Hello there, this is English tips blog, a place for exchange Educative blogs, sharing experience and promote Education, so, after visiting my blog, liked please promoting for friends. Skype: aventureirosdacaatinga carlosrn36@gmail.com
quinta-feira, 20 de janeiro de 2011
quarta-feira, 19 de janeiro de 2011
Tourists and Landscapes
Me and Franches, hiking towards the Archaeological site Xique-Xique I, of course now it's closed for visitors because both Archaeological sites Xique-Xique I and II is receiving an infrastructure of walkways, the project has been developed by the Brazilian National Historic and Artistic Heritage (IPHAN) the purpose is after the conclusion of the Walkways the tourism in the region finally boosts as soon as possible.
This is Aide from Terra del Fuego, Argentine on top of Talhado do Gaviao, locate in the Rural Zone of Carnaúba dos Dantas, beautiful observation desk, beautiful over view. Talhado is another rock art painting located on top of the mountain in Sítio Lagedo far from 9 kilometres away the downtown.
Monte do Galo, it's a Religious tourism, this place attracts over 100 thousand of pilgrims a year, coming from different parts of Northeast, the pilgrimage is in honor to Our Lady of Victory our patron, the image of the Saint came in the middle of XX century from France in a cargo came from Portugal originally come from French.
Rock art paintings belongs to Northeast Tradition, Serido, Sub-tradition, actually this is a hunting scene, according to recent studying they have for about 9.000 years B.P. Located in Xique-Xique I far from 5, 5 killometres away from the downtown, easy access to climb up and reaching until the Archaeological site.
This Rock Art paintings belongs to Agreste Tradition, the main characteristic you cannot identify the paintings, mostly are unrecognizable, in other words abstracts scenes. Located far from 12 kilometres away, the shelter is back to Riacho da Cobra mouth in this municipality.
Here I was guiding tourist from Holland in the Archaeological site Xique-Xique I. For more info, visit my second blog http://www.aventureirosdacaatinga.blogspot.com Did you like this post? Promote this blog for your friends.
Saddam Hussein
Standard: American English
Language level: Advanced
Saddam Hussein
By Aamer Madhani
His regime murdered at least 300.000 of his countrymen, according to estimates by human-right groups. But Saddam also left a legacy in his country as a sort of Mesopotamian revolutionary: a nationalist leader who stood up to the American superpower.
He was born April 28, 1937, to a poor family in the village of al-Awja, near the city of Tikrit. His father died before he was born, and he was sent to live with his maternal uncle.
In 1957, he joined the Baath Party. Two years after, he was found complicity in a failed assassination attempt against President Abdul Karim Qasim, and was forced to flee to Egypt. He returned to Iraq in 1963 after the country’s first Baathist Regime took power in a coup. Five years later, a relative of Saddam’s became president of the Revolutionary Command Council and he took charge of the nation’s security apparatus. On July 15, 1979, Saddam forced Al-Bakr to retire and was sworn in as Iraq’s president.
From his ascension to the presidency, western governments including the United States –recognized Saddam as a ruthless strongman, but someone they could do business with. During the 1980s, the U.S. government tolerated Saddam because they had a common enemy in the Shiite theocracy that ruled Iran. In September 1980, Saddam launched an invasion, setting off an eight year war in which the U.S. supported his country by providing satellite intelligence and refusing to sell the Iranian military spare parts for its mostly American made weaponry.
In August 1990, Saddam’s troops invaded another oil-rich neighbor, Kuwait. That was when the U.S. government stopped supporting him. From 1991 to the end of Saddam’s regime in April 2003, Iraq lived under paralyzing United Nations sanctions that turned the oil-rich country into a Middle East backwater. But it wasn’t until the September 11th, 2001 attacks that the U.S truly focused on ousting Saddam. After the Taliban was ousted, Bush cited evidence that Iraq had attempt to buy weapons grade uranium in Africa, underscoring the need to take with action against Saddam. The allegation later proved to be unfounded.
Without U.N. backing and with a relatively small band of allies, the U.S. began the air assault on Baghdad on March 20, 2003. For more than eight months, Saddam remained on the lam. On December 13th, 2003, U.S. Army soldiers caught him crouched in a hole dug in the floor of a mud hut where he hid with a a pistol and several hundred thousand dollars in cash. He was executed on December 30th 2006 for the homicide of 148 Shiites in 1982. AE.
Vocabulary:
Stood up to: To resist or refuse to be cowed by somebody or to refuse to back down; remain solid.
Baath Party: The Arab Socialist Party was founded in 1947 as a radical, secular Arab-Nationalist Political Party.
Complicit: Involved in something illegal or wrong.
Flee: To escape by running away, especially because of danger or fear.
Apparatus: An organization or system, especially a political one.
Sworn in (Phrasal verb,participle of swear) in: To induct into office by administration of an oath.
Ruthless: Without mercy or pitty.
Shiite: A member of the second largest religious movement within Islam, which is based on the belief that Ali, a member of Mohammed’s family, and the teachers who came after him, were the true religious leader.
Theocracy: Government of a state by immediate Divine guidance or by officials who are regarded as divinely guided.
Set (ting) off: Set in motion or cause to begin.
Crouch (ed) Regular verb: With our knees bent so that you are close to the ground a leaning toward slightly.
Mud hut: Temporary military shelter made of soft wet earth.
terça-feira, 18 de janeiro de 2011
Exercises, Actual Magazine
According to the article about Second World War in paragraph bellow indentify 10 errors, do that without check the postings part I and II answer the question bellow.http://englishtips-self-taught.blogspot.com/2011/01/world-war-ii-part-i.html http://englishtips-self-taught.blogspot.com/2011/01/world-war-part-II.html
The USSR goes after its part in the bargain –the eastern section on the Polish territory, the three Baltic States, and later Finland. A political and military crisis arise and once again the stage was set in Eastern Europe. In 1940, German launched a series of military actions that demonstrated the force of his Blitzkrieg. The Anglo-French troops had fall at preventing the Nazi advance, which would win important victories in Norway, Denmark, Holland and Belgium. The bigger blow, however, was the fall of France. The surrender is announced on signed in the same train car where the armistice of World War I was signed in 1918. The next step was to invade the island of King George VI. Avoiding an clash with the renowned Royal Navy – renowned to be superior, the Germans starts a series of bombings at British soil right away in that same month, the campaign, however, would drag on until October. Great Britain was able to resist, but came out of it somewhat weakened.
Please do the exercise and send me the answer any question carlosrn36@gmail.com
Are Bone Pieces From Pilot Amelia Earhart?
Photo: AP
Amelia Earhart disappeared with her navigator Fred Noonan in 1937 in a Lockheed Electra 10E while attempting a round-the-world flight. Scientists are studying bone fragments found on a South Pacific island.
Source: www.voanews.com improve your English with Voa Special English, promote this site for friends, I think is the best content on the net.
CHRISTOPHER CRUISE: This is SCIENCE IN THE NEWS in VOA Special English. I’m Christopher Cruise.
FAITH LAPIDUS: And I’m Faith Lapidus. Today, we will tell about an effort to learn what happened to American pilot Amelia Earhart. We will tell about a group that studies developments in technology to predict the future. And we will tell about a complex health disorder called chronic fatigue syndrome.
(MUSIC)
CHRISTOPHER CRUISE: American scientists are attempting to recover genetic material in bone fragments that could be from Amelia Earhart. The famous pilot disappeared while flying over the southwest Pacific Ocean more than seventy years ago.
The world has changed greatly since her airplane went missing on July second, nineteen thirty-seven. But public interest in her life and death remains high.
Small bone fragments may help answer continuing questions about her death. Scientists at the University of Oklahoma are performing genetic tests at the Molecular Anthropology Laboratories in Norman, Oklahoma.
FAITH LAPIDUS: When last heard from, Amelia Earhart was seeking to become the first female pilot to fly a plane around the world. Earhart was already internationally known at the time. She had been the first woman to fly a plane alone over the Atlantic Ocean. Still, she was not satisfied.
Earhart wanted to guide her aircraft forty-three thousand kilometers around the equator. Fred Noonan served as navigator for the flight. His job was to plot the plane’s movement.
Earhart and Noonan had completed their planned trip over South America, Africa and Asia when they stopped in New Guinea for fuel. After that, they seemingly did not touch land again. Their bodies and parts of their plane were never found.
CHRISTOPHER CRUISE: Bones that might help solve the mystery were discovered last year on the unpopulated Pacific island of Nikumaroro. The island was known as Gardner Island in Earhart’s time. It is about three thousand kilometers south of Hawaii.
Nikumaroro Island could have been on Earhart’s way to Howland Island. Her flight plan called for her to stop on Howland to refuel her specially-designed Lockheed Electra plane.
Scientists are testing bone from Nikumaroro to learn if DNA, deoxyribonucleic acid, can be recovered from it. DNA contains all the genetic information about an organism. If researchers find human DNA, it can be compared with DNA provided by a member of Amelia Earhart’s family. The long-time mystery of how Earhart died could be solved if the two DNA samples show family similarities.
An organization interested in aircraft and flight history found the bone material and other objects on Nikumaroro. Volunteers who belong to the International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery had explored the island repeatedly in the past.
Earlier explorations had found shoes and other objects. The objects might have belonged to the two-person flight team. But that has not been proven.
Volunteers for the group made the new discovery in what appears to have been a camping area. They also found a container with a woman’s face make-up and glass bottles. The bottles were made before World War Two. In the same area was a knife with its blades removed. Opened seashells were nearby. There was also evidence of small fires.
FAITH LAPIDUS: A television program on the Discovery Channel tells about the group’s findings and work. But an expert about Amelia Earhart’s life says she did not land on an island. Instead, writer Susan Butler believes an American court declaration in nineteen thirty-nine. It ruled that Earhart died when her plane crashed into the ocean and sank.
And that is how a recent film about the pilot represents her death. The movie is called “Amelia.” It is one of a long list of shows, books and films about America’s lost woman hero of flight.
(MUSIC)
CHRISTOPHER CRUISE: An organization called the World Future Society publishes a yearly report about how technology, the economy and society are influencing the world. Tim Mack heads the World Future Society. He says medicine is one area of growth.
TIM MACK: “I was surprised by the enormous growth in medical technology.”
CHRISTOPHER CRUISE: Mr. Mack says the fields of nanotechnology, biotechnology and information technology are working together to create new ways to help patients. These include better ways to provide medicine and identify disease without invasive operations.
Mr. Mack also says developments in artificial intelligence could lead to a future where disabled patients could be cared for by a voice-activated robot.
US Army
A surgeon performs an operation using robotic assistance
FAITH LAPIDUS: The World Future Society also publishes The Futurist magazine. Every year it examines developments in technology and other areas to predict the future. The magazine released the top ten predictions from the Outlook 2011 report.
The report said Internet search engines will soon include both text and spoken results. It said television broadcasts and other recordings could be gathered using programs developed by the Fraunhofer Institute for Intelligent Analysis.
CHRISTOPHER CRUISE: Outlook 2011 also examined refuse collection. It said industrial nations will send much more waste to developing countries. This will cause protests in those countries. In about fifteen years, developing countries will stop accepting foreign waste. This will force industrial nations to develop better waste-to-energy programs and recycling technologies.
The report also had a prediction about education. It said young people use technologies for socializing as well as working and learning. So they solve problems more as teams instead of competing. In this way, social networking is supporting different kinds of learning outside the classroom.
(MUSIC)
FAITH LAPIDUS: Health experts say chronic fatigue syndrome, also known as CFS, is a complex disorder. They say it can cause people to feel fatigued or extremely tired. CFS may also cause physical weakness, muscle and joint pain, problems with memory or thinking, or trouble sleeping. Many people with the disorder have a higher than normal body temperature. They may also have throat pain and weakness in the lymph nodes near the cervix or under the arms.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that between one million and four million Americans suffer from CFS. Those affected are often unable to perform at their normal level of ability. Bed rest does nothing to ease their problems. Increased physical activity often makes their symptoms worse.
CHRISTOPHER CRUISE: There is no test to confirm chronic fatigue syndrome.Instead, doctors use a patient's medical history and testing to dismiss other treatable conditions. Those who are confirmed to have the disorder must experience at least four of the symptoms of CFS for at least six months.
CFS was not widely accepted as a medical condition until the late nineteen eighties. Until then, many people who had it were said to be suffering from mental problems or stress.
It is not yet known what causes the disorder. Scientists have been studying the condition and debating its causes for hundreds of years. Some believe the cause is a viral infection.
FAITH LAPIDUS: Last month, experts urged America’s Food and Drug Administration to ban blood donations from people with a history of CFS. The experts noted conflicting results concerning a possible link between the disorder and a group of viruses known as murine leukemia viruses. MLVs are a kind of retrovirus known to cause cancer in mice. They include xenotropic murine leukemia virus-related virus, also known as XMRV.
Last year, researchers tested blood from thirty-seven patients with chronic fatigue syndrome. They also looked at forty-four healthy blood donors. They reported evidence of MLVs in eighty-seven percent of the CFS patients. This compared to seven percent of the healthy patients.
The evidence supports a two thousand nine study that found evidence of XMRV in about two thirds of CFS patients. However, similar studies have found no such link.
CHRISTOPHER CRUISE:
A recent report in the journal Retrovirology found that xenotropic murine leukemia virus-related virus is not the cause of chronic fatigue syndrome. Study organizers said the blood samples in the earlier studies had likely been mixed with DNA from mice.
The Food and Drug Administration has not made a decision about whether or not to ban blood from donors with CFS. But the American Red Cross said that, in the interest of public safety, it would no longer accept blood donations from people who admit to having the condition.
(MUSIC)
FAITH LAPIDUS: This SCIENCE IN THE NEWS was written by Jerilyn Watson and June Simms, who was also our producer. I’m Faith Lapidus.
CHRISTOPHER CRUISE: And I’m Christopher Cruise. Join us again next week for more news about science in Special English on the Voice of America.
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