My English is really getting better. I (try) to learn the language since 2010, but only recently have I been able to make some real progress. By the time I started high school in 2013, I (study) the language for almost three years; however, I was only able to introduce myself and utter a few memorized sentences. For a couple more years, I (struggle) through grammar and vocabulary lessons, which made absolutely no difference. Nothing worked, so I decided to study abroad. I found an exchange program in England that sounded like the perfect answer. I (stay) with a host family for one month. It was a huge disappointment! I (sit) there the whole time staring at the host mother and father hoping that there would be some breakthrough. Nothing.
When I returned, I mentioned to a friend that I (have) problems with the language for years. He recommended that I spend a year in an English speaking country. I decided to go abroad again. I (research) exchange programs for a couple of weeks and finally decided on a school in the United States.
Well, it worked. I (live) and (study) in the U.S. for more than two years. I (stay) here for at least another year before I return home. By then, I should be completely fluent.
Born February 24, 1930 in the village of silence. During World War II he worked as a mechanic. In 13 years, from a mine lost his sight.
Mikhail Suvorov - the author of sixteen books of poetry. The poet is inherent in a very bright and peculiar vision of the world. He created his own world of memory and power of his imagination. Many poems of the poet set to music and are widely recognized.
More than thirty years of Mikhail Suvorov taught in specialized ochno- correspondence school for blind young workers. He was awarded the title of Honored Teacher of the Russian Federation.
M.I.Suvorov - a member of the Writers' Union, now Russia, 1961
Died June 19, 1998 in the city of Tver.
Sea, sand, sun, fun, and freedom to determine Greece travel at its best. Just the term "Greek islands" conjures up these images.
But the reality is that the "islands" may not be for everyone, even the youngest and freedom-loving. A truly independent travelers facing canceled ferries, missed connections, questionable rooms are taken when tired and hungry, and a number of other problems. If you are on a tight budget times, the island hopping begins to peek from the scope of opportunities for the majority.