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Head to this new night in Stoke Newington for live music – folk, jazz, hip hop, and more – plus DJs and comedy. The evening finishes with a mass jam session.
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Read the text. Read out the sentences with the new words (ex.4,5).
John Barker
John Barker was born in London. He has a mother, Margaret Barker, a father, Richard Barker, and a young sister Sally. Richard Barker is a children’s doctor and Margaret Barker teaches music at school. The family lives in London at 19 Green Street.
John’s aunt and uncle and his cousins live in Scotland but they often come to London to visit the Barkers.
John went to school when he was five (all children in Great Britain do). John wants to speak French, Russian and Spanish well.
John would like to be a journalist, travel all over the world and meet a lot of interesting people. He wants to work for a newspaper or a magazine.
John isn’t always a good pupil. He has too many things to do. He loves football and photography. John takes the pictures of the places he visits. He has some very good pictures of the Lake District and Scotland. This year John is working a lot. He wants to be one of the best pupils in his class. After he finishes school, John wants to go to London University.
reshalka.com
ГДЗ Английский язык 5 класс (часть 1) Афанасьева. UNIT 2. Step 2. Номер №6
Решение
Перевод задания
Прочитай текст. Выбери и прочитай предложения, в которых встречаются новые слова (упр.4, 5).
Джон Баркер
Джон Баркер родился в Лондоне. У него есть мама, Маргарет Баркер, папа, Ричард Баркер, и маленькая сестра Салли. Ричард Баркер – детский доктор, а Маргарет Баркер учит музыке в школе. Семья живет в Лондоне на Зеленой улице, 19.
Тетя, дядя и двоюродные брятья и сестры Джона живут в Шотландии, но они часто приезжают в Лондон навестить семью Баркер.
Джон пошел в школу, когда ему было пять лет (как и все дети в Великобритании). Джон хочет хорошо говорить по−французски, по−русски и по−испански.
Джон хотел бы быть журналистом, путешествовать по миру и встречать много интересных людей. Он хочет работать в газете или в журнале.
Джон не всегда хороший ученик. У него много дел. Он любит футбол и фотографию. Джон фотографирует места, которые посещает. У него есть несколько очень хороших снимков Озерного Края и Шотландии. В этом году Джон старательно работает. Он хочет быть одним из лучших учеников в классе. После окончания школы Джон хочет поступить в Лондонский Университет.
ОТВЕТ
1) John’s aunt and uncle and his cousins live in Scotland but they often come to London to visit the Barkers.
2) John would like to be a journalist, travel all over the world and meet a lot of interesting people.
3) He wants to work for a newspaper or a magazine.
4) He loves football and photography.
5) After he finishes school, John wants to go to London University.
Перевод ответа
1) Тетя, дядя и двоюродные братья и сестры Джона живут в Шотландии, но они часто приезжают в Лондон навестить семью Баркер.
2) Джон хотел бы быть журналистом, путешествовать по миру и встречать много интересных людей.
3) Он хочет работать в газете или в журнале.
4) Он любит футбол и фотографию.
5) После окончания школы Джон хочет поступить в Лондонский Университет.
League of the Lexicon is a beautifully designed game about words and language, ideal for language lovers, quiz fiends and the incurably curious.
Designed by Joshua Blackburn, the game lauded by Stephen Fry, Susie Dent and Lynne Truss is a language game like no other – thanks to covid lockdown and two boys who didn’t like English homework.
At home with his two young sons, Joshua, Sonny and Jude made language games to avoid doing English homework. There was WordSplat, Word War, the fiendish Dojo and finally League of the Lexicon, which became an obsession.
There are many iconic word games like Wordle, Scrabble Boggle or Bananagrams but this is different. League of the Lexicon is a highly entertaining board game about words, made by word lovers, for word lovers.
Created in collaboration with the world’s finest linguists and lexicographers, many of whom contributed questions to the game, players face the ultimate test of worldly wisdom.
The League of the Lexicon, after whom the game is named, is a company of outcast lexicographers on a quest to secure rare lexical Artefacts. This intriguing cast, from the esteemed Doc Johnson to Roget, the martini-drinking badger, are the characters used during play and have been brought to life by the illustrator Stavros Damos.
This is the world of League of the Lexicon: exotic yet steeped in the history of language and with seductive 1930s aesthetic and graphic motifs that draw on the history of writing, players are drawn into a game world that is rich with detail and unlike any other quiz game.
League of the Lexicon
Simple to learn but challenging to win, the game is for two to six players, but with six rule variations, it accommodates both solo play and large parties. And with two levels of difficulty, younger or less confident players can join in.
Last year on a chance visit to Waterstones, Britain’s largest book-chain, the branch game buyer was shown a prototype. Six weeks later, and with the game still unfinished, Waterstones secured exclusive rights to sell the game in the UK and ordered 5,000 copies for Christmas.
With Waterstones on board, Two Brothers Games then launched on the crowdfunding site Kickstarter; it was fully funded in five hours, and within three weeks had become the most successful word game in Kickstarter history. When the game arrived at Waterstones it was made Game of the Month and sold out in record time.
The game features 2,000 questions probing every corner of language, from definitions and archaic words, to etymology, usage, and language trivia. But this isn’t any old quiz game; the world’s finest linguists and lexicographers have contributed questions to the game, making it the ultimate test of wordly wisdom.
Beautifully designed with a sustainable heart, the packaging and contents have been made to the highest standards with FSC sustainable paper stock, there are no plastic components and a compact shipping-friendly box design.
Having run his own design agency, the game had to look perfect. But as a game for word lovers, it had to have the brains to back it up. Joshua Blackburn started contacting dictionary editors, authors, lexicographers, linguists and more asking them to contribute questions to the game; meanwhile, a team was researching and writing hundreds of game questions.
Joshua Blackburn said: “The joy of League of the Lexicon isn’t just proving what you know, it’s finding out what you don’t. Until now, Scrabble has been the ultimate game for word lovers, but League of the Lexicon is a game about words, and there isn’t a game like it.”
The health benefits
This thrilling board game is great for players of all ages and word games support cognitive health. They can help to increase focus, concentration, and memory.
They can help us to be more present in day-to-day activities. While it doesn’t appear that brain games can prevent age-related cognitive decline and dementia, growing research indicates that they may slow or delay them.
Puzzles and games, especially those involving novelty, can stimulate and challenge key parts of the brain including language, logic, reasoning, visual perception, attention and problem-solving.
The game will soon be arriving at Barnes and Noble, ready for American language lovers. Available in the UK, priced £34.99 exclusively at Waterstones along with Blackwell’s, Foyles, Hatchard’s & Waterstones subsidiary brands.
https://www.twobrothersgames.co.uk/
Not in fact a misunderstanding of «word is bond». It means that something is a new and important idea. It has been in common usage at least since the release of the aptly titled Run DMC song «Word is Born» (1990).
Well I’m long gone, word is born…
by Fat Cass October 26, 2005
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word is born
A street saying equivalent to no cap. Only OGs use this one.
Friend: That was one hot chick
Me: Damn, word is born yo.
by ya boi 02aku February 3, 2020
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word is born
«Word is born» means «truth be told» or «the truth is spoken», as in the Logos (Greek, for «word») of the New Testament. «In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.» (John 1:1, NIV) And then the Word says, «I am the way and the truth and the life,» in John 14:6. Don’t any of you go to church?
I saw that bitch go down on the pastor at church—word is born, yo!
by JTavisO July 5, 2011
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word is born
As mentioned, a misunderstanding of ‘word is bond’; as in «I am giving you my word, and it is my bond.»
Isn’t language beatiful.
«Dude, that was sweet!»
«Word is born!»
«..did you just say born?!»
by nick November 13, 2003
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Word is born..son!
A New York slang that means or can be translated to: I’m telling you the truth… man
Commonly used in phrases of excitement and news telling or sharing thoughts
Word is born..son! they have the new kicks at DR JAYS!
by back in the dayz May 20, 2009
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Word is born
A trio of words that can mean the same thing universally like any other symbol, word, phrase, equation, sound, frequesncy, etc…..the question is not could we speak, but should we?
I speak therefor I am = Word is born
by Priestly Incense January 23, 2023
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More random definitions
Прочитайте текст и вставьте вместо каждого пропуска нужную грамматическую форму, выбрав её из четырёх предложенных вариантов.
History of London
The history of London goes back thousands of years. In those ancient times the first inhabitants, Celtic tribes, made A_________ homes on the river Thames. Next B_________ Germanic tribes — the Angles, the Saxons and the Jutes. In 43 AD the Romans invaded Britain. They C_________ a bridge across the Thames. D_________ they decided it was a good place to build a port. Around 50 AD the Romans founded a town by the bridge. Its name is derived from the Celtic word «Londinios,» which E_________the place of the brave. So, London was born.
A 1) theirs 2) they 3) their 4) them
B 1) comes 2) came 3) was coming 4) have come
C 1) build 2) were building 3) built 4) have built
D 1) Later 2) Late 3) Last 4) Latest
E 1) mean 2) has meant 3) means 4) is meaning
A | B | C | D | E |
---|---|---|---|---|