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Janys123
Janys123
29.11.2020 18:23 •  Английский язык

28. Read the text of Exercise 27 and answer the questions: 1. When does Lena go to the library?
2. What does she do at the library?
3. What can you see in the library?
4. What books interest Lena?
5. What poems does she like?
6. Where does the librarian sit?
7. What do boys and girls do in the reading-room?
8. What is there on the stand in the reading-room?
29. Read and answer the questions:
1. What do you see when you go into a children's library?
2. What kind of books do older children take out to read?
3. What interests you most of all when you begin to choose a
book?
4. What is your school reading-room like?
5. Why is it a popular place in the school?
6. What are your favourite books?
30. Read the text and describe your wall newspaper:
idea (ar'dıə]: Have you any idea of what I am going to do? I
have an idea for a new game. What a good idea!
look for ['luk'fo:]: I am looking for a book about Soviet cosmo-
nauts.
popular l'popjulə): This singer is very popular with young
people.
27. Read the text and describe the library:
At the Library
Lena Stogova likes to read interesting books. She very often
goes to the library to read books there or to take out a book
to read at home.
When you go into the children's library, you first see a
large room with shelves on all the walls, and all the shelves are
full of books. There are picture books with pictures and stories
for small boys and girls.
For older children there are novels, poems, plays, books on
history, geography and the arts. Books on history and geography
are very popular.
Lena likes books on literature very much. Russian and So-
viet writers interest her most of all. She often takes out works
by Pushkin, Lermontov, Tolstoy, Chekhov, Gorky and others.
She likes Pushkin's poems, but she reads Mayakovsky's
poems too.
There is a table in the room at which the librarian sits.
She gives out and takes back books. Many boys and girls are
standing in front of the table. They are bringing back the books
they have read and taking out the books they have chosen.
Lena sees Kolya, a boy from her form. He is bringing back
a book about the Great October Socialist Revolution.
On the right of the big room is the reading-room, where
there are tables and chairs. Near the wall there is a stand with
newspapers and magazines. Many boys and girls are reading
books, magazines or newspapers.
On one side of the reading-room there is a stand "Lenin Is
Always with Us". In the middle of the stand there is a large
portrait of Lenin and around it there are pictures and texts
which tell the schoolchildren about his life and his work for
the October Revolution and for building Socialism in the USSR.
Doing Things Together
Schoolchildren not only learn together. They do many other
things after lessons. They hold Young Pioneer meetings, pre-
pare wall newspapers, go to the cinema or the theatre and they
work together on the school plot or in the fields.
Doing interesting things together helps friendship and you
learn to help each other when there is something difficult.
Today Misha Popov and three other classmates have gath-
ered to prepare their form's new wall newspaper.
"What are we going to write in it?" asked Vasya Belov.
"Well," answered Misha. "This is not a holiday newspaper.
We shall write about school life and what Young Pioneer sec-
tions do."
"I told some boys and girls to write for our newspaper,"
said Valery Nikonov, "and here is what I have collected.”
"Read what they have written," said Liza Prokhorova.
"We shall discuss what is good for our newspaper articles."
One of the classmates wrote how Young Pioneers helped each
other with difficult homework. A girl of the Third Section wrote
111 казакша аудару​

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Ответ:
Zelais
Zelais
05.03.2021 06:10

Abay was born in what is today the selo of Karauyl, in Abay District, East Kazakhstan Province; the son of Qunanbay and Uljan, Qunanbay's second wife, they named him Ibrahim, but because of his brightness, he soon was given the nickname "Abay" (meaning "careful"), a name that stuck for the rest of his life. His father's economic status enabled the boy to attend a Russian school in his youth, but only after he had already spent some years studying at a madrasah under Mullah Ahmet Ryza.[citation needed] At his school in Semipalatinsk, Abay encountered the writings of Mikhail Lermontov and Alexander Pushkin.

Abay's main contribution to Kazakh culture and folklore lies in his poetry, which expresses great nationalism and grew out of Kazakh folk culture. Before him, most Kazakh poetry was oral, echoing the nomadic habits of the people of the Kazakh steppes. During Abay's lifetime, however, a number of important socio-political and socio-economic changes occurred. Russian influence continued to grow in Kazakhstan, resulting in greater educational possibilities as well as exposure to a number of different philosophies, whether Russian, Western or Asian. Abay Qunanbayuli steeped himself in the cultural and philosophical history of these newly opened geographies. In this sense, Abay's creative poetry affected the philosophical thinking of educated Kazakhs.
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Ответ:
dianababitskay
dianababitskay
05.03.2021 06:10

Abay was born in what is today the selo of Karauyl, in Abay District, East Kazakhstan Province; the son of Qunanbay and Uljan, Qunanbay's second wife, they named him Ibrahim, but because of his brightness, he soon was given the nickname "Abay" (meaning "careful"), a name that stuck for the rest of his life. His father's economic status enabled the boy to attend a Russian school in his youth, but only after he had already spent some years studying at a madrasah under Mullah Ahmet Ryza.[citation needed] At his school in Semipalatinsk, Abay encountered the writings of Mikhail Lermontov and Alexander Pushkin.

Abay's main contribution to Kazakh culture and folklore lies in his poetry, which expresses great nationalism and grew out of Kazakh folk culture. Before him, most Kazakh poetry was oral, echoing the nomadic habits of the people of the Kazakh steppes. During Abay's lifetime, however, a number of important socio-political and socio-economic changes occurred. Russian influence continued to grow in Kazakhstan, resulting in greater educational possibilities as well as exposure to a number of different philosophies, whether Russian, Western or Asian. Abay Qunanbayuli steeped himself in the cultural and philosophical history of these newly opened geographies. In this sense, Abay's creative poetry affected the philosophical thinking of educated Kazakhs.
0,0(0 оценок)
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