Saltar navegación

Carla nos habla de Londres

Ajuste de pantalla

El ajuste de pantalla se aprecia al ver el vídeo en pantalla completa. Elige la presentación que más te guste:

Subido el 9 de febrero de 2020 por Rebeca A.

83 visualizaciones

Descargar la transcripción

First I'm going to talk about the city of London. 00:00:00
First I'm going to say the London location. 00:00:03
London is in Europe, but more exactly in the United Kingdom. 00:00:07
The United Kingdom is comprised in Scotland, North-Island, England and Wales. 00:00:12
London is the city of England and its main monuments. 00:00:17
The first main monument is the Palace of Westminster. This monument is a world-hated site. It hosts House of Parliament and, in London, Westminster Abbey, and the popular clock and symbol of London, the famous Big Ben, which is the world's luckiest four-faced clock. 00:00:28
Now I'm going to say the London Eye, the most famous Ferris wheel in London. 00:00:46
For its capsules you can get an incredible view of London. 00:00:53
The Buckingham Palace. 00:00:59
It is the official residence and administrative centre in Monarchist's House in 1837. 00:01:01
It's the place of royal ceremonies, official visits and investidors, and of course the 00:01:12
famous Changin of course. 00:01:17
Now the Tower Bridge. 00:01:21
It is the most famous bridge in London and is certainly the most colourful with its Victorian 00:01:24
Gothic style. 00:01:29
It is located next to the Tower of London hence its name, and Prison Castle where the 00:01:31
the Crown Jewel Circuit is more. 00:01:37
And when I stayed at London, 00:01:42
I stayed in a hotel in this site 00:01:44
and to go to the other part of London, 00:01:48
I need to go in a boat. 00:01:51
The British Museum. 00:01:56
This is one of the most important museums in the world, 00:01:57
as is the Louvre. 00:02:01
It is contained more than 7 million objects 00:02:02
all the continents and illustration the human history. Now I'm going to talk 00:02:05
about the pound sterling is the London currency. The British pound is the oldest 00:02:11
currency in existence today. The British pound is the official currency of the 00:02:21
United Kingdom and it's comprising England, Scotland, Wales and North Island. 00:02:26
Currently the notes are made of plastic so that they cannot broken or damaged when they get wet. 00:02:33
This is the money, the coins and this is the bad notes. 00:02:41
And now I'm going to put two videos. One of them is for the coins. 00:02:45
Coins of the United Kingdom. 00:02:53
This is a one penny coin. 00:03:01
One penny. We can write one penny as one p. 00:03:05
This is a two pence coin. Two pence. We can write two pence as two p. 00:03:11
This is a five pence coin. Five pence. We can write five pence as five p. 00:03:23
This is a 10 pence coin. 10 pence. We can write 10 pence as 10p. This is a 20 pence coin. 20 00:03:36
pence. We can write 20 pence as 20p. This is a 50 pence coin. 50 pence. We can write 50 pence 00:03:55
as 50p. This is a one pound coin. One pound. We can write one pound like this. 00:04:13
This is a two pound coin. Two pounds. We can write two pounds like this. Can you 00:04:29
name each coin. Two pence, one penny, ten pence, five pence, twenty pence, one pound, fifty pence, two 00:04:44
pounds. And the second one from the case security filters for the banknotes. The Bank of England banknotes. There are four 00:05:03
denominations of banknotes in circulation. 5, 10, 20 and 50 pound. There are 5, 10 and 00:05:16
20 pound notes printed on polymer and 20 and 50 pound notes printed on paper. This 00:05:27
bill will run through a number of key security features. You should check these features 00:05:35
to ensure notes are genuine. The following security features are found on the polymer 00:05:40
notes. There is a large see-through window. A portrait of the Queen is printed on the 00:05:46
window, with the numerical value of the note and the words Bank of England printed twice 00:05:52
around the edge. A metallic image is positioned over the window. The foil is gold on the front 00:05:58
of the £5 and £10 notes, and blue and gold on the front of the £20 note. The foil is 00:06:06
silver on the back of all notes. On the polymer £20 note, there is a second, smaller window 00:06:13
in the bottom corner of the note. Below the large see-through window on the front of the 00:06:21
notes, there is a silver foil patch containing a hologram. When you tilt the notes from side 00:06:26
to side, the words change between the value of the note and pounds. A 3D image of the 00:06:32
coronation crown appears above the see-through window. 00:06:39
The following security features are found on the paper notes. 00:06:43
When you tilt the paper 20-pound note from side to side, the holographic images on the 00:06:48
scroll screen change between the pound symbol and the number 20. 00:06:53
When you tilt the 50-pound note up and down or side to side, the images on the green motion 00:06:58
thread change between a pound symbol and the number 50. 00:07:03
When paper banknotes are held up to the light, there is a bright denomination at the top of the Queen's portrait in the watermark. 00:07:07
Some security features are common across all current Bank of England banknotes. 00:07:17
On the front of any of the notes, you can feel the raised print, for example, on the words Bank of England, and in the bottom right corner. 00:07:23
Under a good quality ultraviolet light, the numerical value appears in bright red and green on the front of the notes, against a duller background. 00:07:32
The Bank of England Bank Notes. 00:07:43
Now I'm going to say the costumes. 00:07:53
The costume number one is Look Right. 00:07:56
Painting of the asphalt of the main streets warns tourists of the reverse direction of traffic in this country. 00:07:59
The main reason is that the coachmen used to whip with their right hand and control the reins with their left hand. 00:08:06
This allowed coachmen to avoid hitting other hikers as well as pedestrians. 00:08:14
The custom 2 is British shake hands when they greeting. So you should avoid the habit of 00:08:21
giving two kisses to other one 00:08:29
The custom 3 is very quite common 00:08:33
So it is essential to keep an umbrella with you. A curious fact is that around 00:08:36
18,000 umbrellas are lost in the underworld every year 00:08:42
The custom for is hefty. In the United Kingdom, 16,000 million scoops are consumed annually. 00:08:46
5. Education is very important. We disapraise very much that you create say thank you or apology. 00:08:55
When you go down the street and have a contact somewhere accidentally, the English say sorry, sorry, 00:09:03
even if it was not them who touched you in the first place and the six customs 00:09:11
is British are very punctual and organized therefore we must never skip a 00:09:21
line and punctually is not courtesy but a requirement if we are working or 00:09:27
studying in England we should never be late the typical food first I'm going to 00:09:34
say the breakfast and the lunch and for finish the tea. Breakfast. English 00:09:41
breakfast is a large breakfast which is packed where there is no lunch 00:09:46
sausages and eggs and bacon and you can put any beans, tomatoes or toast. Lunch. 00:09:53
One of the most typical foods of England is a traditional fish and chips with 00:10:01
lemon, which is very common and popular. This recipe is so old that it is very 00:10:08
difficult to know exactly the date or age of the tea. The 5 o'clock tea ceremony is a 00:10:14
well-established custom usually accompanied by cookies, crackers or even 00:10:21
sandwiches, which because they are selling the fabrics among people. And now 00:10:27
is the end of my presentation and I hope you like it and I hope you're also learning something about 00:10:38
Neo of London. Fantastic Carla. 00:10:45
Subido por:
Rebeca A.
Licencia:
Todos los derechos reservados
Visualizaciones:
83
Fecha:
9 de febrero de 2020 - 12:14
Visibilidad:
Clave
Centro:
CP INF-PRI SERRACINES
Duración:
10′ 51″
Relación de aspecto:
1.78:1
Resolución:
2560x1440 píxeles
Tamaño:
1.91

Del mismo autor…

Ver más del mismo autor


EducaMadrid, Plataforma Educativa de la Comunidad de Madrid

Plataforma Educativa EducaMadrid