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100

Prezantimi

PërshëndetjeHello

MirëmëngjesGood morning

MirëditaGood afternoon

MirëmbrëmaGood evening

Natën e mirëGood night

Si jeni?How are you?

Mirë, faleminderitFine, thank you

Po ju?And you?

Mirë se viniWelcome

Kjo është një ditë e bukurIt is a beautiful day

Ju uroj një ditë të mbarëHave a nice day

LamtumirëGoodbye

Shihemi më vonëSee you later

Shihemi nesërSee you tomorrow

Më falni (kur përplaseni me dikë)Excuse me (when bumping into someone)

Mund t'ju ndihmoj?May I help you?



100

Nje tekst qe duhet ta perktheni

My town

My Town – Newquay

by Alex Howarth, 14

I live in Newquay. It’s a small town on the Atlantic coast in the south of England. It has got great beaches and is the best place to surf in the UK. There are lots of surf schools where you can learn how to surf. I go surfing with my friends every weekend. My favourite place is Fistral Beach.

I love Newquay because there are lots of other things to do as well as surfing. If you like water sports, you can go kayaking, water-skiing or coasteering. Coasteering is different because it is rock climbing, jumping into the sea and swimming in the same activity, but you should always go with a special instructor.

If you like animals you can also visit the Blue Reef Aquarium and see lots of different fish and even sharks. You can also go horse riding on the beach or visit Newquay Zoo. There are lots of other attractions too like mini golf and bowling. Come and see for yourself!

100

Test yourself into reading, writing, listening and speaking.

100

My facebook page where you can find all the materials for english.

100

Present simple shembuj fjalish.


I like tennis but I don't like football. (don't = do not)
I don't live in London now.
I don't play the piano but I play the guitar.
They don't work at the weekend.
John doesn't live in Manchester. (doesn't = does not)
Angela doesn't drive to work. She goes by bus.


200

Si te lexohen numrat

Finish by reading the hundreds when applicable:

  1. 15,560 – fifteen thousand five hundred sixty.
  2. 786,450 – seven hundred six thousand four hundred fifty.
  3. 342,713 - three hundred forty-two thousand seven hundred thirteen.


200

Have got 

I've got a new computer.
They haven't got any red chilli peppers.
She's got long, brown hair.
He hasn't got many friends.

200

Pyetje 

who kush

what  cfare

where ku

when kur

why pse

whom cilit

300
Ngjyrat 


Çfarë ngjyrë është kjo?What color is it?

Ngjyra është e kuqeThe color is red

E zezëBlack

BluBlue

Ngjyrë kafeBrown

Ngjyrë kafeBrown

E gjelbërGreen

PortokallOrange

LejlaPurple

E kuqeRed

E bardhëWhite

E verdhëYellow

GriGray

FloriGold

ArgjendSilver



300

Gjeni foljet ne kete tekst

As a mother of two teenagers I have done the best I can to raise them into accepting and kind people to their community, and I most certainly believe and know that this is the goal of most other parents as well. However, our children grow up in a society where they get influenced by several different factors outside their home, social media, school environments, and friends make such a large impact on today's youth. I am attempting, to the best I can, to protect my children from the negative aspects of these factors, but, in any environment where they are not in my own home and I do not know what they will be up to, I obviously cannot.

300

Advanced reading 

When you picture mountain climbers scaling Mount Everest, what probably comes to mind are teams of climbers with Sherpa guides leading them to the summit, equipped with oxygen masks, supplies and tents. And in most cases you'd be right, as 97 per cent of climbers use oxygen to ascend to Everest's summit at 8,850 metres above sea level. The thin air at high altitudes makes most people breathless at 3,500 metres, and the vast majority of climbers use oxygen past 7,000 metres. A typical climbing group will have 8–15 people in it, with an almost equal number of guides, and they'll spend weeks to get to the top after reaching Base Camp.

But ultra-distance and mountain runner Kilian Jornet Burgada ascended the mountain in May 2017 alone, without an oxygen mask or fixed ropes for climbing.

Oh, and he did it in 26 hours.

With food poisoning.

And then, five days later, he did it again, this time in only 17 hours.

Born in 1987, Kilian has been training for Everest his whole life. And that really does mean his whole life, as he grew up 2,000 metres above sea level in the Pyrenees in the ski resort of Lles de Cerdanya in Catalonia, north-eastern Spain. While other children his age were learning to walk, Kilian was on skis. At one and a half years old he did a five-hour hike with his mother, entirely under his own steam. He left his peers even further behind when he climbed his first mountain and competed in his first cross-country ski race at age three. By age seven, he had scaled a 4,000er and, at ten, he did a 42-day crossing of the Pyrenees.

He was 13 when he says he started to take it 'seriously' and trained with the Ski Mountaineering Technical Centre (CTEMC) in Catalonia, entering competitions and working with a coach. At 18, he took over his own ski-mountaineering and trail-running training, with a schedule that only allows a couple of weeks of rest a year. He does as many as 1,140 hours of endurance training a year, plus strength training and technical workouts as well as specific training in the week before a race. For his record-breaking ascent and descent of the Matterhorn, he prepared by climbing the mountain ten times until he knew every detail of it, even including where the sun would be shining at every part of the day.

Sleeping only seven hours a night, Kilian Jornet seems almost superhuman. His resting heartbeat is extremely low at 33 beats per minute, compared with the average man's 60 per minute or an athlete's 40 per minute. He breathes more efficiently than average people too, taking in more oxygen per breath, and he has a much faster recovery time after exercise as his body quickly breaks down lactic acid – the acid in muscles that causes pain after exercise.

All this is thanks to his childhood in the mountains and to genetics, but it is his mental strength that sets him apart. He often sets himself challenges to see how long he can endure difficult conditions in order to truly understand what his body and mind can cope with. For example, he almost gave himself kidney failure after only drinking 3.5 litres of water on a 100km run in temperatures of around 40°C.

It would take a book to list all the races and awards he's won and the mountains he's climbed. And even here, Kilian’s achievements exceed the average person as, somehow, he finds time to record his career on his blog and has written three books, Run or Die, The Invisible Border and Summits of My Life.

400

Mbiemrat 

Mbiemra:

a green tree një pemë e gjelbër

 tall building një ndërtesë e lartë

a very old man një njeri shume plak

the old red house  shtëpia e vjetër e kuqe


400

How to be organized in school?

400

You have recently read an article in your local newspaper where a person suggested that a new law should be introduced which means that when children under the age of 18 are caught smoking their parents will receive a heavy fine. Write an opinion column where you make your thoughts on this proposal known.

Let everyone bear the aftermath of their actions.

I am not a smoker and I was never one. However, when I was 14, I smoked for the first time and I didn’t even know how to smoke! My friend was a regular smoker and she was only 15. Doubtless she made me smoke and that by threatening me that she would never talk to me again. As you can imagine I did what she said and ended up already breathless, because I didn’t even know how to smoke. Now if I would be caught smoking and my parents would receive a heavy fine, that doesn’t seem really fair, because in the first place my parents know that I don’t smoke and they were not even there at the moment. I am certain that every parent doesn’t want their kid to smoke. Although if I were to blame my friend that pushed me to do that maybe her parents would receive the heavy fine, except that that doesn’t seem fair either. As her friend, I know really well that her parents had no idea she smokes and she was hiding that fact for already a year. So why should someone be doomed for someone else’s actions, unless they are the ones that push them towards that.?!


In most of the cases usually teenagers under 18 hide the fact that they are smoking. They do it to look cool, to don’t go against their friends wishes, due to stress or maybe they are influenced by their parents when they see them smoke. They may wonder why do their parents always smoke and they have the temptation to try it. Now that would be the case where maybe a law that prevents the parents smoking in home or something alike.

However, for my opinion parents receiving a heavy fine would not prevent the person from smoking again, which would actually make this law ineffective in completing its aim with success. As we can see the person in question is not being punished, but his/her parents. I am sure that the kid would not listen to the parent even after the heavy fine, because if it were for parent’s advices and reprimands the kid would not start smoking in the first place. But then how can we make children under 18 stop smoking?


In my opinion, a better idea would be to actually fine the persons who sell cigarettes to kids under 18. Since then if they are caught and receive a heavy fine, they will lose more money than actually earn. All those under 18 will not have the chance to buy cigarettes from anyone and that will solve the problem, maybe not entirely but at least it will decrease it.

Let everyone bear the aftermath of their actions!


Greta Williams

500

Nje link ku mund te gjeni me shume mbiemra

500

Why I love reading? Write an essay to 500 words. Here is a youtube video to get inspired.If you don't like reading, you might want to write an essay on why you don't.

500

10 Things You Should Never Do Before Exams | Exam Tips For Students |

500
Read this part of a blog and write your own blog, you are free to choose the topic.

But what fascinates me is that I really never knew what is behind the fashion industry. All I thought about was really creative fashion designers, and a lot of hard work. I mean now I know that there is a lot of hard work going on, but that is not mainly just from the designers or the company, it is about the workers. They are the ones who are doing the hard work. I am not talking about the whole fashion industry, as there is more that I need to learn about it. The one that I am talking about specifically is fast fashion. Brands like H&M, Zara, Premark and so on, they are just some of the brands that are using this “fast fashion”. I am one of those people that usually buy from H&M, Zara and other brands like this. It is true, I find their clothes really trendy and also cheap. So that makes me spend a lot of money into their products and every-time I go in their store, there is something new, there’s always something new. That is what makes me even just go and check what is new, what is on trend this week and so on. But after I saw how do they make this clothes yesterday, that made me feel really bad. The reason was because they hire workers from poor countries with really bad living conditions and they make them work in really bad conditions. They don’t respect their human rights and no one does anything about it. They pay them 1 € per day and that is not enough for them to pay for the food and the house that they are staying in. So then a lot of people end up living in one house together and lots of others end up in the streets. These people work for really long hours and they don’t even have the right to get a really short break just to go to the toilet! These are just some of the things that I’ve learned yesterday in the exhibition. I would describe it as terrible and I think you can imagine that just by reading this blog. I know that teenagers now can spend less money and buy more clothes, but what about those poor people that are working so hard in those poor conditions just so they can get 1 € to feed their family. Which as they say is not enough even for the food! That’s why I think that I would consider fast fashion if they start at least respecting the human rights to those people, if they fix their working conditions and give them a break and pay them more then just 1 €!