[BOOKWORMS] You really want to learn a book that has not much vocabulary, so when you read a few or three words then go to the dictionary. This makes you tired and makes you lose interest and “scared” of reading something in English. Brother.
– This set of books is divided by the reader, including 6 stages, each stage corresponds to the number of words more or less.
Stage 1 with 400 headwords (beginning)
Stage 2 – 700 headwords
Stage 3 – 1000 headwords
Stage 4 – 1400 headwords
Stage 5 – 1800 headwords
Stage 6 – 2500 headwords
Therefore, after reading this book, you will receive about 3000 common words.
– This series uses grammar, simple tenses and vocabulary, which is really pleasant if you choose the right level.
We will start the series of articles in the book “The Human Body” at a stage 3 (level B1) suitable for you at the stage of creating a habit of reading English with a little knowledge about your child’s body. people.
YOU ARE AMAZING
(YOU ARE REALLY NORMAL)
It’s a burning hot summer afternoon.As you run up the field, your heart and lungs are working twice as hard as usual, and your blood is moving five times as fast. Your legs hurt, and you feel very, very tired, but you can’t stop now.Suddenly, the ball is coming towards you, turning in the air.Your eyes follow it while your brain does the thinking: Where will it be a moment later? How can I reach it? Where are all the other players?
It’s a scorching hot summer afternoon, when you sprint on the pitch, your heart and lungs are twice as active as usual, and your blood is moving five times faster. your lower leg hurts, and you feel very tired, but you can’t stop now Suddenly, the ball is rushing towards you, swirling in the air.Your eyes follow it while brain Your realization of thought: Where will it be after a while? How can I catch it? Where are all the other players?
You jump: nerve signals shoot through your body, and hundreds of muscles in your legs, arms, back, and stomach move together to push you into the air.At just the right moment you push your neck forwards, and your head hits the ball . It flies into the goal at 60 kilometers per hour! As you run back down the field, six pairs of muscles move in your face, and you smile.You don’t feel tired any more.Your body wants you to forget the pain and feel good – so you can go on and win the game.
You jump up: nerve signals pass through your body, and hundreds of muscles in your legs, forearms, back and stomach move together to push you into the air. Push your neck forward and your head hits the ball. It flies inside the goal at 60 kilometers an hour! When you slow down on the pitch, six pairs of muscles move across your face, and you smile.You don’t feel tired at all.Your body wants you to forget the pain and feel fine – so you can go on. keep and win the match.
In the evening, you will be asleep, but your body will be hard at work.It will mend the damage that you did to your muscles in today’s match, and do a thousand other things to keep you alive.Your body will make new skin and new blood, your muscles and your hair will grow, and in the eight hours before you wake up, your heart will beat 33,000 times.In the morning, you may hurt all over, but you will be ready to start a new day.
In the evening you’ll be sleepy, but your body will work hard, it will repair the damage you did to your muscles in today’s match, and do thousands of other things to do it. Your body will make new skin and new blood, your muscles and hair will grow, and in the eight hours before you wake up, your heart will beat 33,000 times. In the morning you may have pain all over, but you will be ready to start the day.
Under your skin there is an extraordinary world full of tiny living things called cells – the smallest parts of any animal or plant.There are hundreds of different types of human cell, and everything in your body is made of them: from your eyes and your heart to your skin and your teeth.Your body is like an amazing machine, with 100 trillion living, working parts.But unlike machines, you can think and feel.So how does your body work? How does it make you who you are? And what happens when things go wrong?
Underneath your skin, there is an incredible world filled with tiny living things called cells – the smallest component of any animal or plant. There are hundreds of different types of human cells, and everything in your body is made of them: from your eyes and heart to your skin and teeth.Your body is like an extraordinary machine, with 100 trillion living components. But unlike machines, you can think and feel. So how does your body work? How does it shape who you are? And what happens when these things fail?