como páginas web, videos y guías sobre estos temas.
This document compares various aspects of India and Spain such as population, leaders, landmarks, cities, sports, traditional clothing, and food. It provides images and facts for each category being compared between the two countries, with the goal of learning how to compare elements in English. Key details compared include the population of India and Spain, leaders like Mahatma Gandhi and King Felipe, landmarks like the Taj Mahal and Cathedral of Santiago, cities like Delhi and Lugo, sports like cricket and football, traditional attire like the sari and Galician dress, and cuisine like Indian food and Galician food.
This document contains an English language exam with multiple sections:
1. Completing sentences with the correct verb form - past simple, past continuous, present simple, present continuous.
2. Describing a person with 80 words including what they are, have, and are wearing.
3. Completing sentences with quantifiers - some, any, how much, how many, a lot of, a, an, many, much.
4. Writing two 80-word paragraphs about given topics using connectors - going to a stationery shop to buy pens and a marker, something interesting done last month using past continuous verbs, what someone in your family does on Saturdays, what Donald Trump does
This document contains an English language exam with multiple parts. Part 1 has students complete sentences with verbs in various tenses. Part 2 asks students to describe a person. Part 3 has students complete sentences with quantifiers like some, any, many. Part 4 gives students a choice to write a paragraph about topics like a dialogue at a shop, something interesting done last month, what a family member did last summer, or what the school director does daily.
The document provides a grammar exercise where students must choose the correct verb tense - present simple, present continuous, past simple or past continuous - to complete 27 sentences. The tenses test a variety of situations including actions occurring now, regularly occurring actions, unfinished past actions and completed past actions. The student must demonstrate their understanding of when to use each verb tense in English.
This document summarizes the song "Arcade" by Duncan Laurence, the winner of the 2019 Eurovision Song Contest. The song describes a broken heart from a failed relationship, with feelings of being lost and carrying the pain home. It refers to the singer's childhood in a small town and getting addicted to a "losing game", with the overall message that loving you was a losing game.
The document provides a review of grammar structures for 4th year secondary school students (4o ESO) in Spanish. It includes 10 sentences to rewrite using different grammar points like passives, tenses, reported speech, modals, conditionals, and connectors. The document then provides the answers for rewriting each sentence step-by-step to demonstrate the correct grammar structures. It covers a variety of grammar topics to help students prepare for an exam.
The document discusses reported speech sentences and how to change direct speech into indirect speech. It provides 9 examples of direct speech sentences and their equivalent reported speech counterparts by changing pronouns, adverbs of time and verbs as needed for consistent tense and pronoun usage in reported statements.
Castanets are a percussion instrument consisting of a pair of concave shells joined by a string. They are used in Spanish, Kalo, Moorish, Ottoman, Italian, Sephardic, Swiss, and Portuguese music. To play them, one pair is held in each hand with the string hooked over the thumb and shells resting in the palm. When the hands are clicked together they produce rhythmic clicks or rattles. Originally made from chestnuts, castanets were used by ancient Greeks and Egyptians. Famous castanet players include Carmen Amaya, Lola Flores, and Alex Acuña.
The Vihuela was a stringed instrument popular during the Renaissance, similar to the guitar. It had 6 or 7 double strings, usually made of animal intestine. While its inventor is unknown, the Vihuela originated in Spain and Portugal in the 16th century, where it was more popular than the lute. It was constructed of wood and had the shape of an 8, around the same size as a guitar. Some famous musicians composed works for the Vihuela during this period.
The bagpipe is a traditional wind instrument from Scotland, Galicia, Brittany, Ireland and Asturias. It consists of a perforated tube inserted into a bag for holding air, and has 3 to 6 holes along its cylindrical wooden body. Though its original inventor is unknown, the bagpipe today remains an important symbol of cultural identity for its regions and is played by many famous individual musicians and groups.
The mandolin is a stringed musical instrument of the lute family that is made of wood and is a bit wider than the guitar. It has been around for over 3000 years originating in Mesopotamia and is played famously by Chris Thile and David Grisman. The mandolin is short and oval shaped with wooden construction and strings.
The Dulzaina is a Spanish double reed wind instrument that is part of the oboe family. There are different regional versions of the Dulzaina, such as the Gralla in Catalonia and the bolin-gozo in the Basque region. The Dulzaina originated in ancient Greece and was introduced to Catalan in the 14th century from France. It has a conical shape with seven holes and is typically made of wood. A famous player of the Catalan Gralla is Ivan Caro.
The banjo is a string instrument smaller than a guitar originally played in the USA. It is traditionally made by black Americans and has a circular wooden frame covered by a skin with 4, 5, 6, or 10 strings. Famous banjo players include Abigail Washburn and Béla Fleck.
The fiddle is a bowed string instrument that is essentially the same as a violin but is played in folk music traditions from Europe and North America. While the violin has gut strings, the fiddle has steel strings that produce a brighter tone, making it more suitable for folk styles. The fiddle, like the violin, is made of wood with the exception of its steel strings. Some famous fiddlers who play folk styles include Charlie Daniels, Mark O'Connor, Craig Duncan, and Jay Ungar.
The concertina is a free-reed musical instrument that originated in England and Germany and is used for classical music in Ireland, England and South Africa as well as for tango and polka music. It is a wooden instrument that is played by expanding and contracting it using buttons or keys and, unlike the accordion, is generally smaller with fewer reeds. One of the most famous concertina players is Noel Hill, who was born in County Clare, Ireland and is known for songs like "The Humours of Castlefin."
2. INTRODUCIÓN
No paleolítico vivían na Idade de Pedra,foi a idade que máis tempo estivo,durou 2,85millons de
anos. Fabricaban as súas propias armas, de pedra, coiro, madeira, ósos e astas, con elas
cazaban,pescaban. Cando no lugar no que estaban se lles acababan os recursos marchaban a outros
lugares constantemente. Cubrían as necesidades básicas coa economía.
NUTRICIÓN DO PALEOLÍTICO
Os nómades,cazaban,pescaban e recolectaban froitos,cando a comida se lles acababa,mudábanse a
outro lado porque xa non tiñan comida.
CARACTERÍSTICAS DA SUA VIDA
Os nómades non teñen territorio fixo, senón que se desprazan constantemente,cazaban en grupos de
20 a 50 persoas as persoas máis importantes eran as que máis cazaban.
COMO CAZABAN
Cazaban en grupo con armas construídas por eles, e coas peles dos animais fabricaban a sua propia
roupa.
BIBLIOGRAFÍA
Wikipedia nomadé, wikipedia paleolítico.
Bibliotecadixital.edu.mx
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