The document describes what different children want to be when they grow up, including a doctor, nurse, dentist, policeman, lawyer, teacher, postman, cook, fireman, and scientist. Their reasons for their career choices are that they like helping people in need, taking care of patients, cleaning teeth, cracking down on crime, fighting for justice, teaching, delivering mail, cooking for everyone, keeping people safe from fire, and doing research.
This document contains a collection of riddles and jokes. It includes wordplay jokes asking how to say a number with many 1s, calling a bear without an ear a bee, and keeping doctors away with an apple. Other jokes are puns playing on homophones like throwing butter out a window to see a butterfly or water to see a waterfall. Riddles ask what can't be used until broken (an egg) and which room has no doors or windows (a mushroom). The document ends with a joke answering "Flower" is John's mother, playing on a Chinese phrase.
This document provides tips for effectively dealing with problems and challenges. It recommends viewing problems as opportunities, considering multiple perspectives to problems, maintaining an open and unbiased mindset, focusing on strengths rather than limitations, and making a positive difference through service. The overall message is about maintaining a positive outlook and problem-solving approach.
The document provides a simple instruction to press the Esc key in order to exit from something. It gives a brief one sentence direction without any additional context or explanation. The entire content of the document is focused on informing the reader to press the Esc key.
The document provides a simple instruction to press the Esc key in order to exit from something. It gives a brief one sentence direction without any additional context or explanation. The entire content of the document is focused on informing the reader to press the Esc key.
The document describes the beauty of spring through the senses. It encourages the reader to close their eyes and smell the spring, listen to birds singing, and feel true happiness in the sweet moment. While it may rain, the document suggests focusing on how magical everything seems in this spring moment rather than looking at gray skies.
The students of Class 513 from Qingshui Elementary School in Xinbei City wrote a letter to Santa. They thanked Santa for the gifts he brought last year and told him about their year. They also included their Christmas wishes for this year.
Dear Santa, we are the students of Class 510 from Qingshui Elementary School in New Taipei City. We have been good this year and are looking forward to Christmas. Please bring us presents and have a safe trip!
Dear Santa, we are students from Qingshui Elementary School in New Taipei City. We have been working hard at our studies this year. For Christmas, we hope you can bring us presents to encourage our learning and growth.
This document provides phrases to say "thank you" in different languages from around the world. It lists the thank you phrases in Mandarin Chinese, Taiwanese, Hakka, Japanese, Korean, Indonesian, Thai, Vietnamese, Pakistani Urdu, English from the UK and US/Canada, French, German, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Turkish, Hindi from India, Russian, Egyptian, Brazilian, Argentine, Persian from Iran, Greek, and concludes by saying comments are appreciated.
This document provides phrases to say "thank you" in different languages from around the world. Some of the main phrases included are: Mandarin Chinese - "Xie xie; xie xie ni", Japanese - "Arigado", Korean - "Kam'sa'hamnida", Thai - "Khawp-khun", Pakistani (Urdu) - "Shukria", French - "Merci", German - "Danke", Italian - "Grazie", Spanish - "Gracias", Portuguese - "Obrigado", Turkish - "Te'sekkur e'derim", Indian Hindi - "Shukriyaa", Russian - "S'pasibo", Egyptian -
This document provides phrases to say "thank you" in different languages from around the world. Some of the languages and phrases included are: Mandarin Chinese "Xièxiè, gǎngxiè nǐ", Japanese "Arigatō", Korean "Kam'sa hamnida", Thai "Khawp-khun", Vietnamese "Cảm ơn bạn", Hindi "Shukriyaa", and Russian "Spasibo". The document aims to show expressions of gratitude in multiple world languages.