Have you ever read a great classic and come across an unfamiliar word?
There are many editions of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man.
This one is worth the price if you would like to enrich your
vocabulary, whether for self-improvement or for preparation in advance
of entrance examinations. Each page is annotated with a mini-thesaurus
of uncommon words highlighted in the text. Not only will you experience
a great classic, but learn the richness of the English language with
synonyms and antonyms at the bottom of each page.
Skills Builder For Young Learners - Flyers 2 Student's Book + Audio (2000)
Added by: IrinaM | Karma: 469.74 | Exam Materials » YLE | 14 July 2008
177
This exciting new series is designed to develop all four language skills at primary level. The syllabus reflects the language covered in primary courses and material taught around the world. The tasks and activities provide excellent practice in listening, speaking, reading and writing. The series is an ideal supplement to any course at primary level. The books can also be used by pupils who are preparing for the Young Learners Examinations (YLE) as well as other examinations at the same level.
Skills Builder For Young Learners - Flyers 1 Student's Book + Audio (2000)
Added by: IrinaM | Karma: 469.74 | Exam Materials » YLE | 13 July 2008
209
This exciting new series is designed to develop all four language skills at primary level. The syllabus reflects the language covered in primary courses and material taught around the world. The tasks and activities provide excellent practice in listening, speaking, reading and writing. The series is an ideal supplement to any course at primary level. The books can also be used by pupils who are preparing for the Young Learners Examinations (YLE) as well as other examinations at the same level.
Simon Montefiore - Young Stalin
read by James Adams
What makes a Stalin? Was he illegitimate? Was his mother whore or saint? Was Stalin a Tsarist agent or Lenin's chief gangster? Was his most notorious heist planned during his stay in London? Was he to blame for his wife's death? If he really missed the 1917 Revolution, how did he emerge so powerful?
Born in poverty, scarred by his upbringing, exceptional in his studies, this charismatic but dangerous boy was hailed as a romantic poet and trained as a priest but found his mission as fanatical revolutionary. He became the mastermind of bank-robberies, protection-rackets, arson, piracy and murder yet he was, uniquely, part-intellectual, part-brigand. Surprisingly, he is also revealed as a scandalously prolific lover, leaving a trail of mistresses (varying from schoolgirls to noblewomen) and illegitimate children.