Do you know what a tattle tale is? Why do you think people do not like tattle tales as friend?
( bài luận anh 7 ko cần làm cũng đc chỉ cho mình ý nghĩa ko phải là nghĩa lên dịch đâu nhé )
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my name is Chi
i live in Bac Giang
i'm in class 5a
ko có câu tl
my favourite subject is math
ko có câu tl
yes, i do
my hobby is listening to music
my best friend name is Nguyen
no, i don't
no, i don't
no, i don't
k mk nhé
My name is Hieu.
I live in Can Tho city.
I'm in class 7p2.
a intelligent boy.
Math, English, Physics,....
Sorry, I don't hate anything, I'm just scared.
Yes, I read a book about 3 hours / day.
I love read a book, tidy room, make breakfast for my family, ....
My best friend name is Bao, Pham Quoc Bao.
Yes, but not much.
No, I'm just scared.
Yes of cause, what is your name ?
BYE
1. No, i don't because I do not like to travel.
2.
By Mike Cruse
Dear Timmy:
You know, it’s funny, for as long as we’ve known each other, we’ve spent very little time actually around each other. But I really wanted to tell you how much the time we’ve spent together has meant to me, and I also wanted to say thank you.
We don’t really think about it much, but the words “thank you” can accomplish so much and can convey more than one could possibly imagine.
Thank you for being one of the first people to be nice to me in elementary school. I think you saw the fear in my eyes when I showed up at a new school where most of you had kind of grown up around each other. You hung out with me on the playground and would always invite me to play games with you at recess.
Thank you for always being the same back then, no matter what. I sadly hit my popular peak in fifth grade, and even though we were in the same class we didn’t talk so much. That was my fault and I’m sorry.
While I was feeling the joy of being popular, you were being labeled as troublemaker — and worse, a lost cause — by the very adults that were supposed to be guiding us, teaching us, nurturing us. No child should be made to feel that way.
3.
3. As for me I spent a week in Turkey. I took the plane in Paris
and flew for three and a half hours to Izmir. There a woman
was waiting for us to drive us by bus to Kusadasi (pronounced
kouchadaseu). She is a French woman who married a Turkish
man five years ago. She is from Lievin, in the North of France.
She confessed that her husband followed her to France but
he didn't get used to the weather. It was a bit too wet and
too cold for him. So, they went back to Turkey. He then
became the manager of a hotel (not the one we went to) and
she started working for a holidays group at the hotel where
we went.
We arrived in the afternoon at the hotel which is based very
close to the sea. How wonderful it is to have meals almost on
the beach, listening to the waves and looking at the sun
downing in the evening. We could have a glass, then go to the
beach and as soon as we were thirsty come back to the bar
and have another glass before swimming a little. It was very
comfortable. I loved it.
Concerning the site, it was very beautiful. The beach was in
front of us and on the right side, we had a view on the
mountains. We even took a boat to some little beaches on the
edge of these mountains. The water was like a warm bath.
And you'd say, what about Turkish people? They are really
nice. They don't speak a lot of French, but if you can speak English, I assure you you can spend good time with them. I
had the feeling that they didn't know what to do to please us.
I have never met so nice people. I advise you to go there,
really, you'll come back with so many souvenirs in your minds.
If you have spent enough time in the workplace, you have probably suffered the surprise of betrayal. I’m not talking about getting fired or not getting a promotion. Those events are par for the course for any ambitious, risk-taking, goal-oriented employee. What I’m talking about is when a workplace friend or mentor engages in conduct that advances their career at your expense. This is the first in a four-part series on Dealing with Workplace BetrayalIf you have spent enough time in the workplace, you have probably suffered the surprise of betrayal. I’m not talking about getting fired or not getting a promotion. Those events are par for the course for any ambitious, risk-taking, goal-oriented employee. What I’m talking about is when a workplace friend or mentor engages in conduct that advances their career at your expense. This is the first in a four-part series on Dealing with Workplace Betrayal