اعتذر عن الاغلاق لان الموضوع مكرر
http://www.uae.ii5ii.com/showthread.php?t=64801
الله يحفظج و مرحبا بج بينا ^^
الله يحفظج و مرحبا بج بينا ^^
English novelist, generally considered the greatest of the Victorian period. Dickens’s works are characterized by attacks on social evils, injustice, and hypocrisy. He had also experienced in his youth oppression, when he was forced to end school in early teens and work in a factory. Dickens’s good, bad, and comic characters, such as the cruel miser Scrooge, the aspiring novelist David Copperfield, or the trusting and innocent Mr. Pickwick, have fascinated generations of readers.
"In the little world in which children have their existence, whosoever brings them up, there is nothing so finely perceived and so finely felt, as injustice." (from Great Expectations, 1860-61)
Charles Dickens was born in Landport, Hampshire, during the new industrial age, which gave birth to theories of Karl Marx. Dickens’s father was a clerk in the navy pay office. He was well paid but often ended in financial troubles. In 1814 Dickens moved to London, and then to Chatham, where he received some education. The schoolmaster William Giles gave special attention to Dickens, who made rapid progress. In 1824, at the age of 12, Dickens was sent to work for some months at a blacking factory, Hungerford Market, London, while his father John was in Marshalea debtor’s prison. "My father and mother were quite satisfied," Dickens later recalled bitterly. "They could hardly have been more so, if I had been twenty years of age, distinguished at a grammar-school, and going to Cambridge." Later this period found its way to the novel LITTLE DORRITT (1855-57). John Dickens paid his £40 debt with the money he inherited from his mother; she died at the age of seventy-nine when he was still in prison.
In 1824-27 Dickens studied at Wellington House Academy, London, and at Mr. Dawson’s school in 1827. From 1827 to 1828 he was a law office clerk, and then a shorthand reporter at Doctor’s Commons. After learning shorthand, he could take down speeches word for word. At the age of eighteen, Dickens applied for a reader’s ticket at the British Museum, where he read with eager industry the works of Shakespeare, Goldsmith’s History of England, and Berger’s Short Account of the Roman Senate. He wrote for True Sun (1830-32), Mirror of Parliament (1832-34), and the Morning Chronicle (1834-36). Dickens gained soon the reputation as "the fastest and most accurate man in the Gallery", and he could celebrate his prosperity with "a new hat and a very handsome blue cloak with velvet facings," as one of his friend described his somewhat dandyish outlook. In the 1830s Dickens contributed to Monthly Magazine, and The Evening Chronicle and edited Bentley’s Miscellany. These years left Dickens with lasting affection for journalism and suspicious attitude towards unjust laws. His career as a writer of fiction started in 1833 when his short stories and essays to appeared in periodicals. ‘A Dinner at Poplar Walk’ was Dickens’s first published sketch. It appeared in the Monthly Magazine in December 1833. It made him so proud, that he later told that "I walked down to Westminster Hall, and turned into it for half an hour, because my eyes were so dimmed with joy and pride, that they could not bear the street, and were not fit to be seen there." SKETCHES BY BOZ, illustrated by George Cruikshank, was published in book form in 1836-37. THE POSTHUMOUS PAPERS OF THE PICKWICK CLUB was published in monthly parts from April 1836 to November 1837.
Dickens’s relationship with Maria Beadnell, the daughter of a banker, whom he had courted for four years, ended in 1833. Three years later Dickens married Catherine Hogart, the daughter of his friend George Hogarth, who edited the newly established Evening Chronicle. With Catherine he had 10 children. They separated in 1858. Trying to cure Catherine of her headaches and insomnia, Dickens regularly mesmerised his wife. Some biographers have suspected that Dickens was more fond of Catherine’s sister, Mary, who moved into their house and died in 1837 at the age of 17 in Dickens’s arms. Eventually she became the model for Dora Copperfield. Dickens also wanted to be buried next to her and wore Mary’s ring all his life. Another of Catherine’s sisters, Georgiana, moved in with the Dickenses, and the novelist fell in love with her. Dickens also had a long liaison with the actress Ellen Ternan, whom he had met by the late 1850s.
Dickens’s sharp ear for conversation helped him to create colorful characters through their own words. In his daily writing Dickens followed certain rules: "He rose at a certain time, he retired at another, and, though no precisian, it was not often that arrangements varied. His hours for writing were between breakfast and luncheon, and when there was any work to be done, no temptation was sufficiently strong to cause it to be neglected. The order and regularity followed him through the day. His mind was essentially methodical, and in his long walks, in his recreations, in his labour, he was governed by rules laid down for himself – rules well studied beforehand, and rarely departed from. " (anonymous friend, in Charles Dickens, An Illustrated Anthology, Cresent Books, 1995)
The Pickwick Papers were stories about a group of rather odd individuals and their travels to Ipswich, Rochester, Bath, and elsewhere. It was sold at 1 shilling the installment (1836-37), and opened up a market for similar inexpensive books. Many of Dickens’s following novels first appeared in monthly installments, including OLIVER TWIST (1837-39). It depicts the London underworld and hard years of the foundling Oliver Twist, whose right to his inheritance is kept secret by the villainous Mr. Monks. Oliver suffers in a poorfarm and workhouse. He outrages authorities by asking a second bowl of porridge. From a solitary confinement he is apprenticed to a casket maker, and becomes a member of a gang of young thieves, led by Mr. Fagin. Finally Fagin is hanged at Newgate and Mr. Barnlow adopts Oliver. NICHOLAS NICKELBY (1838-39) was a loosely structured tale of young Nickleby’s struggles to seek his fortune.
David Lean’s dark, atmospheric version of Oliver Twist from 1948 is among the best films made from Dickens’s novels. Lean’s young thieves are as hard and professional as the brutal gang members of Luis Buñuel’s Los Olvidados (1950). Alec Guinness played the old, big-nosed Fagin. The caricature upset some Jews in England, as Dickens’s novel had done one hundred and ten years earlier. The Zionists protested that the character was presented in the same way that Jews were vilified in the Nazi paper Der Sturmer. American critics attacked the film’s alleged anti-Semitism, and cuts were made before it was shown, with twelve minutes missing, in the American theatres. Lean’s stylised Great Expectations (1946), based on Dickens’s novel, had been a great success in the U.S. "Grandfather would have loved it," said Monica Dickens, the granddaughter of the author, of the film. With these works Lean has been considered an authority on Dickens.
A CHRISTMAS CAROL (1843) is one of Dickens’s most loved works, which has been adapted into screen a number of times. The character of Ebenezer Scrooge, the "squeezing, wrenching, grasping, scraping, clutching" miser, has attracted such actors as Seymour Hicks, Albert Finney, Michael Caine, George C. Scott and Alastair Sim. In a pornography version from 1975 Mary Stewart was "Carol Screwge". Historical subjects did not much interest Dickens. BARNABY RUDGE (1841), set at the time of the ‘No Popery’ riots of 1780, and A TALE OF TWO CITIES (1859) are exceptions. The latter was set in the years of the French Revolution. The plot circles around the look-alikes Charles Darnay, a nephews of a marquis, and Sydney Carton, a lawyer, who both love the same woman, Lucy.
Among Dickens’s later works is DAVID COPPERFIELD (1849-50), where he used his own personal experiences of work in a factory. David’s widowed mother marries the tyrannical Mr. Murdstone. David becomes friends with Mr. Micawber and his family."I went in, and found there a stoutish, middle-aged person, in a brown surtout and black tights and shoes, with no more hair upon his head (which was a large one, and very shining) than there is upon an egg, and with a very extensive face, which he turned full upon me. His clothes were shabby, but he had an imposing short-collar on."Dora, David’s first wife, dies and he marries Agnes. He pursues his career as a journalist and later as a novelist.
BLEAK HOUSE (1853) belongs to Dickens’s greatest works of social social criticism. The novel is built around a lawsuit, the classic case of Jarndyce and Jarndyce, which affects all who come into contact with it. Much of the story is narrated in the first person by a young woman, Esther Summerson, the illegitimate daughter of the proud Lady Dedlock and Captain Hawdon. The character of Harold Skimpole, an irresponsinbe and lecherous idler, is said to be based on the poet and journalist Leigh Hunt.
GREAT EXPECTATIONS (1860-61) began as a serialized publication in Dickens’s periodical All the Year Round on December 1, 1860. The story of Pip (Philip Pirrip) was among Tolstoy’s and Dostoyevsky’s favorite novels. G.K. Chesterton wrote that it has "a quality of serene irony and even sadness," which according to Chesterton separates it from Dickens’s other works. "Ours was the marsh country, down by the river, within, as the river wound, twenty miles of the sea. My first most vivid and broad impression of the identity of things, seems to me to have been gained on a memorable raw afternoon towards evening. At such a time I found out for certain, that this bleak place overgrown with nettles was the churchyard; and that Philip Pirrip, late of this parish, and also Georgiana wife of the above, were dead and buried; and that Alexander, Bartholomew, Abraham, Tobias, and Roger, infant children of the aforesaid, were also dead and buried; and that the dark flat wilderness beyond the churchyard, intersected with dykes and mounds and gates, with scattered cattle feeding on it, was the marshes; and that the low leaden line beyond was the river; and that the distant savage lair from which the wind was rushing, was the sea; and that the small bundle of shivers growing afraid of it all and beginning to cry, was Pip."Pip, an orphan, lives with his old sister and her husband. He meets an escaped convict named Abel Magwitch and helps him against his will. Magwitch is recaptured and Pip is taken care of Miss Havisham. He falls in love with the cold-hearted Estella, Miss Havisham’s ward. With the help of an anonymous benefactor, Pip is properly educated, and he becomes a snob. Magwitch turns out to be the benefactor; he dies and Pip’s "great expectations" are ruined. He works as a clerk in a trading firm, and marries Estella, Magwitch’s daughter.
Dickens participated energetically in all forms of the social life of the time, "light and motion flashed from every part of it," wrote his friend and future biographer John Forster. In the 1840s Dickens founded Master Humphrey’s Cloak and edited the London Daily News. He spent much time travelling and campaigning against many of the social evils with his pamphlets and other writings. In the 1850s Dickens was founding editor of Household World and its successor All the Year Round (1859-70). Although Dickens’s works as a novelist are now best remembered, he produced hundreds of essays and edited and rewrote hundreds of others submitted to the various periodicals he edited. Dickens distinguished himself as an essayist in 1834 under the pseudonym Boz. ‘A Visit to Newgate’ (1836) reflects his own memories of visiting his own family in the Marshalea Prison. ‘A Small Star in the East’ reveals the working conditions on mills and ‘Mr. Barlow’ (1869) draws a portrait of an insensitive tutor.
Dickens lived in 1844-45 in Italy, Switzerland and Paris, and from 1860 one his address was at Gadshill Place, near Rochester, Kent, where he lived with his two daughters and sister-in-law. He had also other establishments – Gad’s Hill, and Windsor Lodge, Peckham, which he had rented for Ellen Ternan. His wife Catherine lived at the London house. In 1858-68 Dickens gave lecturing tours in Britain and the United States. By the end of his last American tour, Dickens could hardly manage solid food, subsisting on champagne and eggs beaten in sherry. In an opium den in Shadwell, Dickens saw an elderly pusher known as Opium Sal, who then featured in his mystery novel THE MYSTERY OF EDWIN DROOD. He collapsed at Preston, in April 1869, after which his doctors put a stop to his public performances. Dickens died at Gadshill on suddenly of a stroke on June 8, 1870. Some of his friends later thought the readings killed him. Dickens had asked that he should be buried "in an inexpensive, unostentatious, and strictly private manner".
OUR MUTUAL FRIEND (1865), the second last novel Dickens wrote, started with a murder mystery. In the opening chapter a drowned man is found floating on Thames. The Italian writer Italo Calvino has called the novel "an unqualified masterpiece, both in its plot and in the way it is written." The Mystery of Edwin Drood was published in 1870, but Dickens did not manage to finish it. He planned to produce it in 12 monthly parts, but completed only six numbers. The story is chiefly set in the cathedral city of Cloisterham and opens in an opium den. "Ye’ve smoked as many as five since ye come in at midnight," the woman goes on, as he chronically complains. "Poor me, poor me, my head is so bad. Them two come in after ye. Ah, poor me, the business is slack, is slack! Few Chinamen about the Docks, and fewer Lascars, and no ships coming in, these say! Here’s another ready for ye, deary."The choirmaster of the cathedral, John Jaspers, lives a double life, as an opium addict and a respected member of society. His ward, Edwin Drood, disappears on Christmas Eve, after a quarrel with Neville Landless. However, there is no trace of Edwin’s body. Dick Datchery, a disguised detective arrives to investigate the case. "It is the complex nature of Dickens’s evil men, not their merited fate, that makes them the peers of Dostoyevsky’s lost souls. For this reason, I have always been irked by the critical treatment of his last novel as a pure whodunit. ”Endings” were not his strong suit." (Angus Wilson in The New York Times, March 1, 1981)
For further reading:Charles Dickens by Jane Smiley (2017); Dickens and the 1830s by Kathryn Chittick (1991); Dickens by Peter Acroyd (1990); The Invisible Woman: The Story of Nelly Ternan and Charles Dickens by Claire Tomalin (1990); Dickens on America and the Americans, edited by Michael Slater (1979); Dickens and Charity by Norris Pope (1979); Charles Dickens as Familiar Essayist by Gordon Spence (1977); The World of Charles Dickens by Angus Wilson (1970); Dickens the Craftsman: Strategies of Presentation, edited by Robert B. Partlow, Jr. (1970); The Inimitable Dickens by A.E. Dyson (1970); Dickens at Work by Kathleen Tillotson and John Butt (1957); Charles Dickens: His Tragedy and Triumph by Edgar Johnson (1953); The Life of Charles Dickens by John Forster(1872-74) – Dickens links: The Dickens Page – Charles Dickens Gad’s Hill Place – See also: Monica Dickens and friedly rival William Makepeace Thackeray – Trivia: Dickens suffered periodically insomnia like many authors, among them Franz Kafka
Selected works:
SKETCHES BY BOZ, 1836
THE POSTHUMOUS PAPERS OF THE PICKWICK CLUB, 1836-37 – Pickwick-kerhon jälkeenjääneet paperit (suom. Eino Palola) – film 1954, dir. by Noel Langley
THE ADVENTURES OF OLIVER TWIST, 1837-39 – Oliver Twist (suom. Maini Palosuo) – films: 1916, dir. by James Young; 1921, dir. by Millard Webb; 1922, dir. by Frank Lloyd, starring Jackie Coogan, Lon Chaney; 1933, dir. by Willam Cowen; 1948, directed by David Lean, starring Alec Guinness, Robert Newton; musical film 1968: Oliver!, dir. by Carol Reed, starring Ron Moody, Oliver Reed; television film 1982, dir. by Clive Donner, starring George C. Scott, Tim Curry; Oliver and Company, animated feature 1988, dir. by George Scribner; animation film 1991, dir. by Fernandez Ruiz; Twist, 2022, dir. by Jacob Tierney, starring Joshua Close, Nick Stahl, Gary Farmer, Michèle-Barbara Pelletier; Boy Called Twist, 2022, dir. by Tim Greene, starring Jarrid Geduld; 2022, dir. by Roman Polanski, starring Ben Kingsley, Barney Clark, Harry Eden, Jamie Forman
THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES OF NICHOLAS NICKLEBY, 1838-39 – Nicholas Nicklebyn elämä ja seikkailut (suom. Kersti Juva) – films: 1947, dir. by Alberto Cavalcanti – can’t compare with the Royal Shakespeare Company’s 8,5 hour stage version; television film 2022, dir. by Stephen Whittaker, starring John Dallimore, James D’Arcy, Sophia Myles, Diana Kent; 2022, dir. by Douglas McGrath, starring Stella Gonet, Andrew Havill, Henry McGrath, Hugh Mitchell, Poppy Rogers
THE OLD CURIOSITY SHOP, 1841– films: 1978 musical version Mr. Quilp, retitled The Old Curiosity Shop, dir. by Michael Tuchner, starring Anthony Newley, David Hemmings – remade for cable in 1995, dir. by Kevon Connor, starring Peter Ustinov, James Fox
BARNABY RUDGE, 1841
AMERICAN NOTES, 1842
THE CHRISTMAS CARROL, 1843 – Joululaulu (suom. mm. Tero Valkonen, Marja Helanen-Ahtola, ym.) / Saiturin jouluyö (suom. Jukka Torvinen) – films: Scrooge: or Marley’s Ghost, 1901, dir. by W.R. Booth; A Christmas Carol, 1908; A Christmas Caril, 1910; Scrooge, 1913, dir. by Leedham Bantock; A Christmas Carol, 1914, dir. by Harold Shaw; Scrooge, 1922, dir. by George Wynn; Scrooge, 1923, dir. by Edwin Greenwood; Scrooge, 1928, dir. by Hugh Croise; A Dickensian Fantasy, 1933, dir. by Aveling Ginever; Scrooge, 1935, dir. by Henry Edwards; A Christmas Caril, 1938, dir. by Edwin L. Marin; Leyenda de Navidad, 1947, dir. by Manuel Tamayo; Scrooge, 1951, dir. by Brian Desmond-Hurst – original British title Scrooge; A Christmas Carol, 1960, dir. by Robert Hardford-Davis; Scrooge, 1970, dir. by Ronald Neame, starring Albert Finney, Alec Guinness, The Passions of Carol, 1975, dir. by Amanda Barton; television film 1984, dir. by Clive Donner, starring George C. Scott, Nigel Davenport; modernized film adaptation under the title Scrooged, dir. by Richard Donner, starring Bill Murray, Karen Allen; The Muppet Christmas Carol, 1992, dir. by Brian Henson
THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES OF MARTIN CHUZZLEWIT, 1843-44
THE CHIMES, 1845 – Uudenvuoden kellot (suom. Werner Anttila) / Kellot
THE CRICKET ON THE HEART, 1846 – Kotisirkka (suom. Verner Anttila) / ؤlن rakasta minua vielن (suom. Tuikku Ljunberg)
PICTURES FROM ILTALY, 1846
DOMBEY AND SON, 1848 – Dombey ja poika (suom. Aino Tuomikoski) – films: film 1919, dir. by Maurice Elvey, starring Norman McKinnel; TV series 1969, dir. by Joan Craft; TV series 1983, dir. by Rodney Bennett; TV film Dombais et fils, 2022, dir. by Laurent Jaoui
DAVID COPPERFIELD, 1849 – (suomentanut mm. vuonna 1924 J.A. Hollo) – films: 1935, dir. by George Cukor, starring Freddie Bartholomew, W.C. Fields, Frank Lawton, Lionel Barrymore; television film 1970, dir. by Delbert Mann, starring Robin Phillips, Susan Hampshire, Michael Redgrave, Edith Evans; television film 1999, dir. by Emilia Fox, Pauline Quirke, Maggie Smith, John Normington, Daniel Radcliffe; television film 2022, dir. by Peter Medak, starring Michael Richards, Eileen Atkins, Anthony Andrews, Frank MacCusker, Hugh Dancy; TV drama 2022, dir. by Ambrogio Lo Giudice, starring Giorgio Pasotti
A CHILD’S HISTORY OF ENGLAND, 1851-53
BLEAK HOUSE, 1853 – Kolea talo (suom. Kersti Juva) – films: 1920, dir. by Maurice Elvey, starring Constance Collier, Berta Gellardi, E. Vivian Reynolds; 1922, dir. by H.B. Parkinson, starring Betty Doyle, Sybil Thorndike, Stacey Gaunt; 1926, dir. by Lee De Forest, Widgey R. Newman; television drama 2022, dir. by Justin Chadwick, Susanna White, starring Anna Maxwell Martin, Denis Lawson, Carey Mulligan, Patrick Kennedy, Gillian Anderson, Charles Dance
HARD TIMES, 1854
LITTLE DORRITT, 1855-57 – Pikku Dorritt (suom. Helena Kesäniemi) –films: TV film La petite Dorrit, 1961, dir. by Pierre Badel; film 1988, dir. by Christine Eszart, starring Derek Jacobi, Alec Guinness TV mini-series 2022, teleplay by Andrew Davies
THE TALE OF TWO CITIES, 1859 – Kaksi kaupunkia (suom. Helka Varho) – films: 1917, dir. by Frank Lloyd; 1935, dir. by Jack Conway, starring Ronald Colman, Elisabeth Allan, Basil Rathbone; 1958, dir. by Ralph Thomas, starring Dirk Bogarde, Dorothy Tutin, Cecil Parker; television film 1980, dir. by Peter Cushing
THE UNCOMMERCIAL TRAVELLER, 1860
REPRINTED PIECES, 1861
GREAT EXPECTATIONS, 1861 – Loistava tulevaisuus (suom. Maini Palosuo) / Suuria odotuksia (suom. Alpo Kupiainen) – films: 1917, dir. by Robert G. Vignola; 1934, dir. by Stuart Walkerr; 1946, directed by David Lean, starring John Mills, Valerie Hobson; 1998, dir. by Alfonso Cuarón, starring Gwyneth Paltrow, Ethan Hawke, Anne Bancroft
OUR MUTUAL FRIEND, 1865
THE MYSTERY OF EDWIN DROOD, 1870 – Edwin Droodin arvoitus (suom. Risto Lehmusoksa) – films: 1935, dir. by Stuart Walker, starring Claude Rains, Douglass Montgomery, Heather Angel; 1993, dir. by Timothy Forder, starring Robert Powell, Michelle Evans; 1993, dir. by Timothy Forder, starring Gareth Arnold, Gemma Craven, Michelle Evans, Barry Evans, Ronald Fraser, Emma Healey
SPEECHES, LETTERS AND SAYINGS, 1870
COLLECTED WORKS EDITIONS: The Charles Dickens Edition, 21 vols., (1867-75); Nonesuch Edition, 23 vols., (1937-38); The New Oxford Illustrated Dickens, 21 vols. (1947-58); The Clarendon Dickens (in progress, 1966-)
TO BE READ AT DUSK, 1898
MISCELLANEOUS PAPERS, 1908 (2 vols.)
CHARLES DICKENS’S UNCOLLECTED WRITINGS FROM HOUSEHOLD WORDS, 1970 (ed. by Harry Stone)
THE SUPERNATURAL SHORT STORIES OF CHARLES DICKENS, 1979 (edited by Michael Hayes)
A DECEMBER VISION, 1986
DICKENS’S JOURNALISM, vol. I, 1993
DICKENS’S JOURNALISM, vol. 2, 1997
THE LETTERS OF CHARLES DICKENS, 1965-2017 (the Pilgrim edition; 12 vols.)
نرقب الزود !
شكرا لك
السَلاْمَ علَيْكُم وَرحْمُة الله وبَركْآتهُ
حَلْ صفحْة 30 مادة الانجَليزْي للصف الثامن ْ , , !
{ الاجابة باللون الاحمر }
1 never am
am never
2 plays sports often
often plays sports
3 eat in the restaurant often
often eat in the the restaurant
4- sometimes I visit
I visit sometimes
5 every day pray
pray every day
6 every afternoon in the library
in the library every afternoon
7 one time
once
8 weeks
week
9 how usually
how often
10 you do
do you do
11 –
the
12 to talk
talk
13 are we
we are
14 about
of
15 how to
how
16 last
next
17 the
to the
18 of saudi arabia
saudi arabia
19 that
about
20 have
–
تسلمييييييييييييييييييييييييين
مشكورة اختي عالحل,,
بارك الله فيج..
مع الترجمة في المرفقات
United Arab Emirates is one of the best countries that you can go to them for tourism and enjoy your time, the capital of UAE is Abu Dhabi, which is characterized by a lot of activities, wonderful for enjoying the best times, such as Sheikh Zayed Mosque, Emirates Palace Hotel, Marina Mall, Corniche Abu Dhabi, Yas Marina Circuit hotel, Yas Marina Circuit, the world of Ferrari, heritage village, Qasr Al Sarab resort, Desert Islands Resort, Jebel Hafeet, Mbozorh green, and many others.
The Dubai Tower is famous for the presence of Khalifa and is the tallest tower in the world, and the global village, and the Madinat Jumeirah and Burj Al Arab, Dubai Mall and also is the largest mall in the world, as you can see the dancer’s largest fountain in the world, Dubai Mall Aquarium.
In Sharjah there are many museums to visit, and in Ajman might like cheap shopping in their stores and in Umm Al Quwain and Ras Al Khaimah and Fujairah, you can enjoy the landscapes and ancient monuments and ancient.
^.^
الصراحة تقرير رائع..
بارك الله فيج اختي..
واسمحيلي حطيت جزء منه في الموضوع نفسه..
وتم التقييم ++
مــــشـــكــــوورة"
The importance of science of the individual and society ..
قال الله تعالى: (اقرأ باسم ربك الذي خلق خلق الإنسان من علق اقرأ وربك الأكرم الذي علم بالقلم علم الإنسان ما لم يعلم )
Thus Allah ordered His Prophet Muhammad, peace be on him and his family and him and the command of Allah to His Messenger ordered him and his nation because it is front of them and their leader to God Almighty and this demonstrates the importance of science and the importance of learning it does not equal who know and those who do not know that the worship of God is not aware of
Like walking in the deserts by ways other than no evidence and this must of everyone to seek knowledge and application of knowledge is obligatory eye on who needs it and the duty enough to those who did not need the slaves of Allah seek knowledge for knowledge is light and guidance, ignorance, darkness and misguidance Seek knowledge it with faith in the elevation in the world and the next it is the legacy of the Prophets peace be upon them that the prophets did not inherit dirhams and dinars, but inherited the knowledge they have inherited the flag is taken may take luck and a multitude of their inheritance, but man is proud, if God be with the knowledge to be an heir to the Messenger of Allah may Allah bless him and his family and him that science better of money and the greatest reward and enduring interest Seek knowledge, let your tongue Believe in others because the implications of science remains after the courtyard of his family Scientists rabbis still monuments commendable and their way Mothorh and their pursuit of commendable and reminded them brought that mentioned in the councils filled councils praise them and pray for them even said good deeds and morality high were role models of people, people in need to scientists more than they need food and drink and the marriage because scientists are the ones who Ydlewnhm the law of God, no life for man, but to do God’s law and scientists to spread the knowledge in various ways, either in council or in writing, either in sermons in mosques and methods of dissemination of science many known that the pursuit of knowledge of the best because it is these high demands, especially in our time which many people when asked the world and the flocking and many where readers knowledgeable without scholars working the fruit of science is to work and the call to God and said the Prophet peace be upon him God we know what benefit us and taught us what Anfna and increased knowledge.
ابا اشوف ردودكم الحلوة
حل ص 26 و 27 و 28 و 29 و 30 و 31و 32 في كتاب students book
و حل صفحة 22 و 23 و 24 و 25 و 26و 27 في work book
ارجووووووو المساااعدةةة
حل الوحده الأولى كاملة
حلل صفحة 16
______________________
2 .. Am I
3 .. Next
4 .. _
5 .. To me
6 .. about
7 .. how to
8 .. that
9.. important points
10 .. of China
11 .. Lebanese
12 .. each
13 .. starts
14 .. Are there any
15 .. very large lake
16 .. vote
17 .. does it take
18 .. by
19 .. Anne Hathaway in 1582
20 .. There are
حل صفحه 17 في الكتاب الملون كامله
1>>
الاجابة الأولى و الأخيرهـ ..
2>>
– I am going to study Grammer
– I am going to larn about Daily life
– I am going to study scince
b
– No I am not
– yes he is
– No we are not
table 3 :: الجدول
what
where
when
How
Why
D {{
I am going to shop next week
I am study English now
I did my homework yesterday
e {{ هذا السؤال يتحدث عن أشياء خاطئه في هذه الجمل ..
1 – بدون to
2 – بدون us
3 – to بعد كلمة explain
4 – بدون to
حل ص 18 الكتاب الملون ..
ص18
B
1-Ö
2- لا تضعي علامة
3-Ö
4- لا تضعي علامة
5- لا تضعي علامة
6-Ö
7-Ö
8-Ö
9-Ö
10-Ö
11-Ö
12-لا تضعي علامة
13- لا تضعي علامة
14-Ö
15-Ö
16-Ö
17-Ö
C
1-Make the Mostof Your Lessons
2-How can youlearn more in lessons ? Here are three ideas
3-4
4-31
5-2
D
1-Math-Geography-History
2-20Centry
3-KSA-Brazile
4-Portuguese
5-Portuguese
E
1-write a sommery .
2- prepare yourlesson .
3- ask the teacheror friend if I don’t anderstand some thing .
في ص20 الوحدة الاولى
Iam ………… . Iam a good student . I ask my self ((What am I going to learn today)). before I go
to school .Then every day ,after School,I write a summery of my lessons. Finally,when I have trouble
understanding,I get from my frinds or my teacher.I works hard and is a successful student
ص21
مسوينtime table
ولازم احنا بعد انسوي time table
math
science
sport
break1
english
arabic
break2
geography
arabic
الحين البرقراف رقم 1 اخر شي
we have diffrent subjects every day
before th break 1then sport we have math
after the break we have then arabic
after the we have then arapic
حل الوحدة الثانية منworkbook
29
5-9-3-6-8-2-4-10-1–7
30
1.stapler
2.paperclip
3.thumb tack
4.scissors
5.stamp
6.pencil holder
7.calculator
8.clipboard
9.calendar
B
4-2-1-6-5-3-8-7
C
1. someone who sells clothes works in the retail
2.someone who grws crops works in the agriculture
3.someone who drives a taxi works in the transport
31
A
1.good
2.better
3.worse
4.worse and bettea
B
1.yesterday Iwas ill . taday Tam worse
2.my drawing is worse than yours
3.the wather is good tody
منقوووول لتعم الفائده
تسسلمين عالحل اختي..
بارك الله في جهودج , ننتظر المزيد
و أنا لو كنت اعرف الاجوبة كنت عطيتج بس و الله ما عندي
حل كتاب الوروك بوك الوحدة 4 .. xD ..
وشووف هذإأ بعدد ,,
فهرس شامل لمواضيع اللغه الإنكليزيه (ملخصات,اوراق عمل ,امتحانات) وكل مايخص القسم
فيه كل شـى =مر عليه !!
وبالتـوفيق لك إأآخوووى .. ^_^
" أوراق عمــل "
******
"امتــحانــات "
نموذج امتحان للصف الثامن الفصل الدراسي الثالث
حصري :- نموذج امتحان امسا لمادة اللغة الانجليزية لمجلس أبوظبي للتعليم 2022
امتحان نهاية الفصل الدراسي الثاني 2022 , 2022 مع الحل , اللغة الانجليزية , الثامن
امتحان انجليزي للصف الثامن …~
امتحانات انجليزي الفصل الثاالث امتحانات وحلول رووووعة تندم لو ما دخلت
امتحان انجليزي الفصل الثالث
حصري:-امتحان مادة اللغة الانجليزية مع نموذج الإجابة للفصل الدراسي الثالث لمجلس أبوظبي
امتحان تجريبي للغة الانجليزية (الفصل الثاني)
نموذج امتحان Grade 8 / الفصل الثالث / انجليزي / للصف الثامن ..
تدريب لإمتحان reading
امتحان اللغة الانجليزية الصف الثامن الفصل الثاني تجريبي
writting exam 8
" تــقــاريــر وبــحــوث "
بحث عن المجتمع بالانجليزي للصف الثامن
تقرير عن الصحه بالعربي والأنجليزي
تقرير healthy food /un heathy
تقرير بالـ English عن التلفاز بالانكليزي
موضوع ( why i want learn english )
Thomas Edison
العادات والتقاليد في دولة الامارات…لا تبخلون علينا
ابا تقرير عن deforestation
Health benefits of fasting
موضوع عنchewing gum
يــتــبــع …^^
Paragraph about education in UAE
" بــوربــويــنــت "
مشروع الوحدة – بوربوينت عن إنجازات الإمارات
بوربوينت عن الشيخ زايد , powerpoint about shaikh Zayed
بوربوينت Wild Weather , الوحدة الثانية الصف الثامن
بوربوينت الانجليزي
POWER POINT ABOUT COMMUNITY SERVICE
يــتــبــع …^^
مراجعة , مذكرة اللغة الانجليزية , الثامن
" أخــرى "
قواعد انجليزي للصف الثامن