Formal and informal letter expressions
Matura exam tasks
Sample letter - job application
Tuesday, April 9, 2019
Tuesday, March 19, 2019
ESL Video
B2:
Computers
Sugar and brain
Thanksgiving with FRIENDS
More video activities here
C1:
Steve Jobs
The Wright Brothers
iPhones
More C1 videos here
Computers
Sugar and brain
Thanksgiving with FRIENDS
More video activities here
C1:
Steve Jobs
The Wright Brothers
iPhones
More C1 videos here
Tenses + vocabulary
Tuesday, March 12, 2019
Sunday, March 3, 2019
Tuesday, February 26, 2019
Wednesday, February 13, 2019
Középszint
Nyelvhelyesség
Közép:
Task 1
1. H 2. F 3. I 4. L 5. K 6. A 7. B 8. N 9. D 10. E 11. M
Task 2
12. creative 13. unsuccessfully 14. employers 15. unusual 16. attractive 17. himself 18. surprising 19. offer/offers
Task 3
20. out 21. one/some 22. so 23. without 24. to 25. have (also acceptable: produce) 26. it 27. be 28. that/which
Emelt:
Task 1
1. personal 2. provider(s) 3. cancellation/cancelation 4. astonishing 5. initially 6. individual 7. economic 8. realization/realisation 9. reasonable
Task 2
10. B 11. C 12. B 13. A 14. D 15. A 16. D 17. C 18. A 19. D
Task 3 20. that/which 21. has 22. so/meaning 23. more 24. made/cooked/prepared/produced (also acceptable: baked) 25. who 26. whose 27. as (also acceptable: with) 28. would/might/could
Task 4
29. which 30. yet 31. 9 32. it 33. highly 34. 9 35. been 36. At/at 37. being 38. so 39. was
40. a
Közép:
Task 1
1. H 2. F 3. I 4. L 5. K 6. A 7. B 8. N 9. D 10. E 11. M
Task 2
12. creative 13. unsuccessfully 14. employers 15. unusual 16. attractive 17. himself 18. surprising 19. offer/offers
Task 3
20. out 21. one/some 22. so 23. without 24. to 25. have (also acceptable: produce) 26. it 27. be 28. that/which
Emelt:
Task 1
1. personal 2. provider(s) 3. cancellation/cancelation 4. astonishing 5. initially 6. individual 7. economic 8. realization/realisation 9. reasonable
Task 2
10. B 11. C 12. B 13. A 14. D 15. A 16. D 17. C 18. A 19. D
Task 3 20. that/which 21. has 22. so/meaning 23. more 24. made/cooked/prepared/produced (also acceptable: baked) 25. who 26. whose 27. as (also acceptable: with) 28. would/might/could
Task 4
29. which 30. yet 31. 9 32. it 33. highly 34. 9 35. been 36. At/at 37. being 38. so 39. was
40. a
Tuesday, February 12, 2019
Felvételi
Szakok követelményei
Felvi
szakkereső, szakleírás, pontszámító,
https://www.felvi.hu/pub_bin/dload/FFT2013A_AOF/tobbletpont_tablazat_fft13AOF.pdf
Felvi
szakkereső, szakleírás, pontszámító,
https://www.felvi.hu/pub_bin/dload/FFT2013A_AOF/tobbletpont_tablazat_fft13AOF.pdf
Wednesday, January 30, 2019
Tuesday, January 29, 2019
Monday, January 7, 2019
Translation + reading comprehension Origo
Talking heads
Alan Leader has been hearing voices since he was 15. The first time it happened he was in a television shop. He had been upset by images of starving children in Biafra. Now a voice coming from a TV was telling him the famine was his fault, that somehow he was to blame. "I felt completely shocked by it," he recalls. For a year he told no one, afraid of the stigma attached, while the voices grew increasingly distressing. Eventually he was diagnosed as a schizophrenic, spent the next 15 years in and out of psychiatric units, and was put on long-term medication in an effort to staunch the noises in his head. He still hears voices.
There are five in all: two are aggressive and often argue with each other, while the others make trivial comments about wallpaper patterns or car number plates. But Leader, 47, who lives in north London, has been out of psychiatric care and off medication for more than 10 years. He has a full-time job, working in mental health services to help others with similar experiences. He has learned to live with his voices and, by accepting them, to control them. "I wouldn't know what to do without them now. They are part of me," he says.
However, the idea that voice-hearing can be an acceptable, even enriching, experience may well strike fear in the minds of the general public, which is used to headlines shrieking that voices 'ordered' someone to kill.
There are five in all: two are aggressive and often argue with each other, while the others make trivial comments about wallpaper patterns or car number plates. But Leader, 47, who lives in north London, has been out of psychiatric care and off medication for more than 10 years. He has a full-time job, working in mental health services to help others with similar experiences. He has learned to live with his voices and, by accepting them, to control them. "I wouldn't know what to do without them now. They are part of me," he says.
However, the idea that voice-hearing can be an acceptable, even enriching, experience may well strike fear in the minds of the general public, which is used to headlines shrieking that voices 'ordered' someone to kill.
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