O documento discute a modalização do discurso em um editorial do jornal Folha de S. Paulo criticando o presidente venezuelano Hugo Chávez. O autor analisa o uso de palavras que revelam a opinião subjetiva do jornalista, como "rolo compressor do bonapartismo chavista" e "discreta maioria (54,9%)". O resumo mostra que o jornal critica as ações autoritárias de Chávez para se manter no poder.
The document lists various Halloween creatures such as pumpkins, skeletons, demons, bats, spiders, ghosts, witches, werewolves, goblins, werewolves, witches, ghosts, spiders, bats, zombies, vampires, demons, and skeletons. It then asks if the reader is scared now and was produced by Marco Sergio.
O documento discute a modalização do discurso em um editorial do jornal Folha de S. Paulo criticando o presidente venezuelano Hugo Chávez. O autor analisa o uso de palavras que revelam a opinião subjetiva do jornalista, como "rolo compressor do bonapartismo chavista" e "discreta maioria (54,9%)". O resumo mostra que o jornal critica as ações autoritárias de Chávez para se manter no poder.
The document lists various Halloween creatures such as pumpkins, skeletons, demons, bats, spiders, ghosts, witches, werewolves, goblins, werewolves, witches, ghosts, spiders, bats, zombies, vampires, demons, and skeletons. It then asks if the reader is scared now and was produced by Marco Sergio.
The document discusses Halloween vocabulary including ghosts, vampires, witches, and skeletons. Ghosts are described as horrible white monsters that are angry. Vampires drink blood. Witches fly on brooms. Skeletons are very thin. The document also mentions that children wear costumes and masks and go trick or treating at their neighbors' houses on Halloween.
The teacher assigned homework on Independence Day that requires answering questions about why it is celebrated, recipes for Uncle Sam's "I want you" cake and other July 4th desserts, details on the largest fireworks display in the country, release information and plot of the film Independence Day, using linked web pages and images as references.
Pancake Day is celebrated with pancakes and various traditions. It falls on the Tuesday before Ash Wednesday and is celebrated in many places, particularly in the UK, Ireland and certain Commonwealth countries. To celebrate, people eat pancakes, engage in pancake races, and prepare pancakes using basic ingredients like flour, eggs, milk or water, and a raising agent.
We celebrate Christmas on December 25th. Traditional Christmas food includes turkey and ham. Christmas symbols are the Christmas tree, wreath, mistletoe, stockings and Santa Claus. The history of Christmas traces back to pagan winter festivals and the Christian celebration of Jesus' birth. Typical Christmas decorations include lights, garlands, wreaths, and ornaments on the tree. The document provides links to Wikipedia and a YouTube video about Christmas traditions and history.
Children celebrate Halloween by dressing up in costumes, going trick-or-treating, attending parties, and watching horror films. Decorations like jack-o'-lanterns are meant to scare away monsters, referencing the legend of Jack Lantern. Common Halloween monsters described include spiders, devils, witches riding broomsticks, and werewolves that transform and eat people during a full moon.
Internet safety rules include having antivirus software, not accepting unknown people as Facebook friends, keeping passwords private, asking parents to install filters against inappropriate sites, and avoiding sharing personal information with strangers.
The document discusses Halloween vocabulary including ghosts, vampires, witches, and skeletons. Ghosts are described as horrible white monsters that are angry. Vampires drink blood. Witches fly on brooms. Skeletons are very thin. The document also mentions that children wear costumes and masks and go trick or treating at their neighbors' houses on Halloween.
The teacher assigned homework on Independence Day that requires answering questions about why it is celebrated, recipes for Uncle Sam's "I want you" cake and other July 4th desserts, details on the largest fireworks display in the country, release information and plot of the film Independence Day, using linked web pages and images as references.
Pancake Day is celebrated with pancakes and various traditions. It falls on the Tuesday before Ash Wednesday and is celebrated in many places, particularly in the UK, Ireland and certain Commonwealth countries. To celebrate, people eat pancakes, engage in pancake races, and prepare pancakes using basic ingredients like flour, eggs, milk or water, and a raising agent.
We celebrate Christmas on December 25th. Traditional Christmas food includes turkey and ham. Christmas symbols are the Christmas tree, wreath, mistletoe, stockings and Santa Claus. The history of Christmas traces back to pagan winter festivals and the Christian celebration of Jesus' birth. Typical Christmas decorations include lights, garlands, wreaths, and ornaments on the tree. The document provides links to Wikipedia and a YouTube video about Christmas traditions and history.
Children celebrate Halloween by dressing up in costumes, going trick-or-treating, attending parties, and watching horror films. Decorations like jack-o'-lanterns are meant to scare away monsters, referencing the legend of Jack Lantern. Common Halloween monsters described include spiders, devils, witches riding broomsticks, and werewolves that transform and eat people during a full moon.
Internet safety rules include having antivirus software, not accepting unknown people as Facebook friends, keeping passwords private, asking parents to install filters against inappropriate sites, and avoiding sharing personal information with strangers.