6 ACTIVATE Change the words in blue in the dialogue in exercise 4 using the information in your application form. Then practise your new dialogue with a partner.
Мультфильм "Франкенвини" повествует о дружбе мальчика и его собаки. Пса зовут "Спарки". Спарки, погнавшись за мячом, погибает под колёсами автомобиля. Его хозяит, мальчик по имени Виктор, не может смириться с такой утратой, и намеревается оживить собаку. Ему это удаётся, но оживший труп Спарки убегает и терроризирует всю округу, пугает всех людей.
Просматривается параллель с произведением "Франкенштейн". Кроме того, некоторые моменты фильма напоминают художественный фильм "Кладбище домашних животных" Стивена Кинга, в котором хозяева домашних питомцев закапывают своих четвероногих друзей на кладбище, где якобы хоронили умерших индейцы. Но так как здесь идёт речь всё-таки о мультфильме, Спарки совсем не злой, а наоборот, очень даже дружелюбный и игривый пёс.
Объяснение:
Cartoon "Frankenweenie" tells about the friendship between a boy and his dog. The dog's name is "Sparky". Sparky, chasing the ball, dies under the wheels of the car. His owner, a boy named Victor, cannot accept such a loss, and intends to revive the dog. He succeeds, but the revived corpse of Sparky escapes and terrorizes the entire neighborhood, frightens all people.
There is a parallel with the work of "Frankenstein". In addition, some moments in the film are reminiscent of Stephen King's feature film "Pet Sematary", in which pet owners bury their four-legged friends in a cemetery where the deceased Indians were supposedly buried. But since here we are talking about a cartoon, Sparky is not at all evil, but on the contrary, a very friendly and playful dog.
Vesalius was a Flemish-born anatomist whose dissections of the human body helped to correct misconceptions dating from ancient times.
Andreas Vesalius was born on 31 December 1514 in Brussels, Belgium, then part of the Holy Roman Empire. He came from a family of physicians and both his father and grandfather had served the holy Roman emperor. Vesalius studied medicine in Paris but was forced to leave before completing his degree when the Holy Roman Empire declared war on France. He then studied at the University of Louvain, and then moved to Padua to study for his doctorate. Upon completion in 1537 he was immediately offered the chair of surgery and anatomy.
Surgery and anatomy were then considered of little importance in comparison to the other branches of medicine. However, Vesalius believed that surgery had to be grounded in anatomy. Unusually, he always performed dissections himself and produced anatomical charts of the blood and nervous systems as a reference aid for his students, which were widely copied.
In the same year Vesalius wrote a pamphlet on blood letting, a popular treatment for a variety of illnesses. There was debate about where in the body the blood should be taken from. Vesalius' pamphlet was supported by his knowledge of the blood system and he showed clearly how anatomical dissection could be used to test speculation, and underlined the importance of understanding the structure of the body in medicine.
In 1539, his supply of dissection material increased when a Paduan judge became interested in Vesalius' work, and made bodies of executed criminals available to him. Vesalius was now able make repeated and comparative dissections of humans. This was in marked contrast to Galen, the standard authority on anatomy who, for religious reasons, had been restricted to animals, mainly apes. Vesalius realised that Galen's and his own observations differed, and that humans do not share the same anatomy as apes.
Мультфильм "Франкенвини" повествует о дружбе мальчика и его собаки. Пса зовут "Спарки". Спарки, погнавшись за мячом, погибает под колёсами автомобиля. Его хозяит, мальчик по имени Виктор, не может смириться с такой утратой, и намеревается оживить собаку. Ему это удаётся, но оживший труп Спарки убегает и терроризирует всю округу, пугает всех людей.
Просматривается параллель с произведением "Франкенштейн". Кроме того, некоторые моменты фильма напоминают художественный фильм "Кладбище домашних животных" Стивена Кинга, в котором хозяева домашних питомцев закапывают своих четвероногих друзей на кладбище, где якобы хоронили умерших индейцы. Но так как здесь идёт речь всё-таки о мультфильме, Спарки совсем не злой, а наоборот, очень даже дружелюбный и игривый пёс.
Объяснение:
Cartoon "Frankenweenie" tells about the friendship between a boy and his dog. The dog's name is "Sparky". Sparky, chasing the ball, dies under the wheels of the car. His owner, a boy named Victor, cannot accept such a loss, and intends to revive the dog. He succeeds, but the revived corpse of Sparky escapes and terrorizes the entire neighborhood, frightens all people.
There is a parallel with the work of "Frankenstein". In addition, some moments in the film are reminiscent of Stephen King's feature film "Pet Sematary", in which pet owners bury their four-legged friends in a cemetery where the deceased Indians were supposedly buried. But since here we are talking about a cartoon, Sparky is not at all evil, but on the contrary, a very friendly and playful dog.
Объяснение:
Vesalius was a Flemish-born anatomist whose dissections of the human body helped to correct misconceptions dating from ancient times.
Andreas Vesalius was born on 31 December 1514 in Brussels, Belgium, then part of the Holy Roman Empire. He came from a family of physicians and both his father and grandfather had served the holy Roman emperor. Vesalius studied medicine in Paris but was forced to leave before completing his degree when the Holy Roman Empire declared war on France. He then studied at the University of Louvain, and then moved to Padua to study for his doctorate. Upon completion in 1537 he was immediately offered the chair of surgery and anatomy.
Surgery and anatomy were then considered of little importance in comparison to the other branches of medicine. However, Vesalius believed that surgery had to be grounded in anatomy. Unusually, he always performed dissections himself and produced anatomical charts of the blood and nervous systems as a reference aid for his students, which were widely copied.
In the same year Vesalius wrote a pamphlet on blood letting, a popular treatment for a variety of illnesses. There was debate about where in the body the blood should be taken from. Vesalius' pamphlet was supported by his knowledge of the blood system and he showed clearly how anatomical dissection could be used to test speculation, and underlined the importance of understanding the structure of the body in medicine.
In 1539, his supply of dissection material increased when a Paduan judge became interested in Vesalius' work, and made bodies of executed criminals available to him. Vesalius was now able make repeated and comparative dissections of humans. This was in marked contrast to Galen, the standard authority on anatomy who, for religious reasons, had been restricted to animals, mainly apes. Vesalius realised that Galen's and his own observations differed, and that humans do not share the same anatomy as apes.