Thursday 23 April 2020

Formal letter

FORMAL LETTER

24 Kenton Road
London
19th April, 2020
Director of Bletchley Park
Bletchley Park
Buckinghamshire
Dear director,
I'm writing in response to the advert posted in the street of Bletchley Park. I would like to apply for the position of code-breaker.
I’m 25 years old and I have a computer science certificate and an engineer diploma which I did last year. I recently completed a language course and currently I can speak 5 languages. My work experience includes MAKING programs and decipherING codes for a security industry. 
In addition to the above, I am hardworking and a responsible person that knows his responsibilities and takes them very seriously.
I hope you consider my application favourably. I would be happy to attend an interview for the position. 
I look forward to hearing from you.
Yours faithfully,
Chris Clarkson

Making Esperanto a common, international language is idealistic but impossible



Making Esperanto a common, international language is idealistic but impossible

Languages are very important for the communication with people around the world and to make us understand each other. But sometimes people who live in a place dominate their language better than others. That's why making Esperanto a common and international language is idealistic but impossible.
On the one hand, Esperanto is a created language. This means that all the people have the same difficulty in learning the language. It is also one of the easiest languages because it was created to be easily learned by everyone.
On the other hand, it is a new language, and making everybody speak it is very difficult because there are other languages that want to be the most spoken in the world. A new language won’t be allowed to be the most spoken in the world.
In conclusion, Esperanto is the idealistic language because it gives everybody the same difficulty to be learned but there are a lot of othere languages that want to be the international language, like English.

Esperanto, el idioma que fracasó. - Ciencia y educación en Taringa!

Putting love-locks a romantic thing or a menace?

Putting love-locks a romantic thing or a menace?
People fall in love constantly and to show the love that they feel, they do some special things. Puting  padlocks on a bridge is one of them. But is putting love-locks a romantic thing or a menace?
On the one hand, life is short and we have to do the things that make us and our loved people feel special. Puting a padlock on a bridge has become a normal thing among the young people. Especially the ones who travel to France because they see the city of love full of love-locks. They think that this is the best way to demonstrate what they feel.
On the other hand, padlocks cause bridges to weigh more than they should and this can cause an accident in the future with someone falling over the bridge. Love-locks also cause historical monuments to stop being as pretty as they should be.

In conclusion, love-locks are a great way to demonstrate  your love but we cannot put padlocks everywhere.

The weight of love: 'love locks' as emotional objects | OUPblog

KAHOOT PAASSIVE



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