Общее понимание: 1) какое было первоначальное название лондона? почему это так важно для римлян? 2) кем был король альфред великий? когда он вошел/возглавил в город? 3) где еще встречается упоминание об уильяма-завоевателе? 4) какое было 12-14 века? 5) как чума повлияла на лондона? 6) кто был ответственным за реконструкцию города? почему необходима была реконструкция? 7) почему население лондона выросло в 19 веке? 8) как первая мировая война влияла на лондона? что о второй мировой войне? 9) какие в лондоне изменения после второй мировой войны? 10) какие названия небоскребов-зданий в лондоне вы знаете?
21 On a trip to Europe in 1932, Helen Keller and Annie Sullivan RECEIVED a hero's welcome.
22 They WERE AWARDED honorary degrees in Scotland and met the king and queen of England. This was the last major trip Helen and Annie ever made together. After a series of illnesses, Annie Sullivan died in 1936 in her home in New York.
23 Keller TURNED numb with grief after Sullivan's death.
24 In her journal she wrote, "It seems that from now on I WILL TREAD paths that lead nowhere." As time passed, however, Keller was determined to carry on with her work.
25 Polly Thomson, a Scottish woman living in the United States, BECAME her interpreter.
26 Thomson HAD KNOWN Keller since 1914 when she began working for her.
27 Keller continued to travel and lecture until she was almost 80 years old. In Africa, Asia, and Latin America, many schools for the blind WERE FOUNDED as a result of Keller's visits.
21 On a trip to Europe in 1932, Helen Keller and Annie Sullivan RECEIVED a hero's welcome.
22 They WERE AWARDED honorary degrees in Scotland and met the king and queen of England. This was the last major trip Helen and Annie ever made together. After a series of illnesses, Annie Sullivan died in 1936 in her home in New York.
23 Keller TURNED numb with grief after Sullivan's death.
24 In her journal she wrote, "It seems that from now on I WILL TREAD paths that lead nowhere." As time passed, however, Keller was determined to carry on with her work.
25 Polly Thomson, a Scottish woman living in the United States, BECAME her interpreter.
26 Thomson HAD KNOWN Keller since 1914 when she began working for her.
27 Keller continued to travel and lecture until she was almost 80 years old. In Africa, Asia, and Latin America, many schools for the blind WERE FOUNDED as a result of Keller's visits.