The document provides examples of statements using the present simple tense to describe likes and dislikes of different foods. It lists affirmative statements with "I", "he/she", "we", "you", and "they" followed by foods that are liked. Negative statements are formed by adding "don't" in place of "like". Interrogative statements are formed using "do" or "does" to ask about likes, with possible answers of "yes...do/does" or "no...don't/doesn't". Further statements of personal likes and dislikes of macaroni and cheese are given, along with a question about liked foods.
The document discusses using the present simple tense to talk about regular or habitual actions. It provides examples of affirmative sentences using the present simple, such as "We go to school every day" and "She goes to school with her friend." Negative examples are also given like "We don't drive a motorbike" and "He doesn't drive a van." Questions in the present simple are formed by using "do" as an auxiliary verb, such as "Do you play basketball?" and "Does he play basketball?"
The document discusses the proper use of the phrases "there is" and "there are" when referring to singular and plural nouns. It provides examples of using "there is" for singular nouns and "there are" for plural nouns in affirmative, interrogative, and negative sentences.
Claude Monet was a French painter born in 1840 in Paris who died in 1926 in Giverny. He was a founder of Impressionism and was known for his landscape paintings featuring flowers, boats, and water lilies, including works depicting the Rouen Cathedral facade and Japanese bridge in his garden, the latter created after he had begun losing his vision to cataracts late in his life.
The document provides examples of plural and singular forms of various fruits and drinks, including apples, peanuts, bananas, milk, water, and coffee. It then gives examples of affirmative, negative, and interrogative sentences using singular and plural forms of strawberries, cherries, and milk, along with the appropriate responses of "yes" or "no" depending on whether the statement is affirmative or negative.
Pablo Picasso was born in Malaga, Spain in 1881 and died in Mougins, France in 1973. He lived in Paris where he met other famous artists like Henri Matisse and Marcel Duchamp. Picasso is considered one of the greatest artists of the 20th century and worked in multiple mediums including painting, sculpting, printmaking and ceramics.
Roy Lichtenstein was an American pop artist born in Manhattan in 1923 who died there in 1997. He was inspired by comic strips and used the popular advertising and comic book styles in his over 4,500 works, which were influential on pop art. His most famous paintings include Whaam! and Drowning Girl, which featured bold colors and reproduced comic book panels.
The document provides examples of statements using the present simple tense to describe likes and dislikes of different foods. It lists affirmative statements with "I", "he/she", "we", "you", and "they" followed by foods that are liked. Negative statements are formed by adding "don't" in place of "like". Interrogative statements are formed using "do" or "does" to ask about likes, with possible answers of "yes...do/does" or "no...don't/doesn't". Further statements of personal likes and dislikes of macaroni and cheese are given, along with a question about liked foods.
The document discusses using the present simple tense to talk about regular or habitual actions. It provides examples of affirmative sentences using the present simple, such as "We go to school every day" and "She goes to school with her friend." Negative examples are also given like "We don't drive a motorbike" and "He doesn't drive a van." Questions in the present simple are formed by using "do" as an auxiliary verb, such as "Do you play basketball?" and "Does he play basketball?"
The document discusses the proper use of the phrases "there is" and "there are" when referring to singular and plural nouns. It provides examples of using "there is" for singular nouns and "there are" for plural nouns in affirmative, interrogative, and negative sentences.
Claude Monet was a French painter born in 1840 in Paris who died in 1926 in Giverny. He was a founder of Impressionism and was known for his landscape paintings featuring flowers, boats, and water lilies, including works depicting the Rouen Cathedral facade and Japanese bridge in his garden, the latter created after he had begun losing his vision to cataracts late in his life.
The document provides examples of plural and singular forms of various fruits and drinks, including apples, peanuts, bananas, milk, water, and coffee. It then gives examples of affirmative, negative, and interrogative sentences using singular and plural forms of strawberries, cherries, and milk, along with the appropriate responses of "yes" or "no" depending on whether the statement is affirmative or negative.
Pablo Picasso was born in Malaga, Spain in 1881 and died in Mougins, France in 1973. He lived in Paris where he met other famous artists like Henri Matisse and Marcel Duchamp. Picasso is considered one of the greatest artists of the 20th century and worked in multiple mediums including painting, sculpting, printmaking and ceramics.
Roy Lichtenstein was an American pop artist born in Manhattan in 1923 who died there in 1997. He was inspired by comic strips and used the popular advertising and comic book styles in his over 4,500 works, which were influential on pop art. His most famous paintings include Whaam! and Drowning Girl, which featured bold colors and reproduced comic book panels.
Leonardo da Vinci was an Italian polymath whose interests included invention, painting, sculpting, architecture, science, and more. He invented early designs of tanks, helicopters, crossbows, and parachutes. His father's name was Piero and his mother's name was Caterina. He had two brothers named Bartolomeo and Domenico.
Fernando Botero was born in 1932 in Medellin, Colombia. He is considered the most recognized living Latin American artist known for his "Boterismo" style. Botero has achieved international recognition for his paintings, drawings, and sculptures which have been exhibited all over the world.
This document contains descriptions of 4 paintings: Girl in Mirror depicts a beautiful blonde girl looking at herself in the mirror, with yellow and red as the main colors. The second painting shows a colorful bedroom inspired by Van Gogh's bedroom, with yellow, blue and white as the dominant hues. The third painting portrays a scared blonde girl with painted lips, featuring flesh tones and yellow. The fourth painting also depicts a scared blonde girl with painted lips and uses flesh tones and yellow.
Vincent Van Gogh was a Dutch post-Impressionist painter born in 1853 who created over 2,100 artworks in his lifetime despite dying at a young age of 37. He had no fixed artistic style and enjoyed painting landscapes, still lifes, portraits and self-portraits using symbolic colors and expressive brushwork. Van Gogh started painting and drawing as a child and produced most of his notable work in the last few years of his life, including famous paintings like "Sunflowers", "The Starry Night", and "Wheatfield with Crows".
Rene Magritte was a Belgian artist born in 1898 who died in 1967. He started painting in 1910 after his mother committed suicide. Some of his most famous paintings included Golconda, The Art for Living which depicted a man with a large head in orange and blue tones, Apple Face showing a man with an apple covering his face in black and green colors, and paintings featuring large eyes or birds against blue skies.
Vincent Van Gogh was a Dutch post-Impressionist painter born in 1853 who painted over 900 pictures and 1600 drawings in his lifetime. He struggled with mental illness and died by suicide in 1890 at the age of 37 after cutting off part of his ear and shooting himself with a gun. Some of his most famous paintings included The Starry Night, Sunflowers, and The Potato Eaters, known for their distinctive use of color, especially yellow, orange and blue.
The document discusses the present simple and present continuous tenses in English. The present simple is used to describe habitual or repeated actions, like things that are done often or sometimes. The present continuous expresses an action that is happening now or ongoing at the present moment. Examples are provided of affirmative, negative, and interrogative sentence structures using both tenses. Key words that are used with each tense are also outlined.
Edvard Munch was a Norwegian painter born in 1863 who died in 1944 in Oslo. He had a difficult personal life, losing his sister, mother and father when he was young. Munch's most important work was his painting, in which he developed a unique expressive style characterized by distorted lines and shapes. Two of his most famous paintings were Jealousy, depicting two men and a jealous woman, and The Scream, showing a man screaming on a bridge, both known for their use of black, red, brown and other somber colors.
This document provides examples of using the present simple tense with the phrase "like + -ing" to express preferences in affirmative, negative, and interrogative sentences. It shows how to construct sentences talking about what single people, groups of people, and others like or don't like doing by using common verbs paired with -ing words. Responses affirming or denying likes are also demonstrated for interrogative examples.
Andy Warhol was an American artist and actor born in 1928 in Pittsburgh who died in 1987 in New York of a heart attack. He is famous for his pop art paintings of Hollywood celebrities like Marilyn Monroe and Mickey Mouse, which used bright colors and images found in popular culture to create iconic works that remain well known around the world.
The document provides instruction on forming comparatives and superlatives in English. It explains that adjectives with 1-2 syllables use "-er" and "the -est" to form comparatives and superlatives, while adjectives with 3 or more syllables use "more" and "the most." Examples are given such as "Bart is taller than Maggie" and "Kilauea is the most dangerous volcano in Hawaii." The document concludes by instructing the reader to practice forming comparatives and superlatives to describe members of a family using adjectives like short, tall, fat, thin, silly, intelligent, old and young.
The document contains portraits of various people including athletes, musicians, actors, and fictional characters. The portraits provide basic details about each person such as where they are from, their physical appearance including hair and eye color, and what they are wearing. The authors of each portrait state that they like the person and provide a reason such as they are a good player, singer, or interesting character.
This document contains 15 portraits created by students. The portraits describe people from various backgrounds including singers, actors, athletes, artists and more. Each portrait provides a name, background information, physical description and why the student likes the person.
Frida Kahlo was in a bus accident as a teenager that left her severely injured. She spent a month in the hospital and two more months recovering at home. During her recovery, she took up painting and would go on to produce over 200 paintings depicting her life and pain. She married artist Diego Rivera in 1929 and is renowned for her self-portraits that portrayed her physical and psychological wounds.
Wassily Kandinsky was a famous Russian painter born in 1866 who helped pioneer abstract art. He studied law, economics and painting in university before moving to Munich at age 30. After being influenced by works in Paris featuring bold colors, Kandinsky's paintings became more abstract and color-focused, featuring compositions of shapes, forms, and colors divorced from visual reality. Some of his paintings include "Odesa's Port" depicting boats in orange, white and black, and "Taring Autumn in Baviera" showing trees and a house in various colors.
Claude Monet was born in Paris in 1840 and died in Giverny in 1926. He was a founder of French Impressionist painting and was known for his landscapes. Monet sought to capture the changing effects of light and seasons by painting the same scene multiple times. The document describes several of Monet's landscape paintings through analyzing the subjects and color palettes used.
He was a Basque sculptor born in 1924 in San Sebastian, Spain who died in 2002 in San Sebastian. He is known for his monumental abstract sculptures made of massive materials like iron. While his early works focused on the human form, his later pieces were more abstract yet he considered himself a realist sculptor. Upon returning to the Basque Country in 1951, he abandoned using plaster and instead worked with materials like iron to create large sculptures.
Paul Cézanne was a French artist born in 1939 who died in 1906 in France. He lived in Paris and was an impressionist painter known for his landscapes. In Paris, Cézanne met Camille Pissarro and the two became friends and artistic collaborators, with Pissarro exerting influence over the younger Cézanne's style. Cézanne is known for using small brushstrokes and planes of color in his paintings of landscapes, still lifes, and people.
Eduard Munch was a Norwegian expressionist painter born in 1863 in Norway and died in 1944. He studied human anatomy and tried to dissect the human soul in his work. His most frequent themes involved human emotions like loneliness, melancholy, and anxiety. His most famous painting is "The Scream", which depicts a frightened figure on a bridge with blue and brown colors.
The document discusses different locations people are going to or not going to, including the butcher's, school, train station, town hall, and park. A person says they are going to the butcher's and not school, another asks if they are going to the train station or town hall with yes and no responses, and finally someone states they are going to the park.
The document contains examples of affirmative, negative, and interrogative sentences about school subjects. It demonstrates using "I've got" to indicate having a class, asking questions about classes and times using "have/have got", and providing short answers about Mondays, Tuesdays, and times for classes like Science, P.E., and English.
Leonardo da Vinci was an Italian polymath whose interests included invention, painting, sculpting, architecture, science, and more. He invented early designs of tanks, helicopters, crossbows, and parachutes. His father's name was Piero and his mother's name was Caterina. He had two brothers named Bartolomeo and Domenico.
Fernando Botero was born in 1932 in Medellin, Colombia. He is considered the most recognized living Latin American artist known for his "Boterismo" style. Botero has achieved international recognition for his paintings, drawings, and sculptures which have been exhibited all over the world.
This document contains descriptions of 4 paintings: Girl in Mirror depicts a beautiful blonde girl looking at herself in the mirror, with yellow and red as the main colors. The second painting shows a colorful bedroom inspired by Van Gogh's bedroom, with yellow, blue and white as the dominant hues. The third painting portrays a scared blonde girl with painted lips, featuring flesh tones and yellow. The fourth painting also depicts a scared blonde girl with painted lips and uses flesh tones and yellow.
Vincent Van Gogh was a Dutch post-Impressionist painter born in 1853 who created over 2,100 artworks in his lifetime despite dying at a young age of 37. He had no fixed artistic style and enjoyed painting landscapes, still lifes, portraits and self-portraits using symbolic colors and expressive brushwork. Van Gogh started painting and drawing as a child and produced most of his notable work in the last few years of his life, including famous paintings like "Sunflowers", "The Starry Night", and "Wheatfield with Crows".
Rene Magritte was a Belgian artist born in 1898 who died in 1967. He started painting in 1910 after his mother committed suicide. Some of his most famous paintings included Golconda, The Art for Living which depicted a man with a large head in orange and blue tones, Apple Face showing a man with an apple covering his face in black and green colors, and paintings featuring large eyes or birds against blue skies.
Vincent Van Gogh was a Dutch post-Impressionist painter born in 1853 who painted over 900 pictures and 1600 drawings in his lifetime. He struggled with mental illness and died by suicide in 1890 at the age of 37 after cutting off part of his ear and shooting himself with a gun. Some of his most famous paintings included The Starry Night, Sunflowers, and The Potato Eaters, known for their distinctive use of color, especially yellow, orange and blue.
The document discusses the present simple and present continuous tenses in English. The present simple is used to describe habitual or repeated actions, like things that are done often or sometimes. The present continuous expresses an action that is happening now or ongoing at the present moment. Examples are provided of affirmative, negative, and interrogative sentence structures using both tenses. Key words that are used with each tense are also outlined.
Edvard Munch was a Norwegian painter born in 1863 who died in 1944 in Oslo. He had a difficult personal life, losing his sister, mother and father when he was young. Munch's most important work was his painting, in which he developed a unique expressive style characterized by distorted lines and shapes. Two of his most famous paintings were Jealousy, depicting two men and a jealous woman, and The Scream, showing a man screaming on a bridge, both known for their use of black, red, brown and other somber colors.
This document provides examples of using the present simple tense with the phrase "like + -ing" to express preferences in affirmative, negative, and interrogative sentences. It shows how to construct sentences talking about what single people, groups of people, and others like or don't like doing by using common verbs paired with -ing words. Responses affirming or denying likes are also demonstrated for interrogative examples.
Andy Warhol was an American artist and actor born in 1928 in Pittsburgh who died in 1987 in New York of a heart attack. He is famous for his pop art paintings of Hollywood celebrities like Marilyn Monroe and Mickey Mouse, which used bright colors and images found in popular culture to create iconic works that remain well known around the world.
The document provides instruction on forming comparatives and superlatives in English. It explains that adjectives with 1-2 syllables use "-er" and "the -est" to form comparatives and superlatives, while adjectives with 3 or more syllables use "more" and "the most." Examples are given such as "Bart is taller than Maggie" and "Kilauea is the most dangerous volcano in Hawaii." The document concludes by instructing the reader to practice forming comparatives and superlatives to describe members of a family using adjectives like short, tall, fat, thin, silly, intelligent, old and young.
The document contains portraits of various people including athletes, musicians, actors, and fictional characters. The portraits provide basic details about each person such as where they are from, their physical appearance including hair and eye color, and what they are wearing. The authors of each portrait state that they like the person and provide a reason such as they are a good player, singer, or interesting character.
This document contains 15 portraits created by students. The portraits describe people from various backgrounds including singers, actors, athletes, artists and more. Each portrait provides a name, background information, physical description and why the student likes the person.
Frida Kahlo was in a bus accident as a teenager that left her severely injured. She spent a month in the hospital and two more months recovering at home. During her recovery, she took up painting and would go on to produce over 200 paintings depicting her life and pain. She married artist Diego Rivera in 1929 and is renowned for her self-portraits that portrayed her physical and psychological wounds.
Wassily Kandinsky was a famous Russian painter born in 1866 who helped pioneer abstract art. He studied law, economics and painting in university before moving to Munich at age 30. After being influenced by works in Paris featuring bold colors, Kandinsky's paintings became more abstract and color-focused, featuring compositions of shapes, forms, and colors divorced from visual reality. Some of his paintings include "Odesa's Port" depicting boats in orange, white and black, and "Taring Autumn in Baviera" showing trees and a house in various colors.
Claude Monet was born in Paris in 1840 and died in Giverny in 1926. He was a founder of French Impressionist painting and was known for his landscapes. Monet sought to capture the changing effects of light and seasons by painting the same scene multiple times. The document describes several of Monet's landscape paintings through analyzing the subjects and color palettes used.
He was a Basque sculptor born in 1924 in San Sebastian, Spain who died in 2002 in San Sebastian. He is known for his monumental abstract sculptures made of massive materials like iron. While his early works focused on the human form, his later pieces were more abstract yet he considered himself a realist sculptor. Upon returning to the Basque Country in 1951, he abandoned using plaster and instead worked with materials like iron to create large sculptures.
Paul Cézanne was a French artist born in 1939 who died in 1906 in France. He lived in Paris and was an impressionist painter known for his landscapes. In Paris, Cézanne met Camille Pissarro and the two became friends and artistic collaborators, with Pissarro exerting influence over the younger Cézanne's style. Cézanne is known for using small brushstrokes and planes of color in his paintings of landscapes, still lifes, and people.
Eduard Munch was a Norwegian expressionist painter born in 1863 in Norway and died in 1944. He studied human anatomy and tried to dissect the human soul in his work. His most frequent themes involved human emotions like loneliness, melancholy, and anxiety. His most famous painting is "The Scream", which depicts a frightened figure on a bridge with blue and brown colors.
The document discusses different locations people are going to or not going to, including the butcher's, school, train station, town hall, and park. A person says they are going to the butcher's and not school, another asks if they are going to the train station or town hall with yes and no responses, and finally someone states they are going to the park.
The document contains examples of affirmative, negative, and interrogative sentences about school subjects. It demonstrates using "I've got" to indicate having a class, asking questions about classes and times using "have/have got", and providing short answers about Mondays, Tuesdays, and times for classes like Science, P.E., and English.
The document provides examples of questions and answers about school subjects and times. It asks about whether the student has certain subjects like math and music. It also asks and answers questions about the time, what subjects are scheduled on certain days of the week, and what time classes like English are. The responses provide the affirmative "Yes" or negative "No" and then state the answer, such as "It's nine o'clock" or "I've got science on Monday."
The document provides examples of questions and answers about school subjects and times. It asks about whether the student has certain subjects like math and music. It also asks and answers questions about the time, what subjects are scheduled on certain days of the week, and what time classes like English are. The responses provide the affirmative "Yes" or negative "No" and then state the answer, such as "I've got Science" or "It's nine o'clock."
Messi, born in 1987, has received numerous individual awards for his playing ability, including winning the Ballon d'Or and FIFA World Player of the Year awards in 2010, 2011, and 2012. He also won the 2010-2011 UEFA Best Player in Europe Award.
The document summarizes the television show The Walking Dead. It describes that The Walking Dead is a famous series about survivors in a world overrun by zombies. It lists the main actors, including Andrew Lincoln as lead character Rick Grimes. It explains that the story is based on a comic book series of the same name, following a small group of survivors searching for safety from zombies and dealing with threats to their humanity.
AC/DC is an Australian hard rock band formed in 1973 by brothers Malcolm and Angus Young who have remained constant members. They have sold over 200 million records worldwide, making them one of the best-selling bands of all time known for their energetic live performances and songs celebrating rebellious attitudes.
Bertsolaritza is the art of composing and singing songs extemporaneously in Basque according to rhyming patterns and melodies. A composed piece is called a bertso, and the singer is a bertsolari. Traditionally performed by men, more women are now participating as well. There are many famous bertsolaris in the Basque country, and bertsolari championships have been held since the 1930s, organized initially by youth groups and later an academy, with a unified championship forming in the 1980s held every four years.
Swimming emerged as a competitive sport in England in the 1830s. By the 1880s, there were over 300 swimming clubs across the country. In 1844, Native Americans introduced the front crawl stroke to Western audiences. Sir John Arthur Trudgen popularized this stroke after learning it from South Americans in 1873. Swimming events have been held at the Summer Olympics since 1896, with competitions in butterfly, backstroke, breaststroke, and freestyle strokes. The international governing body for competitive swimming is FINA.
The document summarizes The Hunger Games franchise, which is based on a trilogy of books by Suzanne Collins. It describes the dystopian setting where districts are forced to select tributes for an annual death match called The Hunger Games. The trilogy consists of The Hunger Games, Catching Fire, and Mockingjay, which have been adapted to films. It provides an overview of some main characters like Katniss Everdeen and President Snow. It also includes biographical information about author Suzanne Collins and recommends the books for those who enjoy action.
There are several major rugby tournaments including the Six Nations, Three Nations, Top 14, and Heineken Cup. Rugby is said to have emerged when William Webb Ellis picked up the ball and ran with it during a football match in 1823 in Rugby, England. The sport later spread to other countries in the Commonwealth like Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and South Africa. New Zealand and South Africa have become two of the top international rugby teams, with New Zealand's All Blacks performing the traditional Haka dance before matches. The 1995 Rugby World Cup final between New Zealand and South Africa was historical, with South Africa winning.
Ivan Rakitic is a 26-year-old Croatian professional soccer player who plays midfielder for Spanish club Sevilla. He started his career with Swiss club Basel before playing in Germany and Spain. Rakitic has been a member of the Croatian national team since 2007 and has represented Croatia in two European Championships. In his personal life, Rakitic is married to a Chinese actress and they have a baby together.
There are 32 groups competing in this championship. Three stadiums were mentioned - Belo Horizonte which holds 69,950 people, Brasilia which holds 70,807 people, and Rio de Janeiro which holds 76,525 people. Each stadium's capacity was provided.
The document summarizes two annual events at Arantzabela School. The Cross Run is held every year where many people from the community run together and all participants receive presents, as there are no official winners. The School Party is a spring celebration where children and parents attend and the children demonstrate activities they have done at school, including an annual water war game.
The giant panda has an insatiable appetite for bamboo, eating half the day and consuming 28 pounds of bamboo daily. It uses elongated wrist bones like thumbs to pluck bamboo stalks. Pandas also occasionally eat small animals like birds or rodents. The giant panda lives in remote, mountainous areas of central China and Tibet at elevations up to 3 kilometers.
The document discusses figure skating, which involves interpreting music by skating and performing elements like jumps, spins, and stunts on ice that are scored by judges. While recreational skating has been practiced for centuries, figure skating emerged in the 19th century and has developed technically and stylistically into its current form.
This powerpoint presentation provides a brief introduction to music and focuses on pop music. It explains that music consists of sounds played together that create compositions to listen to. There are different styles of music, with rock, jazz, and pop being the most popular. The presentation then discusses pop music specifically, noting that it originated in the late 1950s as a combination of rock and roll with other genres of the time. As a genre, pop music is eclectic and often borrows elements from other styles such as dance, rock, Latin, rhythm and blues, and folk.
The Hobbit is a fantasy novel by J.R.R. Tolkien about the hobbit Bilbo Baggins who is persuaded by the wizard Gandalf to join a group of dwarves on a quest to reclaim their stolen treasure from the dragon Smaug. Bilbo's journey takes him away from his home in the Shire into darker and more dangerous lands. The story follows Bilbo and the dwarves as they face various perils along the way and Bilbo must use his wits and common sense to survive encounters with Gollum and other creatures.
Ocho apellidos vascos became the most-watched movie in Spanish over the weekend. The comedy tells the story of a rich kid from Andalusia who pretends to be Basque to win over the heart of a woman who resisted his charms. The film compares to the 2008 French comedy Bienvenue chez les Ch'tis about a southern Frenchman traveling north and dealing with confusing language situations.
The document discusses figure skating, which involves interpreting music by skating and performing elements like jumps, spins, and stunts on ice that are scored by judges. While recreational skating has been practiced for centuries, figure skating emerged in the 19th century and has developed technically and stylistically into its current form.