English Speaking Countries Miriam Mascarasguest551290
The document provides information about landmarks and symbols of England and London, including red double-decker buses, red telephone boxes, the Tower of London, Big Ben, Buckingham Palace, bobbies or police officers, the Tower Bridge, and the London Eye. It then briefly mentions landmarks in the United States such as the White House, New York City, skyscrapers, the Statue of Liberty, San Francisco, and the Golden Gate Bridge before concluding with images related to Australia such as the Sydney Opera House, Aboriginal people, koalas, and kangaroos.
German Expressionism was an influential but overlooked art movement in early 20th century Germany that explored emotional and psychological themes through distorted and exaggerated settings and characters. It influenced many films, plays, paintings and other artistic mediums. Expressionism grew popular in the 1920s but declined under Nazi rule, as Hitler favored classical styles and Expressionism was deemed anti-German. Many German Expressionist artists fled to America and continued developing the style, which went on to influence later films noir and Hollywood works through immigrant artists and techniques. Key Expressionist films like The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari and Nosferatu helped establish the horror and science fiction genres.
Germany is a country located in central Europe with 82 million inhabitants. It is made up of 16 states, with the largest cities being Berlin, Hamburg, Munich, Cologne, and Frankfurt. Germany was founded in 1871 and suffered greatly during World Wars I and II as well as during the Nazi regime of 1933-1945. After World War II, Germany was divided between East and West until reunification in 1989. Some key facts about different regions of Germany are: the South has a distinct accent and hosts Oktoberfest, the North has many wealthy citizens and relies on tourism, and Berlin is the capital and shows the reunification of the country.
English Speaking Countries Miriam Mascarasguest551290
The document provides information about landmarks and symbols of England and London, including red double-decker buses, red telephone boxes, the Tower of London, Big Ben, Buckingham Palace, bobbies or police officers, the Tower Bridge, and the London Eye. It then briefly mentions landmarks in the United States such as the White House, New York City, skyscrapers, the Statue of Liberty, San Francisco, and the Golden Gate Bridge before concluding with images related to Australia such as the Sydney Opera House, Aboriginal people, koalas, and kangaroos.
German Expressionism was an influential but overlooked art movement in early 20th century Germany that explored emotional and psychological themes through distorted and exaggerated settings and characters. It influenced many films, plays, paintings and other artistic mediums. Expressionism grew popular in the 1920s but declined under Nazi rule, as Hitler favored classical styles and Expressionism was deemed anti-German. Many German Expressionist artists fled to America and continued developing the style, which went on to influence later films noir and Hollywood works through immigrant artists and techniques. Key Expressionist films like The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari and Nosferatu helped establish the horror and science fiction genres.
Germany is a country located in central Europe with 82 million inhabitants. It is made up of 16 states, with the largest cities being Berlin, Hamburg, Munich, Cologne, and Frankfurt. Germany was founded in 1871 and suffered greatly during World Wars I and II as well as during the Nazi regime of 1933-1945. After World War II, Germany was divided between East and West until reunification in 1989. Some key facts about different regions of Germany are: the South has a distinct accent and hosts Oktoberfest, the North has many wealthy citizens and relies on tourism, and Berlin is the capital and shows the reunification of the country.
This document provides codes and names for various exercise machines in Spanish. It includes machines for the quadriceps, leg press, chest press, abdominal crunch, shoulder press, lat pulldown, multi-hip, pec-deck, upper back, biceps curl, triceps extension, abductors, adductors, seated row, pectoral machine, seated leg curl, lying leg curl, seated calf raise, lower back, and shoulder fly.
NATS is a high-performance messaging system that is lightweight, simple to use, and scalable. It provides features like request-reply patterns, subject-based routing with wildcards, distribution queues for load balancing, clustering for high availability, and auto discovery of cluster topology. The NATS Docker image is small and lightweight, making it easy to deploy NATS in Docker containers. Examples demonstrated how to run a single NATS node or create a clustered NATS setup using Docker Compose or Docker Swarm for development and production environments.
This company has over 30 years of experience and is ISO/TS-2009/16949 certified, offering auto interior parts like floor carpets, foot mats, engine and cabin insulations, and seatback fabrics with industry-leading short lead times. They employ 40 skilled workers, 50 unskilled workers, and 100 indirect workers to produce and supply these parts across the country.
This recipe calls for making toast with 4 pieces of bread, eggs, milk, blue cheese, salt, pepper, and clarified butter or oil. The bread is dipped in a mixture of eggs and milk seasoned with salt and pepper. The bread is then placed in a hot pan with butter and flipped once slightly browned. Pieces of blue cheese are sprinkled on one side before serving to melt on top of the toast.
Istanbul is the largest city in Turkey, located where Europe and Asia meet, and home to over 8.8 million people, making it Turkey's cultural and economic center. It spans two continents and 39 districts, sitting at the junction of the Bosphorus strait and Golden Horn harbor, and is the only city located on two continents.
Ignacy Łukasiewicz was a Polish pharmacist and chemist born in 1822 who made several important discoveries and innovations related to petroleum. He constructed the world's first oil lamp in 1853 and lit the first street lamp in Europe fueled by kerosene in 1854. That same year, he established the world's first oil mine in Bóbrka, Poland. Throughout his life, Łukasiewicz worked to develop and improve refining processes and applications of petroleum, making advances that helped establish the modern petroleum industry. He died in 1882 and was recognized for his scientific achievements and contributions to social and economic progress.
Karol Adamiecki was a Polish economist, engineer, and management researcher. He graduated from university in St. Petersburg in 1891 and returned to Poland to work in the steel industry, where he developed his ideas on management. He later became a professor and founded the Institute of Scientific Organization in Warsaw to research management techniques. He is known for proposing the law of harmony in management, which emphasized compatibility of tools, coordination of schedules, and building a cohesive team.
Janusz Groszkowski was a Polish scientist and engineer born in 1898 who specialized in electronics and radio technology. He held many prominent roles, including professor at Warsaw University of Technology, director of the National Telecommunication Institute, president of the Polish Academy of Sciences, member of parliament, and deputy chairman of the State Council. Groszkowski made significant contributions to the development of radar systems and published over 300 scientific papers during his career. He is considered a pioneer in the field of radio engineering and made innovations in areas like oscillation analysis and understanding the effects of temperature on inductance.
This document provides codes and names for various exercise machines in Spanish. It includes machines for the quadriceps, leg press, chest press, abdominal crunch, shoulder press, lat pulldown, multi-hip, pec-deck, upper back, biceps curl, triceps extension, abductors, adductors, seated row, pectoral machine, seated leg curl, lying leg curl, seated calf raise, lower back, and shoulder fly.
NATS is a high-performance messaging system that is lightweight, simple to use, and scalable. It provides features like request-reply patterns, subject-based routing with wildcards, distribution queues for load balancing, clustering for high availability, and auto discovery of cluster topology. The NATS Docker image is small and lightweight, making it easy to deploy NATS in Docker containers. Examples demonstrated how to run a single NATS node or create a clustered NATS setup using Docker Compose or Docker Swarm for development and production environments.
This company has over 30 years of experience and is ISO/TS-2009/16949 certified, offering auto interior parts like floor carpets, foot mats, engine and cabin insulations, and seatback fabrics with industry-leading short lead times. They employ 40 skilled workers, 50 unskilled workers, and 100 indirect workers to produce and supply these parts across the country.
This recipe calls for making toast with 4 pieces of bread, eggs, milk, blue cheese, salt, pepper, and clarified butter or oil. The bread is dipped in a mixture of eggs and milk seasoned with salt and pepper. The bread is then placed in a hot pan with butter and flipped once slightly browned. Pieces of blue cheese are sprinkled on one side before serving to melt on top of the toast.
Istanbul is the largest city in Turkey, located where Europe and Asia meet, and home to over 8.8 million people, making it Turkey's cultural and economic center. It spans two continents and 39 districts, sitting at the junction of the Bosphorus strait and Golden Horn harbor, and is the only city located on two continents.
Ignacy Łukasiewicz was a Polish pharmacist and chemist born in 1822 who made several important discoveries and innovations related to petroleum. He constructed the world's first oil lamp in 1853 and lit the first street lamp in Europe fueled by kerosene in 1854. That same year, he established the world's first oil mine in Bóbrka, Poland. Throughout his life, Łukasiewicz worked to develop and improve refining processes and applications of petroleum, making advances that helped establish the modern petroleum industry. He died in 1882 and was recognized for his scientific achievements and contributions to social and economic progress.
Karol Adamiecki was a Polish economist, engineer, and management researcher. He graduated from university in St. Petersburg in 1891 and returned to Poland to work in the steel industry, where he developed his ideas on management. He later became a professor and founded the Institute of Scientific Organization in Warsaw to research management techniques. He is known for proposing the law of harmony in management, which emphasized compatibility of tools, coordination of schedules, and building a cohesive team.
Janusz Groszkowski was a Polish scientist and engineer born in 1898 who specialized in electronics and radio technology. He held many prominent roles, including professor at Warsaw University of Technology, director of the National Telecommunication Institute, president of the Polish Academy of Sciences, member of parliament, and deputy chairman of the State Council. Groszkowski made significant contributions to the development of radar systems and published over 300 scientific papers during his career. He is considered a pioneer in the field of radio engineering and made innovations in areas like oscillation analysis and understanding the effects of temperature on inductance.
Piotr Piotrowski was a Polish inventor, philosopher, psychologist, poet, journalist and photographer born in 1850 who died in 1917. He was regarded as a pioneer of experimental psychology in Poland and created the first Polish psychological laboratory. Throughout his career, he conducted research in parapsychology and developed early theories of monochrome television and telephone technologies.
Wladyslaw Zalewski was a Polish inventor and aviator who invented a bomb ejector in 1923 that was patented in many countries. He produced the bomb ejector himself starting in 1930 in his studio in Lublin, constantly improving the design. After fleeing to Great Britain following the German invasion of Poland in 1939, he handed over his improved design for a bomb ejector to the British Ministry of Aviation Production in 1941, which then produced over 165,000 units that were installed in British bombers.
Żeglen Kazimierz was a Polish monk inventor who lived in the United States in the late 19th century. After Chicago Mayor Carter Harrison was assassinated in 1893, Kazimierz began developing a bulletproof vest. He patented his invention for a bulletproof vest in 1897.
Maria Skłodowska was born in Warsaw, Poland in 1867 and showed early promise as an intelligent student, but was unable to attend university as a woman. She moved to France where she studied science, met her future husband Pierre Curie, and together they discovered radium and polonium, winning the 1903 Nobel Prize in Physics. After Pierre's death in 1906, Marie continued her scientific work and became the first woman professor at the University of Paris, winning a second Nobel Prize in 1911 as the only woman to do so. She pioneered the medical use of radiation but died in 1934 from exposure to radioactivity through her research.
Jan Szczepanik was a Polish teacher and inventor in the late 19th/early 20th century who was called the "Polish Edison" for inventing a weaving machine, photo paper, teletroskop, and bulletproof vest. He was an illegitimate child raised by adoptive parents and worked as a teacher in Poland for many years before gaining international fame for his inventions, including defending the King of Spain with his bulletproof vest design.
This document summarizes events that occurred at Publiczne Gimnazjum in Zabor, Poland during the 2011-2012 school year. It describes a camping trip in September 2011, students receiving scholarships, a voting event for youth, and the school receiving eTwinning quality labels for a student project. It also lists additional school events throughout the fall semester like Teacher's Day performances, a night campout, a charity drive for an animal shelter, concerts, Independence Day celebrations, Christmas Eve activities, and an exchange of Christmas cards between the school and others in Europe through the eTwinning program.
5. 4. Podaj tłumaczenie zdania:
Ich bin weit gesprungen.
a) Daleko popłynąłem
b) Daleko skoczyłem
c) Daleko pojechałem
6. 5. W jakim mieście znajduje się ten
największy port morski Niemiec?
a) W Bremie
b) W Hamburgu
c) W Lubece
7. 6. Jak nazywają się Kraje
Związkowe Niemiec?
a) Kantony
b) Województwa
c) Landy
8. 7. Które z tych miast jest stolicą
Niemiec?
a) Berlin
b) Bonn
c) Brema
9. 8. Jak nazywa się ten budynek?
a) Reichstag
b) Montag
c) Bundestag
10. 9. Co oznacza słowo bunt?
a) Zbuntowany
b) Kolorowy
c) Buty
11. 10. Ile lat trwa niemiecka
podstawówka?
a) 4
b) 6
c) 8
12. 11. Jak nazywa się ta pani?
a) Anja Rubik
b) Angela Merkel
c) Angelina Jolie
13. 12. Jak nazywa się to państwo?
a) Austria
b) Niemcy
c) Szwajcaria
14. 13. Co jest stolicą Austrii?
a) Klagenfurt
b) Graz
c) Wiedeń
15. 14. Gdzie znajduje się ta wieża
telewizyjna?
a) W Kolonii
b) W Monachium
c) W Berlinie
16. 15. Jak powiesz po niemiecku:
zamknij okno?
a) Mach das Fenster zu?
b) Mach das Fenster auf?
c) Ich mache das Fenster auf.
17. 16. Jak nazywa się ten niemiecki
zespół?
a) Tokio Cafe
b) Tokio Plaza
c) Tokio Hotel
18. 17. Jak nazywa się ta niemiecka
grupa rockowa?
a) Gammstein
b) Rammstein
c) Marmor Stein
19. 18. W jakiej drużynie piłkarskiej
Niemiec gra Robert Lewandowski?
a) Bayern München
b) Borussia Dortmund
c) Bayer Leverkusen
20. 19. Jak powiesz po niemiecku:
mam szóstkę z niemieckiego.
a) Ich babe eine Sechs in Deutsch.
b) Ich habe eine Eins in Deutsch.
c) Ich habe eine Sechzehn in Dutsch.
21. 20. Jaka rzeka przepływa przez
Berlin?
a) Wisła
b) Sprewa
c) Łeba
22. 21. Jak nazywa się ta atrakcja
turystyczna Niemiec?
a) Europa Park
b) Tropical Island
c) Heide Park
41. 9. Znany zespół The Beatles
pochodził z:
a)Manchesteru
b)Liverpoolu
c)Edynburga
42. 10. Jak powiesz po angielsku: Jutro
zamierzam iść do kina.
a) I’m going to the cinema tomorrow.
b) I went to the cinema yesterday
c) I will go to the cinema tomorrow.
43. 11. Co oznacza to zdanie?:
I have visited Italy twice.
a)Włochy zwiedziłem trzykrotnie.
b)Włochy zwiedziłem dwukrotnie.
c) Zwiedziłem Włochy w zeszłym roku.
44. 12. Jak nazywa się ta para?
a)Harry and Susan
b)Diana and Charles
c)William and Kate
45. 13. Jak nazywa się ten budynek?
a)Buckingham Palace
b)Windsor Castle
c) Palace of Westminster
46. 14. Tower of London NIE był w
przeszłości:
a)Więzieniem
b)Fortecą
c)Zegarem
47. 15. Imię Pierwszej Damy Stanów
Zjednoczonych to:
a)Monica
b)Mariah
c)Michelle