This document provides a short description of on-site photography services. It offers creative and cutting-edge portrait photography taken on location. The photography focuses on portraits that can capture subjects in their natural environments.
Michael Schmidt, Country Manager for Citrix Switzerland, introduces Citrix's vision of empowering users to access their applications, desktops, and data from any device. Citrix offers a revolutionary virtual desktop system called XenDesktop that delivers applications and desktops to users through various methods while ensuring security, flexibility and scalability. Citrix aims to make datacenters more like clouds by enabling connectivity to any external cloud and providing a single interface for managing hybrid cloud environments across apps, workloads and networks.
This document provides an overview of basic relative pronouns and clauses in English. It discusses defining and non-defining relative clauses, and the relative pronouns that can be used to introduce each type of clause (e.g. that, which, who, whose, when, where). It also covers cases where the relative pronoun can be omitted and distinguishes between the words "whose" and "who's". Examples are provided throughout to illustrate the different concepts.
The document provides three secrets for overcoming hardships:
1. There is always someone suffering more than you who is going through greater trials. Focus on appreciating what you have rather than envying others.
2. Whatever is meant for you will occur, so accept Allah's decree. Having patience during trials will bring peace of mind.
3. Allah is testing you with trials to determine what you deserve. Trials are part of Allah's plan, so do not oppose them. Showing patience during tests will help you in the afterlife.
This document contains several sentences comparing different attributes such as weather, difficulty levels, enjoyment, and sizes using comparative idioms like "nearly as", "more difficult than", and "by far the best". It also discusses celebrations in Scotland and Los Angeles, noting things like the music being louder one year than the last or one event being more lively than others.
This document discusses wh-ever words such as whoever, wherever, whatever, whichever, whenever, and whomever. It explains that wh-ever clauses can be used as subjects or objects in sentences. It provides examples of sentences using each wh-ever word and notes their meanings. It then has a practice section with sentences to fill in the blanks with wh-ever words. Finally, it analyzes the use of wh-ever words in the lyrics of the song "Circle of Love".
The document lists various sports such as soccer, American football, ice hockey, volleyball and provides related vocabulary words for sports. It also discusses some skills needed for sports like speed, balance and reaction time. Finally, it outlines benefits of playing sports such as improved confidence, stress relief, weight loss, better posture, and opportunities to make friends.
By the end of the lesson you will be able to …
define a noun clause.
mention types of noun clause.
say different position of noun clause.
identify some noun clauses.
Michael Schmidt, Country Manager for Citrix Switzerland, introduces Citrix's vision of empowering users to access their applications, desktops, and data from any device. Citrix offers a revolutionary virtual desktop system called XenDesktop that delivers applications and desktops to users through various methods while ensuring security, flexibility and scalability. Citrix aims to make datacenters more like clouds by enabling connectivity to any external cloud and providing a single interface for managing hybrid cloud environments across apps, workloads and networks.
This document provides an overview of basic relative pronouns and clauses in English. It discusses defining and non-defining relative clauses, and the relative pronouns that can be used to introduce each type of clause (e.g. that, which, who, whose, when, where). It also covers cases where the relative pronoun can be omitted and distinguishes between the words "whose" and "who's". Examples are provided throughout to illustrate the different concepts.
The document provides three secrets for overcoming hardships:
1. There is always someone suffering more than you who is going through greater trials. Focus on appreciating what you have rather than envying others.
2. Whatever is meant for you will occur, so accept Allah's decree. Having patience during trials will bring peace of mind.
3. Allah is testing you with trials to determine what you deserve. Trials are part of Allah's plan, so do not oppose them. Showing patience during tests will help you in the afterlife.
This document contains several sentences comparing different attributes such as weather, difficulty levels, enjoyment, and sizes using comparative idioms like "nearly as", "more difficult than", and "by far the best". It also discusses celebrations in Scotland and Los Angeles, noting things like the music being louder one year than the last or one event being more lively than others.
This document discusses wh-ever words such as whoever, wherever, whatever, whichever, whenever, and whomever. It explains that wh-ever clauses can be used as subjects or objects in sentences. It provides examples of sentences using each wh-ever word and notes their meanings. It then has a practice section with sentences to fill in the blanks with wh-ever words. Finally, it analyzes the use of wh-ever words in the lyrics of the song "Circle of Love".
The document lists various sports such as soccer, American football, ice hockey, volleyball and provides related vocabulary words for sports. It also discusses some skills needed for sports like speed, balance and reaction time. Finally, it outlines benefits of playing sports such as improved confidence, stress relief, weight loss, better posture, and opportunities to make friends.
By the end of the lesson you will be able to …
define a noun clause.
mention types of noun clause.
say different position of noun clause.
identify some noun clauses.
This document presents a comparison of English and Arabic sentence structures. It discusses the basic elements of sentences in both languages, including subjects, predicates, and objects. For English, it outlines five basic sentence structures: subject + verb; subject + verb + adverb; subject + verb + noun; subject + verb + adjective; and subject + verb + object. For Arabic, it describes two types of sentences: equational/verb-less sentences and verbal sentences. It details the elements of each Arabic sentence type, including possible word orders. The conclusion notes some differences between English and Arabic sentences that can cause problems in translation.
Natural disasters are caused by natural hazards such as floods, earthquakes, or landslides. They can lead to financial, environmental, or human losses depending on the vulnerability of the affected population. Examples of major natural disasters in recent history include the 2013 floods in Uttarakhand, India that killed thousands, and the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami that killed over 250,000 people. While natural disasters cannot be prevented, modern technology can help forecast and mitigate damage through early warning systems if proper precautions are taken.
Presentation noun clauses final version-instructor's copyAslı Demirkol
The document discusses different types of noun clauses, their functions, and markers. It provides examples of noun clauses using wh- words like who, what, when, where, why, wh- words with -ever, whether, and that. Noun clauses can function as subjects or objects and replace nouns. Infinitive phrases can sometimes replace noun clauses.
This document discusses different types of relative clauses including defining vs. non-defining relative clauses, special cases involving relative pronouns, emphatic relative clauses using "what", relative clauses using "whatever/whoever/wherever", and reduced relative clauses. Examples are provided to illustrate each concept along with exercises for the reader to practice transforming sentences and filling in relative clauses.
This document provides information and examples about using different past tenses in English, including the past simple, past continuous, past perfect, and past perfect continuous. It discusses when to use each tense to describe events that happened in the past, including distinguishing between actions completed in the past (past simple) versus actions ongoing in the past (past continuous). It also covers using time conjunctions like when, while, before, and after to clarify the sequence of events. Several examples are provided and there is a short exercise with multiple choice and sentence rewriting questions to reinforce understanding of these different past tenses.
This document defines and provides examples of different types of clauses, with a focus on noun clauses. It defines a noun clause as a dependent clause that functions similar to a noun by acting as a subject, object, or complement. The document then discusses the different grammatical functions that noun clauses can serve, including as a subject, subject complement, direct object, object complement, prepositional complement, adjective phrase complement, and appositive. Examples are provided for each grammatical function.
This document defines and provides examples of different types of clauses:
1) Independent clauses can stand alone as a complete sentence, while subordinate clauses cannot due to missing a subject and verb relationship and depend on an independent clause for meaning.
2) Adjective clauses modify nouns and begin with relative pronouns like "who", while adverb clauses modify verbs and begin with subordinating conjunctions like "because".
3) Noun clauses function as nouns and are introduced by words like "how", "if", and "that".
This document presents a comparison of English and Arabic sentence structures. It discusses the basic elements of sentences in both languages, including subjects, predicates, and objects. For English, it outlines five basic sentence structures: subject + verb; subject + verb + adverb; subject + verb + noun; subject + verb + adjective; and subject + verb + object. For Arabic, it describes two types of sentences: equational/verb-less sentences and verbal sentences. It details the elements of each Arabic sentence type, including possible word orders. The conclusion notes some differences between English and Arabic sentences that can cause problems in translation.
Natural disasters are caused by natural hazards such as floods, earthquakes, or landslides. They can lead to financial, environmental, or human losses depending on the vulnerability of the affected population. Examples of major natural disasters in recent history include the 2013 floods in Uttarakhand, India that killed thousands, and the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami that killed over 250,000 people. While natural disasters cannot be prevented, modern technology can help forecast and mitigate damage through early warning systems if proper precautions are taken.
Presentation noun clauses final version-instructor's copyAslı Demirkol
The document discusses different types of noun clauses, their functions, and markers. It provides examples of noun clauses using wh- words like who, what, when, where, why, wh- words with -ever, whether, and that. Noun clauses can function as subjects or objects and replace nouns. Infinitive phrases can sometimes replace noun clauses.
This document discusses different types of relative clauses including defining vs. non-defining relative clauses, special cases involving relative pronouns, emphatic relative clauses using "what", relative clauses using "whatever/whoever/wherever", and reduced relative clauses. Examples are provided to illustrate each concept along with exercises for the reader to practice transforming sentences and filling in relative clauses.
This document provides information and examples about using different past tenses in English, including the past simple, past continuous, past perfect, and past perfect continuous. It discusses when to use each tense to describe events that happened in the past, including distinguishing between actions completed in the past (past simple) versus actions ongoing in the past (past continuous). It also covers using time conjunctions like when, while, before, and after to clarify the sequence of events. Several examples are provided and there is a short exercise with multiple choice and sentence rewriting questions to reinforce understanding of these different past tenses.
This document defines and provides examples of different types of clauses, with a focus on noun clauses. It defines a noun clause as a dependent clause that functions similar to a noun by acting as a subject, object, or complement. The document then discusses the different grammatical functions that noun clauses can serve, including as a subject, subject complement, direct object, object complement, prepositional complement, adjective phrase complement, and appositive. Examples are provided for each grammatical function.
This document defines and provides examples of different types of clauses:
1) Independent clauses can stand alone as a complete sentence, while subordinate clauses cannot due to missing a subject and verb relationship and depend on an independent clause for meaning.
2) Adjective clauses modify nouns and begin with relative pronouns like "who", while adverb clauses modify verbs and begin with subordinating conjunctions like "because".
3) Noun clauses function as nouns and are introduced by words like "how", "if", and "that".