This course covers vector and multi-variable calculus. It is the second semester in the freshman calculus sequence. Topics include vectors and matrices, partial derivatives, double and triple integrals, and vector calculus in 2 and 3-space.
How I Met Myself (Адаптированная аудиокнига + PDF, уровень-3, Lower-Intermediate)
Added by: tempter83 | Karma: 28.05 | Black Hole | 14 October 2009
3
Modern, original fiction for learners of English. One icy winter's evening in Budapest, John Taylor is on his way home from the office when a man runs into him and knocks him over. The man turns to say sorry and John is amazed at what he sees: the man is John's double. The double rushes away but leaves no footprints in the snow
A four-level course designed for working adults who need English for work, travel, and socializing. This MultiROM which accompanies the Student's Book offers an interactive wordbank, reading texts from the Student's Book, dictation exercises, and practice activities for the Language focus and Focus on functions sections of the Student's Book.
Added by: huelgas | Karma: 1208.98 | Fiction literature | 26 December 2008
29
End your struggle with the Bard’s prose and indulge in a romantic comedy that’s better than a soap opera. Shakespeare on the Double! Twelfth Night includes an easy-to-understand modern English translation alongside the original Shakespearian text so that you can read only the translation, read the translation with the original text, or tackle the original text, referring only to the translation when you’re stumped. A comprehensive character list describes the traits of each major character, a visual map depicts relationships, and review questions reinforce important information so you won’t miss the action.
"The Bear" by William Faulkner was an extreamly slow paced book. Many of the sentances ran on for two pages or so, and became incomprehensible. Faulkner seems to ramble on aimlessly, failing to reach distinct points. There were some good double meanings in the text, but if this is what you like, look at James Joyce. This was a failure.