UNIT 1 MEASUREMENT UNIT 1 MEASUREMENT UNIT 1
- Slides: 44
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT LOOK AT THE PICTURES. IN PAIRS MAKE QUESTIONS.
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT QUIZ
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT 1. What can be odd and even?
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT 2. What can be thick?
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT 3. What can be near?
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT 4. How many kilometres is a mile?
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT 5. Give a synonym for ‘to span’.
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT 6. Give the antonym of ‘to speed up’.
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT 1. What can be odd and even? numbers
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT 2. What can be thick? air layer fog forest
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT 3. What can be average? size height temperature rate
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT 4. How many kilometres is a mile? 1. 6 kilometres
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT 5. Give a synonym for ‘to span’. To extend, to stretch
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT 6. Give the antonym of ‘to speed up’. To slow down
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT HOW DO YOU PRONOUNCE IT? ? ?
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT OH AFTER A DECIMAL POINT: 5. 03 IN TELEPHONE NUMBERS: 67 01 75 IN BUS NUMBERS: N° 703 IN HOTEL ROOM NUMBERS: ROOM 206 IN YEARS: 1904
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT NOUGHT BEFORE A DECIMAL POINT: 0. 03
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT ZERO FOR THE INTEGER: 0 FOR TEMPERATURE: -8°C
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT NIL IN FOOTBALL SCORES: 5 -0
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT LOVE IN TENNIS: 15 -0
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT EUROPEAN LANDMARKS
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT 103, 000 km / year EUROPEAN LANDMARKS = 2. 5 times 324 m 10, 100 7, 000 75% = 1, 665
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT EUROPEAN LANDMARKS 9 ft 14 ft 9 miles 8. 8 m 2 ft
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT EUROPEAN LANDMARKS 2, 460 m 12
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT PRONUNCIATION /ˈæv(ə)rɪdʒ/
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT PRONUNCIATION /ˈækjʊrət/
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT PRONUNCIATION /haɪt/
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT PRONUNCIATION /leŋθ/
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT PRONUNCIATION /ˈmeʒə(r)mənt/
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT PRONUNCIATION /ˈreɪdiəs/
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT PRONUNCIATION /ˈreɪʃiəʊ/
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT PRONUNCIATION /ˈstreŋθ(ə)n/
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT PRONUNCIATION /ˈsɜː(r)veɪ/
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT PRONUNCIATION /weɪ/
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT READING: DEAD DUCKS FROM DOWN UNDER Dromornis stirtoni, an extinct flightless bird, lived in Australia roughly 8 million years ago. It was probably the heaviest bird in the history of evolution, with a weight of slightly more than 500 kg although its wing span was very small. A considerable amount of information has been obtained from recent fossil finds in Queensland, enabling scientists to work out basic measurements. From a morphological point of view, Dromornis stirtoni appears to be similar to an emu or an ostrich, however, scientists now believe that it is related to the duck species, as the massive dimensions of the head show. The bird attained a height of over 3 meters. The large head and formidable beak suggest that the bird was carnivorous. The cross-section of fossils of the leg bones reveals that the bird had short, thick legs indicating that it could not have run as fast as the ostrich. The width of the body was about the same as the length of the neck and legs.
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT READING Find words in the text that have the same meaning: approximately, more or less: a number, quantity: to estimate, to calculate, to assess: to get, to receive: extremely large, enormous:
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT READING Find words in the text that have the same meaning: approximately, more or less: roughly a number, quantity: amount to estimate, to calculate, to assess: to work out to get, to receive: to obtain extremely large, enormous: massive, considerable
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT READING: DEAD DUCKS FROM DOWN UNDER Dromornis stirtoni, an extinct flightless bird, lived in Australia roughly 8 million years ago. It was probably the heaviest bird in the history of evolution, with a weight of slightly more than 500 kg although its wing span was very small. A considerable amount of information has been obtained from recent fossil finds in Queensland, enabling scientists to work out basic measurements. From a morphological point of view, Dromornis stirtoni appears to be similar to an emu or an ostrich, however, scientists now believe that it is related to the duck species, as the massive dimensions of the head show. The bird attained a height of over 3 meters. The large head and formidable beak suggest that the bird was carnivorous. The cross-section of fossils of the leg bones reveals that the bird had short, thick legs indicating that it could not have run as fast as the ostrich. The width of the body was about the same as the length of the neck and legs.
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT VIEWING: SUPERVOLCANOES
UNIT 1: MEASUREMENT VIEWING: SUPERVOLCANOES Follow the link: http: //ed. ted. com/lessons/the-colossal-consequences-of-supervolcanoes-alexgendler# Watch and answer the questions in ‘THINK’ In pairs summarise your ideas in 100 words.
- What unit is momentum measured in
- Mole unit of measurement
- Mole unit of measurement
- Cohesion bond
- Physical properties of sea water
- Unit of measurement for power
- Unit of measurement for power
- Ostwald viscometer
- Miniature inertial measurement unit
- A measurement includes both a number and a unit.
- Gtt unit of measurement
- L
- Nanometer symbol
- Area/volume
- Unit of measurement
- Limit accuracy
- Unit 10, unit 10 review tests, unit 10 general test
- Convert each measurement
- Chapter 7 work design and measurement
- Level of measurement in statistics
- Mrs gallon
- Weather measurement tools
- Vertical jaw relation at rest
- It measures the vertical distance
- Kussmaul sign
- International measurement system
- English linear measurements
- Ad as unemployment
- Significant figures cartoon
- Captive zeros
- Protractor uncertainty
- Measurements and uncertainties ib physics
- Safety measurement system
- King henry danced merrily down center main
- The customary system
- Principle of measurement of temperature
- Development measurement tools
- Nominal measurement
- Rancimat 743
- Software metrics and software metrology
- Integrity measurement architecture
- Computer measurement group
- Trochee symbol
- Criteria for good measurement
- Hip range of motion