... 2.4 .1. 3 The social context Question Choice a b c d Total F 50 0 50 % 10 0 0 10 0 F 50 0 50 % 10 0 0 10 0 F 13 28 50 % 12 26 56 10 0 F 48 % 96 50 10 0 F 32 13 % 10 64 26 50 10 0 F 21 20 50 % 12 42 40 10 0 ... 23 3.4 .1. 4 Students’ motivation and attitudes towards English Question 10 11 12 Choice F % F % F % F % a 11 22 28 56 10 20 12 b 15 30 14 23 46 17 34 c 23 46 25 50 16 32 25 50 d 18 2 e 17 34 f ... because of their English teachers 24 3.4 .1. 5 Students’ learning strategies and styles Question Choice a b c d e Total 13 F 30 50 14 % 18 60 12 10 0 F 20 22 50 15 % 40 44 10 0 F 36 10 % 72 20 50 10 0...
... B 1. a packet of a.cookies 2.a cup of b.apple juice 3.a glass of c.oranges 4.a kilo of d.beer 5.a tube of e.tea a bottle of f.beef 7.a bar of g.water 8.a box of h.soap 9.a can of i.chocolate 10 ... Unit 11 what you eat ? A Revision I.Grammar Model sentences Can I ? Can you ? How much beef you want? I want a kilo of beef How many eggs you want ? I want six eggs II.Vocabulary • A can of ... beef ? 9.Nam is eating big apple 10 .Would you like coffee? III.Put questions with " How feeel ? " and answer 1. Mai/ thirty 5.Thu/full 2.Huy and Hung/hungry 6. Lan's mother/cold 3.Chi/well 7.Nhi/...
... people believe that camping (64 ) youngsters feel more (65 ) _ 61 A in which B in where C at which D on which 62 A take part 63 A contains 64 A enables 65 A confident B participate in ... forty-ninth state of the United States in 19 59, was bought from Russia in 1 867 The price paid to the Russian government for this huge piece of land was $ 7,200,000 Secretary of State Seward arranged ... wealth D Mr Seward was very proud of his purchase 67 This article as a whole is about A $7,200,000 B Alaska C The U.S and Russia D a secretary of State 68 Which of the following is Not True? A...
... restricted area b, dream of, object to, insist on, complain about, think of, look forward to + (not) + v-ing… Ex: “I’ll offer you a ticket for the play”, he insisted => He insisted on offering me a ticket...
... illustrates a different and all-too-often-held view of how to exercise the power placed in the hands of a leader: 10 589$ $CH4 02-23-04 16 : 44:30 PS 42 Golf and the Game of Leadership Garret’s plan ... positions of power Many of us at one time or another have been victims of this kind of person Two questions: Are you one of them? Are you playing and/or tending to play the politics of per- sonal ... the third round of the 2003 British Open, which was played in Sandwich, England on the Royal St George’s course 10 589$ $CH4 02-23-04 16 : 44: 31 PS 45 Play by the Rules FIGURE 4 -1 Sample leadership...
... gravity affects things near the surface of our planet Galileo Galilei (1 564 16 4 2) was the first to understand this (how) …………………………………………………………………………………… 15 The force causes motion and there is ... Acceleration (n) : the rate of change of the speed for a moving body that moves along a straight line Gia tốc a vector that indicates the rate of change of speed and/or direction of a moving object Véc ... scholar Galileo Galilei (1 564 - 16 4 2) lived and worked Then Galileo introduced the experimental procedures- careful observation by measurements – that made physics a science of accurate predictions...
... does satisfy the required estimate This follows from Proposition 3 .1 of [I], which is in turn a direct consequence of the proofof Lemma 6. 3 of [A2] However, the function εM (f ) belongs to Iac ... (3 .11 ) that εM (f ) is a moderate function in Iac (MV , ζV ) Once we know that εM (f ) is moderate, the relevant part of the proofof Lemma 6. 3 of [A2] tells us that the spectral expansion of ... study of these distributions in terms of their geometric counterparts [A12], and the local induction hypothesis (1. 2) (For special cases of this argument, the reader can consult the proofof Lemma...
... gives a proofof Claim 1. 11 Chapter proves Claim 1. 16 Chapters through give a proofof Claim 1. 13 Chapters through 11 give a proofof Claim 1. 12 Chapters 12 through 14 give a proofof Claim 1. 14 Claim ... hypotheses of Claim 1. 16 are satisfied The conclusion of Claim 1. 16 is the conclusion of Theorem 1. 9 Lemma 1. 20 Assume Claims 1. 11 1. 16 (Theorem 1. 1) holds Then the Kepler conjecture Proof As pointed ... consequence of Claims 1. 11 1. 16 Its proof appears in Theorem 5 .11 1. 4 Proofs of the central claims The previous section showed that the main results in the introduction (Theorems 1. 1, 1. 7, and 1. 9)...
... can apply (6. 14 ) with Lemma 6. 10 (c) to get the required result A similar argument for the case j0 < i0 will conclude the proof6. 2 ProofofProposition6. 9 We shall divide the proof into two ... action of adHα on gYr ,gα p gα 1 c c A PROOFOF KIRILLOV’S CONJECTURE 229 Proof If A ∈ gY,p then c (6. 6) [H , A] = [gHα g 1 , A] = g[Hα , g 1 Ag]g 1 Hence we can replace the action of adH ... lemmas which are needed for the proofof our “Key Proposition above We also sketch the proofof Theorem 1. 4 In Section we A PROOFOF KIRILLOV’S CONJECTURE 211 recall some facts about distributions...