¿Cómo es Golfito?
Lee este anuncio y contesta las preguntas que siguen.
¡Atención, turistas!
¿No sabes qué hacer este verano? ¿Te gustaría hacer un viaje, pero no has decidido adónde ir ni qué quieres hacer? ¿Te gusta la ecología? ¿Eres amigo de la naturaleza? ¿Quieres proteger el planeta? Si tú contestaste «sí» a estas preguntas, eres el candidato perfecto para nuestro programa, Tico Ecotur. Ofrecemos programas para todos los viajeros que quieren trabajar para la conservación de nuestra Tierra.
Nuestro primer viaje va a ser durante las primeras semanas de junio. El primer día, salimos en autobús privado para Golfito, un lugar costarricense conocido mundialmente por su naturaleza y sus hermosos parques nacionales. Después de dos días de viaje, llegamos a Golfito donde pasamos doce días, trabajando con un grupo de naturalistas en su proyecto de reforestación y conservación de los recursos naturales de la región.
Fecha: del 1 al 14 de junio Alojamiento: Vamos a hacer camping.
Salida: desde San José Costo: $3.000 por persona (incluye comida)
What will be an ideal response?
Es muy bonito por su naturaleza; tiene bosques.
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Vamos a escuchar. Answer the questions you hear, using complete sentences. Click here for audio. (2)
What will be an ideal response?
The choice of the Potomac for the nation's capital was controversial. While everyone agreed that a central location was necessary, regional interests surfaced as congressmen recognized its potential economic and political benefits. They also debated the question of the temporary capital. Should New York City or Philadelphia host the federal government until the permanent site was ready? The
complicated negotiations over funding and assumption resulted in moving the temporary capital from New York to Philadelphia as well as locating the new city on the Potomac. President Washington and his fellow Virginians supervised the development of the capital. The Residence Act of 1790 gave the president authority to select a ten-mile square location somewhere along the Potomac; he chose the land on both sides of the river that included Alexandria, Virginia, and Georgetown, Maryland. The federal city would be built in neither of those towns, but on open land on the east bank of the river. Washington appointed a surveyor, three commissioners to manage the project, and Pierre Charles L'Enfant to design the layout of the capital and its major buildings. L'Enfant's grandiose street plan and Greek and Roman architecture expressed an exalted vision of the republic. The commissioners named the federal city "Washington" and the entire district "Columbia." The president expected to finance construction by selling lots in the capital, thinking that land prices would skyrocket as citizens valued proximity to the seat of government. Instead, land sold poorly and lack of money undermined the project. At one of the failed auctions, even the participation of the president and a parade of two brass bands and an artillery troop could not foster sales. When the commissioners suspended construction temporarily for insufficient funds, L'Enfant protested and was fired. His plan for grand boulevards, public squares, fountains, and imposing buildings was retained, but its execution would wait. For a decade the enterprise limped along, saved by grants from Maryland and Virginia. In 1800, when the government moved to Washington, the president's mansion was still unfinished and only one wing of the Capitol had been built. The organizational pattern of the third paragraph is a. spatial order. b. cause and effect. c. listing. d. time order.
Adjectives never come after the nouns they modify
a. True b. False
An idea map can show you all of the following except
a.whether your details support your topic sentence. b.whether your details are arranged and developed logically. c.whether your audience is familiar with your topic. d.whether your paragraph is balanced and not repetitious.