Queridos Alunos!
Bem, na unidade 14 nós aprendemos sobre como nos referir ao passado. Tá certo que falamos apenas um pouco, mas com o vocabulário que temos e o que já vimos até aqui, podemos tirar algum proveito disso. Nesta nova etapa teremos que pesquisar conteúdo que use o que aprendemos, ou seja, simple past.
Segue o que temos que fazer nesta nova etapa:
1) Pesquise sobre o que as pessoas acharam da copa do mundo no Brasil.
Procure por informações em inglês. Desta forma poderemos estar em contato com a língua e checar como está nosso conhecimento da mesma.
2) Diga de onde foi tirada tais informações, ou seja, a fonte.
Assim eu irei poder ler e conferir se o que vocês entenderam está correto, se as informações batem.
3) Poste sobre o que foi dito nestes sites/revistas/artigos/etc.
A sua interpretação poderá ser escrita em português ou em inglês se preferir. Poste sua interpretação juntamente com algum comentário sobre o que foi dito sobre o que as pessoas acharam da copa do mundo.
OBS: Se tiverem dificuldades para achar este tipo de conteúdo é só me dizer.
Abraço!
This World Cup final looked to answer a question that has been surfacing throughout this tournament, and perhaps -- considering the hold King James has had on U.S. basketball fans in the past few weeks -- all of sports: Is it the team, or is it the star?
ResponderExcluirThe last game of this tournament pitted the best player in the world, Messi, against the best team in the world, Germany. And if nothing else, this match demonstrated definitively that while players like Messi might win games, teams like Germany win titles.
So Messi gets the Golden Ball. Germany gets everything else.
After steamrolling its way over Brazil to make the final, Germany looked to be a favorite for the title despite its early draw with Ghana. For Argentina, at stake was the lure of claiming the title on the home turf of its arch rival, Brazil, which finished a devastatingly disappointing fourth after losing in Saturday's match against the Dutch.
But the depth of Germany was too much for Argentina in the end. While Thomas Müller -- who started the tournament with a hat trick against Portugal and whose goal against Brazil in the semifinal made him only the second player in history to score five goals in consecutive World Cups -- has been one of the stars of these past weeks, it was an extra-time goal by Mario Götze, who came off the bench, that propelled Germany to the top.
So with play over for another four years, what have we learned?
Sports matter: As we have seen time and time again with the Olympic Games, politics do not cease to exist when players step onto the field, the court or the pitch. This tournament proved yet again what a critical window sport provides into the world we live in, particularly considering the fiery protests that greeted the Brazilian government when it signed on the dotted line to host. The billions spent on bringing the most-watched sporting event in the world to Brazil put the country's government into a fragile state as protestors told FIFA to "GO HOME." But the politics were not reserved for the streets of São Paulo and Rio: Inside the stadiums we saw fans in blackface when Germany faced Ghana and a spike in the use of "Nazi" on Twitter when Germany faced both Brazil and the United States.
The World Cup next goes to Russia, with Sochi's Fisht Olympic Stadium one of the venues. If the lead-up to the 2014 Winter Olympic Games are any indication, one has to wonder if Russia's next role as host to the world will renew cries against the country's discriminatory policies against the LGBT community, its controversial annexation of Crimea and claims last year by Manchester City star Yaya Toure that he had been abused by racist CSKA Moscow fans during a Champions League match.
Soccer remains the most popular sport in the world: To say the World Cup is a global spectacle barely scratches the surface. The television viewing numbers for the group stages broke all sorts of records. While American pundits seemed stunned that 24.7 million people in the United States watched their national team face Portugal, the ratings in other countries during the group stages are almost incomprehensible. Some 47.4 million people watched Brazil face Croatia, while in Japan 34.1 million people watched their team take on Ivory Coast. On Twitter, Germany's smack down of Brazil became the most conversed match ever, with 35.6 million tweets, dwarfing this year's Super Bowl numbers of 24.9 million.
http://edition.cnn.com/2014/07/13/opinion/bass-world-cup-final-takeaways/
Blz, agora que você já achou o site que fala sobre o world cup, me diz o que você pôde entender do conteúdo relacionado no site. Pode ser qualquer coisa, não importa o que seja.
ResponderExcluirAb,