В
Все
М
Математика
А
Английский язык
Х
Химия
Э
Экономика
П
Право
И
Информатика
У
Українська мова
Қ
Қазақ тiлi
О
ОБЖ
Н
Немецкий язык
Б
Беларуская мова
У
Українська література
М
Музыка
П
Психология
А
Алгебра
Л
Литература
Б
Биология
М
МХК
О
Окружающий мир
О
Обществознание
И
История
Г
Геометрия
Ф
Французский язык
Ф
Физика
Д
Другие предметы
Р
Русский язык
Г
География
Skecher
Skecher
22.10.2020 01:09 •  Английский язык

ETHINK AND PLAN 1 Where are you? What have you been doing
lately?
2 What did you do last weekend? What
happened?
3 What do you want to do with your friend?
4 When do you want to do it?
S Where could (you and) your friend stay?
6 What happens there?​

Показать ответ
Ответ:
Пофиг11
Пофиг11
26.01.2023 17:34
                            The pros and cons of the Internet

Pros:
On the Internet you can find anything you want.Music,movies.A variety of information.You can order different things.On the Internet you can find homeworks,essays, etc. Thanks to the Internet, you can find new friends and communicate with them.Also in Internet you can earn.
Cons:
Sitting for many hours in the day it can be harmful for the eyes.If the debt has to sit on the Internet then this deprives the muscles of the body from movement and physical activity.The Internet may not have a beneficial effect on the human psyche.On the Internet a child can access adult sites.

                            Плюсы и минусы интернета 

Плюсы:
В интернете можно находить всё что захочешь.Музыку,фильмы.Различную информацию.Можно заказывать различные вещи.В интернете можно найти готовые домашние работы,рефераты и т.д. Благодаря интернету можно находить новых друзей и общаться с ними.Также в интернете можно зарабатывать.
Минусы:
Сидя по многу часов в день это может вредить для глаз.Если по долгу сидеть в интернете то это лишает мышцы тела от движения и физических нагрузок.Интернет может не благотворно влиять на психику человека.В интернете ребёнок может заходить на взрослые сайты.
0,0(0 оценок)
Ответ:
Ник555555551
Ник555555551
03.08.2021 03:25

We like riding subways and other public transportation in big cities and watching people — trying to guess from their faces, their body language and their tension what they do, what they prioritize and what they are after in life.

We’ve watched business professionals in Santiago, Chile, and in Monterrey, Mexico, on the midafternoon train, heading home to have lunch with their kids and a siesta before heading back to the office to work for the evening.

We’ve watched career women in Manhattan, New York, and wondered how many of them are postponing having a family and children until they have made their mark on their career, maybe hopeful that they can then have a child in their late 30s or early 40s.

We’ve watched young millennials in Singapore and Shanghai, out for the glitz, the money, the "freedom," and not thinking at all about family — particularly not one of their own. They work late because of the comforts and camaraderie of the workplace and because they have no home to go home to.

We’ve watched elderly people in Stockholm, where the majority of households are occupied by one single individual, and wondered how the government will provide for them as they age and have no children to take care of them.

And we’ve wondered what will happen to society if people continue to get less and less interested in having and caring for children in committed, long-term marriages. Who will do the essential tasks and perform the traditional roles of families? Will babies be produced by artificial means in laboratories, then nurtured and fed and raised in larger institutions, taught to love and be loyal to the state instead of to their family? Will the elderly all be in institutionalized care?

An interesting book by Alan Weisman, titled “The World Without Us,” theorizes on what Earth would be like without humans. An equally interesting question, with an equally frightening answer, is “what would the world be like without families?”

Most would agree that good families and stable homes contain at least four essential elements: love, commitment, time together and communication.

It is difficult to imagine a family succeeding over time or even staying together very long without at least a basic level of each of these four elements. When parents lack any of the four essential elements or when they fail to perform their traditional roles in families, we all lose — both as individuals and as a society. When larger institutions — from schools to businesses to government — try to assume these roles or elements, it alters the way we experience one another, diminishes relationships and undermines human happiness.

Larger institutions simply do not work like families. Love, commitment, time and communication are all defined differently in the corporate or government culture than they are in the family culture. As these larger entities grow and as they increasingly dominate our lives, we sometimes look to them to provide what families used to provide.

And they never do. They never can.

0,0(0 оценок)
Популярные вопросы: Английский язык
Полный доступ
Позволит учиться лучше и быстрее. Неограниченный доступ к базе и ответам от экспертов и ai-bota Оформи подписку
logo
Начни делиться знаниями
Вход Регистрация
Что ты хочешь узнать?
Спроси ai-бота