Primære faneblade

  • Ann-Charlotte Wennerholm: Danish Course : Basic
    Summary: Learn Danish with our Danish Basic Course. Listen-Repeat-Learn Listen: Hear a phrase first in English and then twice in Danish Repeat: Practice at your own pace and learn the pronunciation Learn: You may begin to start using your new language within a few exercises The course contains of 3 hours MP3 -file downloaded recorded material and 2 course booklets in PDF-format. This course is bilingual which simply means that every phrase you hear is first spoken in English then repeated slowly in Danish, allowing you to easily obtain the correct pronounciation. The textbooks follow the chapters of the recording. This introductory course in Danish contains the following 37 chapters: 1. Common expressions – when you meet someone 2. The cardinal numbers 3. The ordinal numbers 4.The time 5. The days of the week 6. The months 7. The seasons 8. The weather 9. The colours 10. By train 11. By air 12. At the airport 13. At passport control / at customs 14. At the hotel 15. Breakfast 16. Renting a car 17. At garage/ at the petrol station 18. By bus 19. By underground 20. By taxi 21. Giving directions 22. Common expressions – when you are in need of help 23. At the bank 24. At the post office 25. Telephoning 26. Common socializing expressions 27. At the restaurant 28. Food 29. Drinks 30. Purchases and shopping 31. At the doctor's 32. At the chemist's 33. Common expressions – in emergencies 34. On the beach 35. Entertainment 36. Excursions 37. Sport You will learn approximately 800 new words. In everyday speech a person uses between 500 and 1500 words. According to the scale provided by the European Council's levels of Language Proficiency, you will have mastered level A1 at the completion of this course. This implies that you will be familiar with the most common words and basic phrases related to your immediate surroundings, a well as beeing able to read common names and simple sentences. You will be able to converse when your interlocutor speaks clearly and slowly. You will be able to complete basic application forms

  • Jamie McGuire: Beautiful Disaster : A Novel
    Af Jamie McGuire (2012)
    Summary: Now a major motion picture! The "deliciously intense" ( USA TODAY ) New York Times bestselling phenomenon follows a good girl drawn to a very bad boy... The new Abby Abernathy is a good girl. She doesn't drink or swear and has the appropriate number of cardigans in her wardrobe. With the darkness of her past behind her, she believes her freshman year at college is the start of a new beginning. But then she meets Travis Maddox. Lean, cut, and covered in tattoos, Eastern University's Walking One-Night Stand is exactly what Abby needs to avoid. Intrigued by her resistance to his appeal, Travis tricks her with a simple bet. If he loses, he must remain abstinent for a month. If Abby loses, she must live in his apartment for the same amount of time. Either way, Travis has no idea that he has met his match in this "beautifully sexy, beautifully intense, and beautifully perfect" (Jessica Park, New York Times bestselling author)

  • Jack London: The Call of the Wild
    Af Jack London (2012)
    Summary: The Call of the Wild is Jack London's most popular book and is considered by many to be his best. Telling the story of Buck, a domesticated dog whose wild instincts begin to kick-in while serving as a sled dog in the treacherous Yukon. The novel's tone is often dark, and despite being considered juvenile literature by some, it portrays much violence and cruelty. The Call of the Wild was followed in 1906 by White Fang with its mirroring plot of a wild wolf becoming domesticated by a miner

  • Jonathan Swift: Gulliver's Travels : Into Several Remote Nations of the World
    Af Jonathan Swift (2012)
    Summary: Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift is a witty and insightful satirical novel recounts the history of Lemuel Gulliver, "First a Surgeon, and then a Captain of several Ships". In his travels Gulliver visits the Land of Lilliput, where he towers over the local inhabitants, the land of Brobdingnag where he is much smaller than the citizens, the floating island of Laputa, infested with fanatical scientists who in their obsession with reason behave with no sense at all and finally to the land of the brutish Yahoos who look to all intents and purposes like humans and are derided by the intelligent horse people. John Gay said in a 1726 letter to Swift that "it is universally read, from the cabinet council to the nursery"

  • James Huneker: Chopin : The Man and His Music
    Af James Huneker (2012)
    Summary: Frederic Chopin (1810 - 1849) was one of the most influential musicians of the 19th Century. Discovered as a child-prodigy pianist in his native Poland, he later travelled to France, where he remained after the Polish uprising of 1830-31. There he gave few public performances, but worked as composer and piano teacher. He later became a French citizen and conducted a stormy relationship with French writer George Sand (Aurore Dudevant). He died at 39 of pulmonary tuberculosis. Chopin innovated many traditional forms of piano music and also created new forms such as the ballade. Though technically demanding, his music is nuanced and deeply expressive. His mazurkas and polonaises became the centerpiece of Polish classical music

  • Af George Eliot (2012)
    Summary: Middlemarch: A Study of Provincial Life is exactly what it claims. Its multiple plots center around the inhabitants of a fictitious Midlands town and their evolving relationships to each other. It is critical of social class, ambition and marriage, and religion. It is commonly considered one of the masterpieces of English writing, and Virginia Woolf described it as "the magnificent book that, with all its imperfections, is one of the few English novels written for grown-up people"

  • Parc Prisoners: Inside Out
    Af Parc Prisoners (2012)
    Summary: Brought together by their crimes, the prisoners, young offenders and young people at Bridgend's Parc Prison share their stories of life on the other side of the security walls. Whether they are hardened criminals, prolific offenders or teenagers in trouble for the first time, they all have one thing in common - they had a life outside. Through their creative writing workshops, these prisoners have put into words their feelings and experiences about doing time at Parc Prison and talk about their hopes for the future. Half of all prisoners have the reading skills of a child of 11 or younger, rendering them virtually unemployable and creating a vicious circle that only encourages a return to crime when they are freed. This book is the result of new initiatives to improve basic skills in prisons and makes compelling reading. About the Author Prisoners from Her Majesty's Prison and Young Offenders Institute Parc, Bridgend, have teamed up to share their experience of life behind bars. The writers are from the prison's core groups: 15-17-year-olds, 18-21, adults and vulnerable prisoners

  • Elizabeth Gaskell: The Life of Charlotte Brontë
    Summary: Nineteenth-century novelist Elizabeth Gaskell was inspired to start writing in part through her friendship with Charlotte Bronte. Later, Gaskell took on the project of composing the first serious, full-length biography of Bronte, a work that scholars agree did much to fan the flames of Bronte's then-burgeoning reputation. The Life of Charlotte Bronte is a fascinating read for fans who want to learn more about the Jane Eyre author's life and career

  • Victor Hugo: The Hunchback of Notre Dame : Or, Our Lady of Paris
    Af Victor Hugo (2012)
    Summary: Immerse yourself in one of the classic masterpieces of Western literature. Victor Hugo's sweeping epic The Hunchback of Notre Dame is a timeless tale of unrequited love that also touches on themes of jealousy, passion, purity, social justice, and moral goodness

  • L. M. (Lucy Maud) Montgomery: Kilmeny of the Orchard
    Summary: Immerse yourself in this captivating romance from the author of Anne of Green Gables . Young teacher Eric Marshall is granted a position on Prince Edward Island and falls in love with a beautiful, mysterious girl named Kilmeny, who is unable to speak. Although she comes to feel the same way about Eric, Kilmeny refuses his advances, wanting to spare him the difficulty of spending a lifetime with a wife who is less than perfect. Will the young lovers find a way around this obstacle?

  • Jane Austen: Love and Freindship sic : And Other Early Works
    Af Jane Austen (2012)
    Summary: Although Jane Austen is best known for novels such as Pride and Prejudice that deal with romantic entanglements and class conflicts, she was also a skilled essayist and humor writer. In Love and Freindship (sic), Austen sends up the epistolary novels that were popular in her day, as well as skewering some of the satire-worthy ideas about love and marriage that were common in the era

  • Charles Darwin: The Autobiography of Charles Darwin : From the Life and Letters of Charles Darwin
    Af Charles Darwin (2012)
    Summary: Charles Darwin is the English naturalist whose work laid the foundation for evolutionary biology and theory. Darwin wrote his autobiography under the title Recollections of the Development of my Mind and Character in 1876. He wrote it for his family, but his son edited and published the autobiography five years after Darwin's death in 1882, removing some of the critical passages about God and Christianity