Музыка это не просто пустые звуки. Данное искусство выражает состояние души и эмоций человека. С музыки можно понять что человек чувствует,о чем он думает,что он хочет сказать, и о чем молчит. Настоящие ценители музыки понимают и знают толк в ней.
В наше время музыка распространенный выражения наших чувств.
Music is not just an empty phrase. This art expresses a state of mind and emotions. With music you can understand what a person feels, what he thinks about what he wants to say, and what is silent. Real music lovers understand and know a lot about it.
Nowadays, music is a common way of expressing our feelings
1. They will have to stay with us when they will arrive here.
2.The phone is ringing. - I will answer it.
3. Will we start the experiment now or will we wait until everybody will come?
4.He thinks nothing wrong will happen to the girl.
5.Rosemary and Philip will come later this evening.We will have a good family party.
6.I dont know when I will be in the mood for entertainment.
7.There is a train that will leave Waverly at ten o'clock tomorrow morning.
8. I will probably come back at 10 tonight.
9.What will i say to him?
10.They will get married this spring.
11.Don't make this noise! You will wake up Lucy.
ex 5
1.Did he do his work?
2.Do you like reading magazines?
3.How much time have you got?
4.Who wrote this book?
5.How much salt did you put in my salad
6.How often he comes here
7.Why don't you like playing tennis
That might be surprising to people more familiar with the statue’s French roots than its Arab ones. After all, the statue’s structure was designed by Alexandre-Gustave Eiffel (yes, that Eiffel), and Lady Liberty was given to the United States by France for its centennial to celebrate the alliance of the two countries formed during the French Revolution.
The statue’s designer, Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi, was also French, but he found inspiration in a very different place: Egypt. In 1855, he visited Nubian monuments at Abu Simbel, which feature tombs guarded by gigantic colossus figures. Bartholdi became fascinated by the ancient architecture, developing what the National Park Service calls a “passion for large-scale public monuments and colossal structures.” Eventually, he channeled that passion into a proposal for the inauguration of the Suez Canal.
Bartholdi envisioned a colossal monument featuring a robe-clad woman representing Egypt to stand at Port Said, the city at the northern terminus of the canal in Egypt. To prep for this undertaking, Barry Moreno, author of multiple books about the statue, writes that Bartholdi studied art like the Colossus, honing the concept for a figure called Libertas who would stand at the canal. “Taking the form of a veiled peasant woman,” writes Moreno, “the statue was to stand 86 feet high, and its pedestal was to rise to a height of 48 feet.” Early models of the statue were called “Egypt Carrying the Light to Asia.”