التصنيفات
الصف الحادي عشر

امتحان تجريبي للفصل الثاني للغة الإنجليزية <<< أرجو التثبيت ^_^ للصف الحادي عشر

امتحان تجريبي للغة الإنجليزيه الفصل الثاني

اطلب من كل من يفتح هذه الصفحة أن يدعوا لي بالتوفيق

وموفقين إن شاء الله …. درجات توب ونسب عااااليه

الملفات المرفقة

ثانكس على الامتحان

الامتحان وايد حلو مشكورة اختي

يسلمواا اختي رؤية
بس ما ملاحظين انو المواضيع اللي فية ما عنا اياها بالكتاب؟!

هيه اكيد
بس ما عليه ندرسهن كلهن

ممكن تعطين الاجابات

يزاااااااااج الله خير وما قصرتي

والله يوفقج ان شاالله

يسلمووووووووووووو
وربي يعطيج الف الف عافية ^^
والله يوفقج ويوفق الجميع ان شاء الله
جاري التثبيت ….

ممكمن الأجبات

الله يوفقج وانشالله من الناجحين خيتووووووووو

أستــــغفر الله العظيم

التصنيفات
الارشيف الدراسي

الأوقات بالإنجليزية .. -اصف التاسع

السسلام عليكم ورحمه الله وبركاته

second .. ثانية

minute .. دقيقة

hour .. ساعة

quarter of an hour .. ربع ساعة

half an hour .. نصف ساعة

day .. يوم

night .. ليلة

morning .. صباح

evening .. مساء

noon .. ظهر

afternoon .. العصر

dawn .. فجر

daily .. يوميا

midday .. منتصف النهار

midnight .. منتصف الليل

sunrise .. شروق الشمس

sunset .. غروب الشمس

dusk .. أول الليل (الغسق)

twilight .. شفق

week .. أسبوع

weekly .. أسبوعيا

fortnight .. أسبوعان

month .. شهر

monthly .. شهريا

lunar monthseason .. شهر قمري

year.. سنة

leap year .. سنة كبيسة

lunar year .. . سنة قمرية

solar year ..سنه شمسية

annually .. سنوي – حولى- موسمى

yearly .. سنويا

decade .. عقد

century .. قرن

السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته,,

تسلم يمناج,,

ما قصصرتي,.,

وعليكم السلاموورحمه الله وبركاته

الله يسلمج

اشكرج ع مرورج

أستغفرك يا رب من كل ذنب

التصنيفات
الصف الاول الابتدائي

مذكرة للوحدة الأولى لمادة اللغة الإنجليزية للصف الأول الصف الأول

السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته

أضع بين أيديكم

مذكرة للوحدة الأولى لمادة اللغة الإنجليزية – للصف الأول ..

تركز على الحروف ( a – b- c ) وبعض الكلمات الطلوبة ..

جزاه الله خيرا من قام بإعدادها ..

وبـالتوفيــق بـإذن الله..

الملفات المرفقة

تسلم اخي…

والله يعطيك الصحة والعافية

السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته’’

يعطيج الف عافية’’

تسلم يمناج,,

عساج عالقوة’’

مشكورة اختي
عاى المذكرة

جزيل الشكررررررررررررررررررررررررررررررر

شكرا جزيلا لك

شكرااا

أستــــغفر الله العظيم

التصنيفات
الصف السابع

500 كلمة ن خلالها ستتقنون 70% من اللغة الإنجليزية للصف السابع

500 كلمة ن خلالها ستتقنون 70% من اللغة الإنجليزية
في المرفقات
منقول

الملفات المرفقة

الغلا المرفق ما يفتح عندي

أرجو التأكد منه

بارك الله فيج ..

؟؟؟؟؟؟؟؟؟

أنا فتح عندي

تستاهلين تقييم+++

تسلمين رووووعـــــه وشامل الكلمات الاساسية أيضاً

ألي ما فتح عنده ينسخ هذا …….

والسموحه منج شمشم برستيج

Rank Word Rank Word
1 the 126 name
2 of 127 very
3 to 128 through
4 and 129 just
5 a 130 form
6 in 131 much
7 is 132 great
8 it 133 think
9 you 134 say
10 that 135 help
11 he 136 low
12 was 137 line
13 for 138 before
14 on 139 turn
15 are 140 cause
16 with 141 same
17 as 142 mean
18 I 143 differ
19 his 144 move
20 they 145 right
21 be 146 boy
22 at 147 old
23 one 148 too
24 have 149 does
25 this 150 tell
26 from 151 sentence
27 or 152 set
28 had 153 three
29 by 154 want
30 hot 155 air
31 but 156 well
32 some 157 also
33 what 158 play
34 there 159 small
35 we 160 end
36 can 161 put
37 out 162 home
38 other 163 read
39 were 164 hand
40 all 165 port
41 your 166 large
42 when 167 spell
43 up 168 add
44 use 169 even
45 word 170 land
46 how 171 here
47 said 172 must
48 an 173 big
49 each 174 high
50 she 175 such
51 which 176 follow
52 do 177 act
53 their 178 why
54 time 179 ask
55 if 180 men
56 will 181 change
57 way 182 went
58 about 183 light
59 many 184 kind
60 then 185 off
61 them 186 need
62 would 187 house
63 write 188 picture
64 like 189 try
65 so 190 us
66 these 191 again
67 her 192 animal
68 long 193 point
69 make 194 mother
70 thing 195 world
71 see 196 near
72 him 197 build
73 two 198 self
74 has 199 earth
75 look 200 father
76 more 201 head
77 day 202 stand
78 could 203 own
79 go 204 page
80 come 205 should
81 did 206 country
82 my 207 found
83 sound 208 answer
84 no 209 school
85 most 210 grow
86 number 211 study
87 who 212 still
88 over 213 learn
89 know 214 plant
90 water 215 cover
91 than 216 food
92 call 217 sun
93 first 218 four
94 people 219 thought
95 may 220 let
96 down 221 keep
97 side 222 eye
98 been 223 never
99 now 224 last
100 find 225 door
101 any 226 between
102 new 227 city
103 work 228 tree
104 part 229 cross
105 take 230 since
106 get 231 hard
107 place 232 start
108 made 233 might
109 live 234 story
110 where 235 saw
111 after 236 far
112 back 237 sea
113 little 238 draw
114 only 239 left
115 round 240 late
116 man 241 run
117 year 242 don’t
118 came 243 while
119 show 244 press
120 every 245 close
121 good 246 night
122 me 247 real
123 give 248 life
124 our 249 few
125 under 250 stop

Rank Word Rank Word
251 open 376 ten
252 seem 377 simple
253 together 378 several
254 next 379 vowel
255 white 380 toward
256 children 381 war
257 begin 382 lay
258 got 383 against
259 walk 384 pattern
260 example 385 slow
261 ease 386 center
262 paper 387 love
263 often 388 person
264 always 389 money
265 music 390 serve
266 those 391 appear
267 both 392 road
268 mark 393 map
269 book 394 science
270 letter 395 rule
271 until 396 govern
272 mile 397 pull
273 river 398 cold
274 car 399 notice
275 feet 400 voice
276 care 401 fall
277 second 402 power
278 group 403 town
279 carry 404 fine
280 took 405 certain
281 rain 406 fly
282 eat 407 unit
283 room 408 lead
284 friend 409 cry
285 began 410 dark
286 idea 411 machine
287 fish 412 note
288 mountain 413 wait
289 north 414 plan
290 once 415 figure
291 base 416 star
292 hear 417 box
293 horse 418 noun
294 cut 419 field
295 sure 420 rest
296 watch 421 correct
297 color 422 able
298 face 423 pound
299 wood 424 done
300 main 425 beauty
301 enough 426 drive
302 plain 427 stood
303 girl 428 contain
304 usual 429 front
305 young 430 teach
306 ready 431 week
307 above 432 final
308 ever 433 gave
309 red 434 green
310 list 435 oh
311 though 436 quick
312 feel 437 develop
313 talk 438 sleep
314 bird 439 warm
315 soon 440 free
316 body 441 minute
317 dog 442 strong
318 family 443 special
319 direct 444 mind
320 pose 445 behind
321 leave 446 clear
322 song 447 tail
323 measure 448 produce
324 state 449 fact
325 product 450 street
326 black 451 inch
327 short 452 lot
328 numeral 453 nothing
329 class 454 course
330 wind 455 stay
331 question 456 wheel
332 happen 457 full
333 complete 458 force
334 ship 459 blue
335 area 460 object
336 half 461 decide
337 rock 462 surface
338 order 463 deep
339 fire 464 moon
340 south 465 island
341 problem 466 foot
342 piece 467 yet
343 told 468 busy
344 knew 469 test
345 pass 470 record
346 farm 471 boat
347 top 472 common
348 whole 473 gold
349 king 474 possible
350 size 475 plane
351 heard 476 age
352 best 477 dry
353 hour 478 wonder
354 better 479 laugh
355 true . 480 thousand
356 during 481 ago
357 hundred 482 ran
358 am 483 check
359 remember 484 game
360 step 485 shape
361 early 486 yes
362 hold 487 hot
363 west 488 miss
364 ground 489 brought
365 interest 490 heat
366 reach 491 snow
367 fast 492 bed
368 five 493 bring
369 sing 494 sit
370 listen 495 perhaps
371 six 496 fill
372 table 497 east
373 travel 498 weight
374 less 499 language
375 morning 500 among

مشكورين ما قصرتوو
الدلع كله ما قصرت

ثانكيووووووووووووووووو

اللعم اعز الاسلام و المسلمين

التصنيفات
الصف الحادي عشر

إمتحان اللغة الإنجليزية للطلاب الحادي عشر من وزارة التربية والتعليم مع الإجابات -مناهج الامارات

السلام عليكم

من العنوان واضح

يرحى الضغط هنا

أتمنى لكم التوفيق
والسلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته

جزاج الله خيررر

شكراااااااااا لك

جزاك الله خير الابلة عاطتنا النوذج بس بدووون الاجابات شكراااااااااااااااااا

سلمتم ع المرور نورتونا ^_^

مشكورة الغالية

سبحــــــــــــــــــــان الله و بحمده

التصنيفات
الارشيف الدراسي

برنامج صغير ورائع يعرض دروسا صوتية لتعليم الإنجليزية (صورة البرنامج) للصف التاسع

هذا البرنامج من إعداد راديو صوت أمريكا

الدروس مترجمة بالعربية

صورة البرنامج
لتحيمل البرنامج اضعط على الرابط أسفل

السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته..

تسلم اخوي عالبرنامج..

ان شاء الله يستفيدون منه الطلاب..

موفقين ان شاء الله..

جزاك الله الف خير اخي
واصل ابدااعك
ربي يوفقك

السسلام عليكم
بارك الله فيك
مما قصصرت

تسلم اخوي و يعطيك العافية

بارك الله فيك

موفق

سبحــــــــــــــــــــان الله و بحمده

التصنيفات
الصف الاول الابتدائي

أوراق عـمل في طريقة كتابة الـحروف للغة الإنجليزية !! -تعليم الامارات

أوراق عـمل في طريقة كتابة الـحروف للغة الإنجليزية !!
م
نفع الله بها

حروف اللغة الانجليزية 26 حرفا ،منها 5 حروف متحركة والباقي حروف صامتة. والحروف المتحركة تقابل الحركات في اللغة العربية ،وتسمى في الانجليزية الحروف المعتلة أي حروف العلة في اللغة العربية.

والكتابة في الانجليزية على شكلين

أ- حروف طباعية
ب- حروف للخط اليدوي

والحروف في اللغة الانجليزية نوعان

أ-حر

وف كبيرة
ب-حروف صغيرة

أما الحروف الكبيرة فتستعمل لأسماء الأعلام ولبدء الكلمة الاولى من الجملة وأما الحروف الصغيرة فهي تستعمل على الدوام0

وإليك الآن الحروف الكبيرة ثم الصغيرة


A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

أما الحروف الصغيرة


a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z

اليكم أوراق العمل


جعل ثوابها لأخي رحمه الله وأسكنه فسيح جناته

الملفات المرفقة

شكرا لج

بارك الله فيج

++++

بوركت يداج اختي ع الموضوع الجميل

الف شكر لج

والله يعطيج الصحه والعافية

مشكوره ع المجهود الطيب

جزاكم الله القبول والغفران .

بارك الله فيكم

مشكووووره اختي على الاوراق

بارك الله فيج اختي
ما قصرتي
في ميزان حسناتج

جزاكم الله خير

السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته’’

يعطيج الف عافية’’

وبارك الله فيج ,,

ما قصرتي’’

ما ضهرلي
ضهرلي بالصيني

شكرا لك
على جهودك معانا

انشاء الله يجعلها في
ميزان حسناتك

شكرا

سبحــــــــــــــــــــان الله و بحمده

التصنيفات
الصف السابع

أخيرا حل جميع درووس اللغة الإنجليزية للصف السابع

الوحدة الأولى :

مُنْتَـديـآت شَبگة حـرُوف للمعلم المتميز

الوحدة الثانية :

http://www.horoof.com/vb/attachment….3&d=1286286981

الوحدة الثالثة :

مُنْتَـديـآت شَبگة حـرُوف للمعلم المتميز

الوحدة الرابعة :

مُنْتَـديـآت شَبگة حـرُوف للمعلم المتميز

الوحدة الخامسة :

مُنْتَـديـآت شَبگة حـرُوف للمعلم المتميز

الوحدة السادسة :

مُنْتَـديـآت شَبگة حـرُوف للمعلم المتميز

الوحدة السابعة :

مُنْتَـديـآت شَبگة حـرُوف للمعلم المتميز

الوحدة الثامنة :

مُنْتَـديـآت شَبگة حـرُوف للمعلم المتميز

منقوووول

سبحان الله و بحمده

التصنيفات
الصف الحادي عشر

تقرير جاهز عن دورة الماء باللغة الإنجليزية ..Water cycle -للتعليم الاماراتي

بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم

السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته

Water cycle

The Earth’s water is always in movement, and the water cycle, also known as the hydrologic cycle, describes the continuous movement of water on, above, and below the surface of the Earth. Since the water cycle is truly a "cycle," there is no beginning or end. Water can change states among liquid, vapor, and ice at various places in the water cycle, with these processes happening in the blink of an eye and over millions of years. Although the balance of water on Earth remains fairly constant over time, individual water molecules can come and go in a hurry, but there is always the same amount of water on the surface of the earth

Description

The water cycle has no starting or ending point. The sun, which drives the water cycle, heats water in the oceans. Some of it evaporates as vapor into the air. Ice and snow can sublimate directly into water vapor. Rising air currents take the vapor up into the atmosphere, along with water from evapotranspiration, which is water transpired from plants and evaporated from the soil. The vapor rises into the air where cooler temperatures cause it to condense into clouds. Air currents move clouds around the globe, cloud particles collide, grow, and fall out of the sky as precipitation. Some precipitation falls as snow and can accumulate as ice caps and glaciers, which can store frozen water for thousands of years. Snowpacks in warmer climates often thaw and melt when spring arrives, and the melted water flows overland as snowmelt. Most precipitation falls back into the oceans or onto land, where, due to gravity, the precipitation flows over the ground as surface runoff. A portion of runoff enters rivers in valleys in the landscape, with streamflow moving water towards the oceans. Runoff, and ground-water seepage, accumulate and are stored as freshwater in lakes. Not all runoff flows into rivers. Much of it soaks into the ground as infiltration. Some water infiltrates deep into the ground and replenishes aquifers (saturated subsurface rock), which store huge amounts of freshwater for long periods of time. Some infiltration stays close to the land surface and can seep back into surface-water bodies (and the ocean) as ground-water discharge, and some ground water finds openings in the land surface and emerges as freshwater springs. Over time, the water continues flowing, some to reenter the ocean, where the water cycle renews itself.

The different processes are as follows:

Precipitation is condensed water vapor that falls to the Earth’s surface. Most precipitation occurs as rain, but also includes snow, hail, fog drip, graupel, and sleet.[1] Approximately 505,000 km³ of water fall as precipitation each year, 398,000 km³ of it over the oceans.[2]
Canopy interception is the precipitation that is intercepted by plant foliage and eventually evaporates back to the atmosphere rather than falling to the ground.
Snowmelt refers to the runoff produced by melting snow.
Runoff includes the variety of ways by which water moves across the land. This includes both surface runoff and channel runoff. As it flows, the water may infiltrate into the ground, evaporate into the air, become stored in lakes or reservoirs, or be extracted for agricultural or other human uses.
Infiltration is the flow of water from the ground surface into the ground. Once infiltrated, the water becomes soil moisture or groundwater.[3]
Subsurface Flow is the flow of water underground, in the vadose zone and aquifers. Subsurface water may return to the surface (eg. as a spring or by being pumped) or eventually seep into the oceans. Water returns to the land surface at lower elevation than where it infiltrated, under the force of gravity or gravity induced pressures. Groundwater tends to move slowly, and is replenished slowly, so it can remain in aquifers for thousands of years.
Evaporation is the transformation of water from liquid to gas phases as it moves from the ground or bodies of water into the overlying atmosphere.[4] The source of energy for evaporation is primarily solar radiation. Evaporation often implicitly includes transpiration from plants, though together they are specifically referred to as evapotranspiration. Total annual evapotranspiration amounts to approximately 505,000 km³ of water, 434,000 km³ of which evaporates from the oceans.[5]
Sublimation is the state change directly from solid water (snow or ice) to water vapor.[6]
Advection is the movement of water — in solid, liquid, or vapour states — through the atmosphere. Without advection, water that evaporated over the oceans could not precipitate over land.[7]
Condensation is the transformation of water vapour to liquid water droplets in the air, producing clouds and fog.[8]

Reservoirs

In the context of the water cycle, a reservoir represents the water contained in different steps within the cycle. The largest reservoir is the collection of oceans, accounting for 97% of the Earth’s water. The next largest quantity (2%) is stored in solid form in the ice caps and glaciers. This small amount accounts for approximately 75% of all fresh water reserves on the planet. The water contained within all living organisms represents the smallest reservoir.

The volume of water in the fresh water reservoirs, particularly those that are available for human use, are important water resources.[10

Residence times

The residence time of a reservoir within the hydrologic cycle is the average time a water molecule will spend in that reservoir (see the adjacent table). It is a measure of the average age of the water in that reservoir, though some water will spend much less time than average, and some much more.

Groundwater can spend over 10,000 years beneath Earth’s surface before leaving. Particularly old groundwater is called fossil water. Water stored in the soil remains there very briefly, because it is spread thinly across the Earth, and is readily lost by evaporation, transpiration, stream flow, or groundwater recharge. After evaporating, water remains in the atmosphere for about 9 days before condensing and falling to the Earth as precipitation.

In hydrology, residence times can be estimated in two ways. The more common method relies on the principle of conservation of mass and assumes the amount of water in a given reservoir is roughly constant. With this method, residence times are estimated by dividing the volume of the reservoir by the rate by which water either enters or exits the reservoir. Conceptually, this is *****alent to timing how long it would take the reservoir to become filled from empty if no water were to leave (or how long it would take the reservoir to empty from full if no water were to enter).

An alternative method to estimate residence times, gaining in popularity particularly for dating groundwater, is the use of isotopic techniques. This is done in the subfield of isotope hydrology.

Changes over time

The water cycle describes the processes that drive the movement of water throughout the hydrosphere. However, much more water is "in storage" for long periods of time than is actually moving through the cycle. The storehouses for the vast majority of all water on Earth are the oceans. It is estimated that of the 332,500,000 cubic miles (mi3) (1,386,000,000 km3) of the world’s water supply, about 321,000,000 mi3 (1,338,000,000 km3) is stored in oceans,or about 95%. It is also estimated that the oceans supply about 90 percent of the evaporated water that goes into the water cycle.[11]

During colder climatic periods more ice caps and glaciers form, and enough of the global water supply accumulates as ice to lessen the amounts in other parts of the water cycle. The reverse is true during warm periods. During the last ice age glaciers covered almost one-third of Earth’s land mass, with the result being that the oceans were about 400 feet (122 meters) lower than today. During the last global "warm spell," about 125,000 years ago, the seas were about 18 feet (5.5. meters) higher than they are now. About three million years ago the oceans could have been up to 165 feet (50 meters) higher.[11]

The scientific consensus expressed in the 2022 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Summary for Policymakers[12] is for the water cycle to continue to intensify throughout the 21st century, though this does not mean that precipitation will increase in all regions. In subtropical land areas — places that are already relatively dry — precipitation is projected to decrease during the 21st century, increasing the probability of drought. The drying is projected to be strongest near the poleward margins of the subtropics (for example, the Mediterranean Basin, South Africa, southern Australia, and the Southwestern United States). Annual precipitation amounts are expected to increase in near-equatorial regions that tend to be wet in the present climate, and also at high latitudes. These large-scale patterns are present in nearly all of the climate model simulations conducted at several international research centers as part of the 4th Assessment of the IPCC.

Glacial retreat is also an example of a changing water cycle, where the supply of water to glaciers from precipitation cannot keep up with the loss of water from melting and sublimation. Glacial retreat since 1850 has been extensive.[13]

Human activities that alter the water cycle include:

agriculture
alteration of the chemical composition of the atmosphere
construction of dams
deforestation and afforestation
removal of groundwater from wells
water abstraction from rivers
urbanization

Effects on climate

The water cycle is powered from solar energy. 86% of the global evaporation occurs from the oceans, reducing their temperature by evaporative cooling. Without the cooling effect of evaporation the greenhouse effect would lead to a much higher surface temperature of 67 °C, and a warmer planet.[14]

Effects on biogeochemical cycling

While the water cycle is itself a biogeochemical cycle,[15] flow of water over and beneath the Earth is a key component of the cycling of other biogeochemicals. Runoff is responsible for almost all of the transport of eroded sediment and phosphorus[16] from land to waterbodies. The salinity of the oceans is derived from erosion and transport of dissolved salts from the land. Cultural eutrophication of lakes is primarily due to phosphorus, applied in excess to agricultural fields in fertilizers, and then transported overland and down rivers. Both runoff and groundwater flow play significant roles in transporting nitrogen from the land to waterbodies.[17] The dead zone at the outlet of the Mississippi River is a consequence of nitrates from fertilizer being carried off agricultural fields and funnelled down the river system to the Gulf of Mexico. Runoff also plays a part in the carbon cycle, again through the transport of eroded rock and soil.[18]

References

^ Arctic Climatology and Meteorology. Precipitation. Retrieved on 2022-10-24.
^ Dr. Art’s Guide to Planet Earth. The Water Cycle. Retrieved on 2022-10-24.
^ National Weather Service Northwest River Forecast Center. Hydrologic Cycle. Retrieved on 2022-10-24.
^ Arctic Climatology and Meteorology. Evaporation. Retrieved on 2022-10-24.
^ Dr. Art’s Guide to Planet Earth. The Water Cycle. Retrieved on 2022-10-24.
^ Arctic Climatology and Meteorology. Sublimation. Retrieved on 2022-10-24.
^ Arctic Climatology and Meteorology. Advection. Retrieved on 2022-10-24.
^ Arctic Climatology and Meteorology. Condensation. Retrieved on 2022-10-24.
^ a b PhysicalGeography.net. CHAPTER 8: Introduction to the Hydrosphere. Retrieved on 2022-10-24.
^ Environmental Literacy Council. Water Cycle. Retrieved on 2022-10-24.
^ a b http://ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/watercycleoceans.html USGS, The Water Cycle: Water Storage in Oceans – Retrieved on 2022-05-14
^ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Climate Change 2022: The Physical Science Basis, WG1 Summary for Policymakers
^ U.S. Geologic Survey. GLACIER RETREAT IN GLACIER NATIONAL PARK, MONTANA. Retrieved on 2022-10-24.
^ Science at NASA. NASA Oceanography: The Water Cycle. Retrieved on 2022-10-24.
^ The Environmental Literacy Council. Biogeochemical Cycles. Retrieved on 2022-10-24.
^ The Environmental Literacy Council. Phosphorus Cycle. Retrieved on 2022-10-24.
^ Ohio State University Extension Fact Sheet. Nitrogen and the Hydrologic Cycle. Retrieved on 2022-10-24.
^ NASA’s Earth Observatory. The Carbon Cycle. Retrieved on 2022-10-24

م/ن

بالتوفيق

وع’ـليكمـٍ آلسلـآمـٍ وآلرح’ـمهـٍ .,.

بآإركـٍ آللهـٍ فيج إخ’ـتي 🙂

ج’ـآري تقييمج + +

ربي يح’ـفظج

ويبارك فيج يارب ..

تسلمين ..

هلَآٍ .,

شح’ـَآلهمْ آلعَربَ عسآهمْ بخَير ( دوْمزِ *~
يزآكمْ آلله ألف خيَر وبآرك الله فيكمَ وصآنكسَ ع هيكْ موضوعِ .,~

اللهَ يحفَظكم ويوَفجكمْ
غلـٍآ

ويبارك فيج

شكرا ع الرد

اللعم اعز الاسلام و المسلمين

التصنيفات
الارشيف الدراسي

مجموعة مصورة للأحرف الإنجليزية Capital and small -تعليم اماراتي

السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته..

مجموعة مصورة

للأحرف الإنجليزية

( Capital and small )

في المرفقات..

م

يتبع

الملفات المرفقة

انتهى..

بالتوفيق جميعا..

الملفات المرفقة

السسلام عليكم
يزاج الله خير
تسسلم يمناج

اقتباس المشاركة الأصلية كتبت بواسطة الطيبة مشاهدة المشاركة
السسلام عليكم
يزاج الله خير
تسسلم يمناج

وعليكم السلام ورحمة الله وبركاته..

اللهم امين يارب..

والله يسلمج..

مشكورة و تسلمني غلاية

لا هنتي

بارك الله فيج الرمش
الف شكر لج

اقتباس المشاركة الأصلية كتبت بواسطة ~غلا الروح~ مشاهدة المشاركة
مشكورة و تسلمني غلاية

لا هنتي

العفو حبيبتي..

نورتي..

اقتباس المشاركة الأصلية كتبت بواسطة ريــ الشمال ــح مشاهدة المشاركة
بارك الله فيج الرمش
الف شكر لج

الله يبارك بعمرك ويحفظك..

الحــــــــــــــــــــــمد لله