An educational cartoon TV series for children aged 5-10. Level A1. The main character, Dora, is a little girl who teaches children basic English phrases while experiencing various adventures.
Dora the Explorer - Yes We Can - Tak, możemy (Polish Edition)
An educational cartoon TV series for children aged 5-10. Level A1. The main character, Dora, is a little girl who teaches children basic English phrases while experiencing various adventures.
The Real Time DVD can either be used in the classroom or for individual study. Each DVD has six episodes. The main focus of each episode is to provide a context for the language in the Real Time sections in the Students’ Book. It would therefore be suitable to watch one episode after having completed one Real Time section.
Each episode is divided into three scenes. There are interactive multiple-choice questions for each scene which you can use while watching. We suggest letting students see the question, watching the scene, then having a class vote on the answer.
Argentina's vibrant, wonderfully idiosyncratic capital, Buenos Aires, is the third largest city in Latin America, yet it is a resolutely human kind of place. Famous for its tango, football and European-style architecture, it also holds hidden gems, including picturesque cobbled neighborhoods, sophisticated shopping and some of the best and most varied cuisine in the whole continent. Cinemas and art galleries, jazz clubs and theatres, atmospheric cafés and antiques markets abound, while exercising or just lazing around in beautifully landscaped parks filled with subtropical vegetation are part of the dynamic yet laid-back porte?o lifestyle
Postmodern Counternarratives - Irony and Audience in the Novels of Paul Auster, Don DeLillo, Charles Johnson, and Tim O'Brien
This book provides a wide-ranging discussion of realism, postmodernism, literary theory and popular fiction before focusing on the careers of four prominent novelists. Despite wildly contrasting ambitions and agendas, all four grow progressively more sympathetic to the expectations of a mainstream literary audience, noting the increasingly neglected yet archetypal need for strong explanatory narrative even while remaining wary of its limitations, presumptions, and potential abuses.