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Tu:Do you live(27)......in........the city?
Lan:Yes.I live in Buon Me Thuot city.
Tu:How Many(28)..............people........does your family have?
Lan:There are four.My father,my mother,my sister and me.
Tu:(29)........which........school do you go to?
Lan:I go to Luong The Vinh junior high school.
Tu:Is there a police station near your house?
Lan:Yes,there(30)....is.........
EIFFEL TOWER(chọn lấy ý nhé bạn,không nên viết dài,nên tự lọc ý và viết theo ý của riêng mk thì hơn ha^^)
If I had a chance to visit one famous place in the world ,I would go to Paris. Paris is a beautiful place.I don't know why I like it so much. I have not had the chance to visit it before, therefore it is my dream destination. However, some people might think visiting this capital is an ordinary thing and could happen. Personally, it is more than a possible thing.I would like to visit the Eiffel Tower which is one of the famous landmarks in France. I want to eat in its prestigious restaurants and bars. In addition, I would visit the Louver Museum and enjoy discovering history. I also would like to visit La Sorbonne University. This university is the oldest educational institutions in modern France. I would like to walk in Champselysee Avenue and watch sunset from there.
Bạn tham khảo :)
If I had the chance to visit one famous place, it would be Paris. Paris is a must see city. I have not had the chance to visit it before, therefore it is my dream destination. However, some might think visiting this capital is an ordinary thing and could happen. Personally, it is more than a possible thing.
I would like to visit the Eiffel Tower which is one of the famous landmarks in France. I want to eat in its prestigious restaurants and bars. In addition, I would visit the Louver Museum and enjoy discovering history. I also would like to visit La Sorbonne University. This university is the oldest educational institutions in modern France. I would like to walk in Champselysée Avenue and watch sunset from there.
Another reason why I would like to visit Paris is to meet my aunt Nawal. My aunt Nawal left my country three years before I was born. She got married to a French man and moves there. I have never seen her in my life, therefor, visiting Paris would give me the chance to see my aunt. I also want to see my parental grandfather Pierre. My father was a French citizen before he applied to the Kuwaiti nationality. I have always wanted to visit my father's country and meet my French relatives. In addition, the most important reason I would visit Paris for is to meet the Italian actress Sophia Loren. She lives in Paris and welcomes anyone who wishes to visit her. This women has been a miraculous person for many years. I would like to visit her, take pictures, and eat lunch in her house. She wouldn't refuse, I suppose.
Summing up, I would like to visit Paris for many reasons. First, to visit Eiffel Tower, its fancy restaurants, La Sorbonne, and the Louver Museum. Second, to visit my aunt and relatives. Finally, to meet my favourite Italian actress.
New York city:
New York City is one of the US cities that is located south of the USA. The city is one of the largest centers of communication in the state of America, and one of the largest gates to receive immigration in America, and the largest centers of trade, industry, finance. And also one of the largest cultural centers in the world containing many museums, art halls and theaters. The city has many buildings that differ in its architectural designs, with wooden buildings. The tourism sector is one of the most important sectors in New York City, with more than forty one foreign and domestic tourists per year. It includes many historical, tourist and religious sites such as Broadway, Times Square, Statue of Liberty. It is really a beautiful and wonderful destination that people should visit.
#tranhuyentuanh
chucbanhoctot
Hello everyone, today I'd like to tell you some information about types and sources of energy. Energy is classified into two main groups: renewable and non-renewable.
The energy generated from natural sources such as the sun, wind, rain, and tides is called renewable energy. They are plentiful and can be generated again and again. They also have low carbon emissions so they are considered green and environment-friendly. Moreover, using renewable energy can reduce your electricity bills. Unfortunately, solar energy can be only used during the daytime but not during night or the rainy season. Geothermal energy also can bring toxic chemicals beneath the earth's surface to the top and can create environmental changes.
Non-renewable energy is the energy taken from other sources that are available on earth.They are limited and will run out in the future. They can't be re-generated in a short time.Fossil fuels - natural gas, oil and coal - are examples of them. They are cheap and easy to use. However, when burnt, they release toxic gases in the air so they cause serious environmental changes such as global warming. And the important thing is that non-renewable sources will expire someday.
My neighbourhood is in the suburbs of Quang Ngai city . I like living here because of many interesting things in my neighbourhood . There are many tall buildings and big houses here. My neighbourhood also has many stores,two markets, a post office, a bank , a stadium so it is very convenient for local people . There are many trees and spaces here so the air here is very fresh . In my neighbourhood there is a big flower field with many kinds of flowers, therefore it is very beautiful in the spring. Morever the people here are friendly and helpful with these reasons . The visitors always come to visit my neighbourhood and they want to stay here longer
1. Write about your holiday/ travel experiences in a famous city.
My first visit to Paris was a remarkable experience, which I will never forget. I booked the Dover-Calais ferry and drove with my wife from London in the cold Christmas weather. We intended to stay until the New Year in a hotel located in a suburb of Paris and visit the city every day.
It was a great feeling to arrive in Paris and see the city of light – a modern city with a very deep sense of history. I will never forget when I first drove through, passing the canals and seeing the monuments. It was like a huge open-air museum. It was love at first sight.
It was dark in the evening, Christmas lights illuminating the whole city. It was bright, almost like daytime. The streets were very busy, full of shoppers marching from one shop to another. I was fascinated seeing The Palais Garnier, which is the Paris Opera House. I parked my car in a small one way street nearby. When we reached the main road, there was an underground station with a big, lit-up sign displaying the word ‘Métropolitain’. I did not make note of the road name, as I thought that the name of the station would be sufficient for finding my car again. We visited the Opera house and walked towards Place de la Concorde. We then walked back to find our car. I located what looked like exactly the same ‘Métropolitain’ sign that I had noted in my head, but it was not the right street.
I became anxious and confused. I approached people who were passing by. Some just ignored me. I told a French man in English that we were looking for ‘Métropolitain’ station. He pointed towards the station. I asked an American couple who were tourists. The guy said, ‘why don’t you go inside the station and find out?’ I approached the woman behind the counter and asked her the same question. She said, “c’ est Métropolitain”. I repeated, “but this is not the same.” She laughed, “Tous sont métros de Paris, ils sont tous le Métropolitain.” She continued in broken English, “All … Métropolitain.”
I finally realised my mistake and understood that the ‘Métropolitain’ sign was the symbol for all metro stations in Paris, not the name of one station! This was just the beginning of our nightmare. How were we going to find the car? It took us nearly over two hours walking through many streets that all looked the same. I wondered whether to call the police. It was a miracle that I finally managed to find my car.
It was late in the evening and we were hungry. We decided to eat in a recommended Lebanese restaurant in a street very close to the Champs-Élysées. We parked close by, so that I could watch my car easily. Every now and then I looked through the window. Suddenly I saw a car at the top of the road shaking back and forth. It was stationary, but was moving up and down. After a minute or so, I saw the car in the front come out and leave. The waiter saw my astonishment and said, ”The cars in Paris are parked bumper to bumper – it’s difficult to park, and impossible to leave.”
We were staying in Épinay-sur-Seine in the north of Paris, 11.3 km from the city centre. The next morning, we walked around the small town. It was Christmas and all the shops were closed. We were happy with our hotel, but we decided to check the prices of other local hotels. I saw a very nice building marked ‘Hotel de Ville’. I approached the building, but the door was closed. After a few minutes a man opened a window. I asked him, “how much is it per night?”. He replied, ”Qu’est-ce que vous voulez?” I repeated my question. He simply said, ”Il est fermé”. I could not understand him. I asked him again, “I just want to know the prices”. He shouted, ”Il est Noël. Le bureau est fermé” and closed the window. We wondered what kind of hotel this was and left.
When we were in the centre of Paris, I saw another Hotel de Ville. It was a magnificent large building that looked like a palace. I suggested to my wife that it was possibly a five-star branch of the same hotel. It was only when I visited the tourist office to get directions to various sightseeing places that I found out the Hotel de Ville is actually the city’s municipal office!
We stayed in Paris for ten days and had a fantastic time. I loved everything about this romantic city and vowed to never hesitate to come back to experience it again and again. But I promised myself that I would learn the language!
2. Write about ways of making your school greener.
1) Start a green team: Join forces with other eco-conscious students to form a Green Team that evaluates the school’s environmental programs and brainstorms innovative ways to improve them. Green Team members can initiate a school recycling program, present environmental education workshops, or lobby the school board to replace existing light bulbs with energy-saving CFLs.
2) Ban bus idling: A recent Yale University study found that students who ride a school bus are exposed to up to 15 times more particulate pollution than average. Why? The answer lies in the practice of bus idling. School buses line up and wait in front of the school with the engines running, filling up with harmful particulate pollution that will stay with you throughout your ride. Bus idling wastes gas, contributes to air pollution and global warming, and is damaging to our health. Make sure your school has a policy in place to ban it.
3) Use paper wisely: Try to avoid using excess amounts of paper at school. Be sure to use all of the sheets in a notebook before starting the next one, use the double-sided feature for printers and copiers, and send text messages to friends instead of passing notes.
4) Clean up: Does your school use a bucket-load of chemical cleaners to clean and disinfect classrooms? If so, ask them to make a switch to eco-friendly cleaners that are better for the environment and non-toxic for the students, teachers, secretaries and administrators who spend their day there. Order the free guide from the Healthy Schools Campaign called “Green Clean Schools” and pass it on to your school administrator.
5) Save on supplies: Before you head to the store to buy new pencils, notepads and binders for school, check to see what’s hiding in your desk drawer from last year.
Hopefully these will help you or your child involved in bringing green ideas to the classroom.
Writing a holiday postcard
One of the last things you hear from your friends or neighbours as you go away on holiday is "Send us a postcard!"
It's one of those great holiday traditions, almost as "British" as a bucket and a spade on a beach. We send postcards (often on the last day of the holiday) to tell our friends what a great time we're having.
Holiday postcards have three main characteriss. They're short, positive (even if it's raining) and predictable in their content.
Here's a quick guide to writing a postcard. Choose any one of the adjectives to complete your sentences.
Hi (name of friend / neighbour / colleague)
We're having a great / wonderful / fantas / fabulous time here in ......
The weather is hot / sunny / perfect and we're spending our days on the beach / sightseeing / relaxing / exploring the local area / by the pool.
The food is interesting / spicy / pretty good and the other people hare are (nationality), friendly / unfriendly / great.
See you on (day you get back)
Love/Wish you were here/ Best wishes
(your name)
My name is Quyen. I am in class 7A. If I become the president of an environmental club, firstly I will encourage students to go to school by bike or bus. It will be very friendly to the environment. Next, I will talk to teachers at school about putting recycling bins in every classroom. We can reuse or sell the things in these bins. Finally, I will organize the secondhand item exchange festival where students can swap their old items with their friends instead of throwing them away. I think I will be a good club president.
We arrived back to Da Nang from an awesome long weekend with the girls in Nha Trang with an extra person. Our brother Quan had joined us on the return flight. He would stay in Da Nang with us for a week before heading home to An Lao to visit the family. This gave us an excuse to do a little sightseeing, as there were a number of sights he had not yet seen in Da Nang. When the siblings grew and became adults, they chose different cities to go off to school and work. Diem and her older brother Kevin came to Da Nang, the closest of the major cities to An Lao, and Quan, Hai, and Luan chose Saigon.
It gave us an opportunity to show Quan some things that I quite frankly hadn’t seen in awhile myself, and some places we frequent regularly. The rainy season was long in retreat, and it was now warm sunny days with the occasional evening shower. Da Nang is so incredibly beautiful in the spring. Not un Georgia. The first stop on the list was of course the Lady Buddha. The beautiful statue that looks down upon the beach and sea and brings luck to the local fisherman.
BUÔN MA THUỘT — I arrived in Buôn Ma Thuột, the capital of the Central Highlands province of Đắk Lắk and fondly referred to as the “Queen of Coffee”, after an eight-hour bus ride.
What really stuck with me after the trip was just how friendly and open the people were. Whether it was the motorbike taxi driver who enthusiasally spoke about his homeland and the interesting places I should visit, or the kind, loquacious hotel owner couple who shared their story and allowed me to stay past the checkout time.
Traffic jams were conspicuous by their absence, and locals were just pleasant to be around with.
“I think the people here are honest and natural compared to those in other cities," said Nguyễn Thị Ngọc Hân, a tourist from Hà Nội who was visiting Buôn Ma Thuột for the first time.
“Things here are not too commercial and have managed to retain their authenity.”
The second thing that struck me was the coffee, especially since I have been drinking coffee my whole life. The first time I took a sip of Buôn Ma Thuột coffee, its strong, bitter taste made me flinch. But then I found its aroma ening and its rich aftertaste lingering.
Its red basal soil makes Đắk Lắk an ideal place for growing coffee, and it accounts for a lion’s share of the country’s production.
Not surprisingly, coffee is a big part of the city’s culture and locals are proud of their high-quality brews. Everywhere I went I would see a coffee shop filled with people enjoying their morning cuppa before work.
A number of the city’s attractions are also linked to coffee.
"The city is living with the coffee,” Marian Takac, a Slovakia tourist, said.
“I can now see why it’s called the coffee capital of Việt Nam."
Buôn Ma Thuột is not all that interesting for tourists, was the locals’refrain, but I thought they were selling themselves short since there seemed to be so many interesting places to visit and things to do that one could easily spend a week there without feeling bored.
Trung Nguyên Coffee Village is a popular tourist attraction. It belongs to the Trung Nguyên Corporation and visitors can drink coffee in cafes with traditional Central Highlands architecture, take pictures of a miniature waterfall and see Central Highlands cultural artefacts.
Another attraction is the World Coffee Museum, which has numerous coffee-related artefacts from around the world: vintage coffee containers and cups, equipment and merchandise and traditional harvest tools of the Central Highlands.
Over the years many eco-tourism sites have emerged, such as KoTam Eco Tourism area. These offer visitors a chance to immerse themselves in the rich culture of the Central Highlands, see the greenery and waterfalls and lakes, wear traditional outfits, listen to traditional musical performances, and sample traditional foods and drinks roasted jungle fowl, cơm lam (sky rice grilled in bamboo shoots served with sesame) and rượu cần (fermented rice wine in earthen jugs, drank through long bamboo tubes).
Speaking of cuisine, bún đỏ (red rice noodles) is an absolute must-try. Mostly served in the afternoon and evening at street stalls around the city, the dish’s most unique characteris is the noodle, which is dyed a distinctive red colour from the broth made with grounded cashew.
Topped with crab roe, minced meat and fried onion, it is a tasty and filling dinner for around VNĐ30,000 (US$1.3).
To truly experience the traditional ethnic ambience of Buôn Ma Thuột, one must pay a visit to Buôn Akõ Dhông (Upstream village), which many locals think has been best able to maintain the area’s traditional roots.
A 20-minute motorbike ride from the city brings me to a place with a curious sight: modern houses situated next to traditional Central Highlands long houses, some turning their longhouses into restaurants and cafes.
One café I went into was filled with traditional local items such as gongs and jugs.
Majes natural beauty
"The city is fun but if you really want to experience the best that Buôn Ma Thuột has to offer, you have to check out Đray Nur and Đray Sap falls," a motorbike taxi drive told me.
Interested, I immediately booked a one-day tour to Đray Nur Waterfalls the next day.
After an hour’s bus drive we arrived at the fall. I still remember the feeling of excitement I had as we descended flights of rocky stairs amid the growing roar of the cascading water, and the moment the majes waterfall came into view was breathtaking.
It was a gigan stream of white rushing down, hitting rocks, splashing water everywhere, and creating a veil of mist.
There was also a crystal clear pond, reflecting the green of the layers of moss covering a nearby cliff.
Đray Nur Waterfalls, or "wife waterfall" in the language of the local Ê Đê ethnic group, is one of the most famous waterfalls in the Central Highlands.
Seeing other excited tourists, foreign and Vietnamese a, reacting in awe also added to the experience.
A mother of two remarked about the incredible view and size of the falls, saying how she really enjoyed getting closer to the falls than at any other place she had been to.
On our way back to the city, the bus stopped by some coffee bushes. They had bright, delicate flowers with a pleasant fragrance and our entire group was taken aback: no one had associated coffee with flowers.
After my week-long trip I took a flight back to HCM City. I felt a bit sad I had to leave quiet, peaceful Buôn Ma Thuột and return to chao HCM City.
Its people, culture and natural beauty left a strong impression on me.
^HT^