Решения задач по предмету Английский язык

Предмет: Английский язык, автор: dosikpro563
Read the text and answer the question (write no more than THREE WORDS or A NUMBER)
One of the wonders of this modern world is the art of making moving pictures. The 19th century was a time of great discoveries and inventions. In 1895 the Lumiere brothers gave the world’s first real cinematograph show in Paris to an audience of 33 people.
In 1894, two French brothers, Auguste and Louis Lumiere, heard about the kinetoscope, a machine that Thomas Edison had invented in the USA in 1889. It was a box which contained a strip of filmed photographs. The photos were moved past a light in the box, so when you looked into the box, the image scanned to move. It took more than fifteen metres of film to make a “movie” of twenty seconds. The Lumiere brothers developed this idea and built a similar machine which projected the pictures onto a screen. They called it the Cinematograph and in 1895 they showed ten films. The “moving pictures” as entertainment was born. The first film the Lumiere brothers showed was “The Arrival of a Train at a Station”. So exciting was the experience that some members of the audience half expected the train to rush out at them from the screen.
In 1895 they showed nine films more. The first film theatre was opened in 1905, in Pittsburgh, USA. The first films were silent, but in 1920s, sound was developed. In 1927, cinema-goers were able to hear, for the first time, dialogue and music in The Jazz Singer. Technicolor appeared in 1932. Before then, each picture in a film had been painted by hand.
In 1950s there were a lot of developments based on new technology, for example, wide-screen processes and stereophonic sound. You sat in the cinema in front of an enormous screen and you could hear the sounds of voices or horses or cars moving from one side of the screen to the other. You felt as if you were actually in the picture. By the end of 20th century, cinema audiences had got used to even more special effects, using computer graphics and other new techniques to produce spectacular films. 1. Read the text and choose the best title.
Technological developments. Moving pictures. History of cinema.
2. Who presented the 1st film? Find in the text.
3. Where and when appeared the 1st cinema theatre?
4. How many people did watch the 1st film?
Предмет: Английский язык, автор: zokirjonovzuhriddin8
Предмет: Английский язык, автор: lanlegit34
КРАТКИЙ ПЕРЕСКАЗ ТЕКСТА!
ДАЮ 100 БАЛЛОВ
Mukhtar Omarkhanuli Auezov (September 28, 1897-June 27, 1961) was a Kazakh writer, a social activist, a Doctor of Philology, a professor and honored academic He grew up under the spiritual influence of the poet Abai. His saga "Abai Zholy" has been translated into many languages. The main character of the saga "Abai Zholy" is the historical figure: great poet, founder of Kazakh literature and enlightener Abai Beauty and generosity, way of life, hopes and aspirations, dreams about happiness unique national character of Kazakh people are artistically depicted in this great saga One sunny winter morning Abai was sitting in his usual place. He was lost in though gazing through the window at the snow-covered slopes of the Akshoky hills, lit up by the sun. How mysterious is the power emanating from those snow-covered mountains While reading his books, writing his poems he had come to look upon those hills as old friends. Abai opened one of the thick worn volumes, found the page he wanted, scanned briefly and leaned back, thinking again. There was no one for miles around who could read these books that had been written by two poets from a remote world and a remot day. Pushkin and Lermontov had both lived so far from the steppes and were unknow and alien to the Kazakhs. They had expressed themselves in an alien tongue, they seemed like kinsmen. In their sadness they seemed to say to him, "You are like us our thoughts are the same."
Those poets were not among the living, but they were not dead. They were immortal and the world would always remember their names. These two would stand forever like the two peaks of Akshoky. "Blessed is a nation enlightened by knowledge," Abai thought with a sigh. "How I wish that we, the Kazakhs, had also inherited the golden treasure of knowledge from our ancestors." Abai began to read Tatyana's letter, a passage from Yevgeny Onegin. "How skillfully those words are woven together, and as alive as breath itself in their deep tenderness," he thought. He read the lines of the letter again and again. "I have lived through this myself!" Two images suddenly flashed across his mind like two shooting stars. One was Togzhan, a symbol of radiant youth, and the other Saltanat, an image of wistful longing. He had been thinking of them as he translated Tatyana's letter into Kazakh the night before. Like Tatyana, they had listened to the voice of reason and they could not break free. Their parting words sounded in his heart. They would feel Tatyana's words as their own, and that was why he had undertaken the translation. For two days he had been making Tatyana speak in the Kazakh language. He found more and more new expressions noble in their sadness. He murmured quietly, his fingers caressing the dombra, and though his eyes were fixed on the two peaks of Akshoky his gaze was turned inwards. He tried to sing the tune, the rhythm was close to the metre of the poem.