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^_^ Lớp học tiếng Anh P13 Ms.Thuy(5th) ^_^

Chủ đề trong 'Tìm bạn/thày/lớp học ngoại ngữ' bởi thuy_ed, 04/04/2007.

  1. 1 người đang xem box này (Thành viên: 0, Khách: 1)
  1. nhuytl

    nhuytl Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    05/09/2006
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    nhà mình thía nào mà vắng hoe vắng hắt thía này
    em nhớ lớp mình lém đấy nhé
    [​IMG]
  2. 012345678910

    012345678910 Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    23/12/2006
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    Ôi, lại một hôm nữa trời mưa !
    Sis ơi, Sis chuyển nhà đúng hôm mát trời hay sao mà lớp mình đi học về hay gặp trời mưa thế không biết !
    Chúc cả nhà ngủ ngon !
  3. friends_forever64

    friends_forever64 Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    18/04/2006
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    Co cho em hoi co co mo lop trinh do co ban-basic thoi day tu de ko ah?Em hoc TA roi nhung bi hong rat nhieu ve ki nang nghe,doc,noi,viet va ca ngu phap nua.Bay gio em muon chinh lai tu dau.Bay gio hoc co kip ko ah?
  4. thuy_ed

    thuy_ed Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    03/02/2006
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    VIETNAM, A BRIEF INTRODUCTION
    In the decades following World War II the name ?~ Viet Nam?T came to signify to many Westerners either a brutal jungle war or a spectacular failure of American power- or both. In the 1960s, bumper stickers in the USA demanded that America Stop the War! And ?~ Bring Our boys Homê?T. Once the war ended, most Americans wanted to forget it, but there have been countless reminders: half-a-dozen major motion pictures, several TV drama series, countless university courses and hundreds of books about Vietnam have a captivated audiences around the globe. However, virtually all of this publicity and information concerns the American war in Indochina, not Vietnam the country. The real Vietnam, with its unique and rich civilization, spectacular scenery and highly cultured and friendly people, has been largely ignored. While no doubt the Vietnam War continues to weigh heavily on the consciousness of all who can remember the fighting, the Vietnam of today is a country at peace. Towards the end of the 1980s, the Cold War thawed and the Hanoi government succeeded in reducing Vietnam?Ts international isolation, in part by opening the country?Ts doors to foreign visitors.
    Most visitors to Vietnam are overwhelmed by the sublime beauty of the country?Ts natural setting. The Red River Delta in the North, the Mekong River Delta in the South and almost the entire coastal strip are patchwork of brilliant green rice paddies tended by peasant women in conical hats. Vietnam?Ts 3,451 km of coastline include countless kilometers of unspoiled beaches and a number of stunning lagoons; some sections are shaded by coconut palms and casuarinas, others bounded by seemingly endless expanses of sand dunes of rugged spurs of the Truong Son Mountains.
    Between the two deltas, the coastal paddies lining the Eastern Sea give way to soaring mountains, some of whose slopes are cloaked with the riches of rainforest. Slightly farther from littoral are the refreshingly cool plateaux of the Central Highlands, which are dotted with waterfalls. The area is home to dozens of distinct ethnolinguistic groups( hill tribes), more than almost any other country in Asia.
    Visitors to Vietnam have their senses thrilled by all the sights, sound, tastes and smells of a society born of over a century of contact between an ancient civilization and the ways of the West. Therê?Ts nothing quite like grabbing a delicious lunch of local delicacies at a food stall deep inside a market place surrounded by tropical fruit vendors and legions of curious youngsters. Or sitting by a waterfall in the Central Highlands, sipping soda water with lemon juice and watching newly wed couples on their honey moon tiptoe up to the stream bank in their? Sunday finest?. Or being invited by a Buddhist monk to attend prayers at his pagoda conducted, according to ancient Mahayana rites, with chanting, drums and gongs.
    One traveler writes: Of the 30 or so countries I have been to, Vietnam is easily the most beautiful. I saw more shades of green than I knew existed. Rice fields manually tended from dawn to dusk were always in view, as were forest-covered mountains. I also frequently caught glimpses of pristine deserted beaches from the train window as we made our way along the coast.
    Fiercely protective of their independence sovereignty for 2000 years, the Vietnamese are also graclously welcoming of foreigners who come as their guests rather than as conquerors. No matter what side they or their parents were on during the war, Vietnamese are, almost without exception, extremely friendly to Western visitors( including Americans) and supportive of more contact with the outside world. People who visit Vietnam during the first years of the country?Ts renewed interaction within the West will play an important role in conveying to the Vietnamese the potentialities of such contact. And now that capitalism is no longer a four letter word, private Vietnamese, businesses have mushroomed, adding and atmosphere of hustle and bustle to Ho Chi Minh City and other cities whose resurgent dynamism is reviving the Vietnamese economy.
    The astonishing pace of economic development in East Asia has made many of these countries considerably more expensive, polluted and less enchanting than they used to be; rice paddies have given way to industrial estates belching out black smoke, bicycles have been replaced by tour buses and thatched huts have been bulldozed to make way for five-star hotels and modern office towers.
    Vietnam has not yet reached that level of development, and a visit to this country as almost like a journey back through time. Red tape kept foreign tourists and investors out for nearly two decades, but visiting has become considerably easier in the past couple of years and the tourists floodgates have opened wide.
    Already, the short period of economic liberalization and openness to outsiders have brought dramatic changes. Vietnam offers a rare opportunity to see a country of tra***ional charm and beauty taking the first hesitant steps into the modern world.
  5. thuy_ed

    thuy_ed Thành viên rất tích cực

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    Hiện tại mình chưa có lớp Basic mới bạn ạ
    @Như Ý: yêu quá, nhớ quá
    @Cả lớp: Thứ 3 cả lớp chuẩn bị bài trong GENIUS nhé
  6. friends_forever64

    friends_forever64 Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    18/04/2006
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    bao gio thi co co ah!
  7. thuy_ed

    thuy_ed Thành viên rất tích cực

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    Chắc hơi lâu bạn ạ, có thể là hết tháng 12
  8. nhuytl

    nhuytl Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    05/09/2006
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    ss iu ơi! để đến tháng 1 lun đi, à, mà tháng 1 busy lém cơ! để tháng 2 đi, à tháng 2 tết roài, để tháng 3 lun đi
    đợi em dzia học cả thể ss iu nhé! muahhhhhhhhhh!
  9. shammy86

    shammy86 Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    11/03/2006
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    sis ơi, dịch giúp em câu này với : "không có câu chuyện cổ tích nào đẹp hơn cuộc sống đẹp viết nên" và câu :"ngựa tượng trưng cho niềm đam mê và những nhu cầu cơ bản" và "Con vật cuối cùng được giữ lại chính là thứ mà bạn có thể đánh đổi những thứ khác để giữ lấy nó. "
    Cám ơn sis nhìu nha!
  10. choc_ice

    choc_ice Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    02/07/2006
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    20-10 Chúc ss iu và tất cả các bạn nữ là học sinh của ss nhận được nhìu lời chúc tốt đẹp và thật nhìu hoa nhé !
    @ SS: Tặng ss nè

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