1)They are made of wood.2) To get to their homes, the Korowai climb up a long wooden pole with notches cut into in for their hands and feet. 3) They build their houses up high to be safe from the dangers of the jungle, such as floods, wild animal and mosqutoes which carry disease. 4) After nightfall, they chat and tell stories before going to sleep.5)of Göreme, Turkey. 6) Over millions of years, nature created rocks in the area that look like upside-down ice cream cones. 7)Some say that it is like the surface of the moon. 8)The locals enjoy living in the 'fairy chimneys', as they call them, because they are cool in the hot summers and warm in the cold wintèrs.
I go to the theater 3-4 times a month. Of course, there are months when it is possible more often, but the opposite happens.
I have loved theater since childhood, mainly because of the opportunity to watch the actors play live. It's like a fascinating film, but without duplicates and the right to make a mistake. I often compare this to film photography: you have one frame and you shouldn't spoil it. I like how the actors, directors and others who work on the play manage to create a whole world without special special effects, sometimes even without scenery.
1)They are made of wood.2) To get to their homes, the Korowai climb up a long wooden pole with notches cut into in for their hands and feet. 3) They build their houses up high to be safe from the dangers of the jungle, such as floods, wild animal and mosqutoes which carry disease. 4) After nightfall, they chat and tell stories before going to sleep.5)of Göreme, Turkey. 6) Over millions of years, nature created rocks in the area that look like upside-down ice cream cones. 7)Some say that it is like the surface of the moon. 8)The locals enjoy living in the 'fairy chimneys', as they call them, because they are cool in the hot summers and warm in the cold wintèrs.
Объяснение:
вроде бы правильно))
I go to the theater 3-4 times a month. Of course, there are months when it is possible more often, but the opposite happens.
I have loved theater since childhood, mainly because of the opportunity to watch the actors play live. It's like a fascinating film, but without duplicates and the right to make a mistake. I often compare this to film photography: you have one frame and you shouldn't spoil it. I like how the actors, directors and others who work on the play manage to create a whole world without special special effects, sometimes even without scenery.