PPT
PPT
PPT
Emotional appeal
Cite specifics
To lie or deceive
To distort
To engage in name-calling
Mostly favorable
Mostly neutral
Mostly apathetic
Mostly hostile
FAVORABLE AUDIENCE
Neutral audience is one in which the majority of the listeners have not
reached a decision about your speech.
They will listen to all sides of your speech equally, so you need to give
them information to persuade them to take a stand.
APATHETIC AUDIENCE
They are the ones in which the majority of the listeners oppose your
speech.
You need to show the listeners that they are being fair in listening to you,
that what you have to say matters to them, and you are worth listening to.
INTENSIVE AND REFLEXIVE PRONOUN
PRONOUN
It is one of the parts of speech.
is a word that substitutes for a noun.
REFLEXIVE PRONOUN
MODALS
It is a type of auxiliary verb that is used to indicate modality.
It express ideas such as capacity , possibility, obligation, permission ,
prohibition, probability, and request.
These are verbs that cannot be used without another verb.
It is a type of auxiliary verb that is used to indicate modality.
It express ideas such as capacity , possibility, obligation, permission ,
prohibition, probability, and request.
These are verbs that cannot be used without another verb.
V
Verb S
Subject M
Modal
For example:
I can write poems.
FORM
There is no “s” in singular.
For example: He cans dance.
There is no “do/does” in the question?
For example: Do you like to can come with me?
There is no “don’t/ doesn’t” in the negative
For example: They don’t can be serious.
MODAL VERBS
Can Must May Ought to Will Could Shall Would
HOW TO USE?
WILL
FUTURE ACTIONS
I will call you later.
OFFER
I will do that for you if you like.
PROMISE
I will be honest from now on.
SHALL
OFFER
Shall I do it for you?
SUGGESTION
Shall we move the meeting next week?
PERMISSION
Shall I return this medal?
MAY
PERMISSION
May I have another cup of coffee?
UNCERTAINTY
I may come tomorrow.
CAN
ABILITY
Abby can write a good composition.
REQUEST
Can you submit your paper later?
PERMISSION
Can I get your number?
COULD
PAST ABILITY
My brother could play the piano when he was younger.
SLIGHT POSSIBILITY
You could have passed the examination
TO GIVE SUGGESTION/ ADVICE
You could ride a bus to go there.
OUGHT TO
OBLIGATION
You ought to practice using the drums some more.
ADVICE
she ought to stop eating candies.
MUST
PROBABILITY
She cannot write that well. She must have copied it
NECESSITY
You must review so you can pass the test.
Space Technology
15 July 1975: With tensions between the US and USSR softening, the
first cooperative Apollo-Soyuz mission is launched. With two separate
flights, the Apollo and Soyuz spacecraft dock in space and the two
commanders Tom Stafford and Alexei Leonov exchange the first
international handshake. This act can be seen to symbolically end the
Space Race, paving the way for future joint missions, such as the
International Space Station and the Shuttle-Mir programme.
SPACE STATION
Space stations were built to provide research facilities to study, Earth,
Sun, the solar system, and the galaxies.
Numerous science experiments are also conducted in space stations.
The United States launched its first space station, Skylab, on May 14, 1973.
Skylab was a space station specially designed to perform experiments in
space.
Astronauts aboard rockets could dock with Skylab and enter the
laboratory. Later, these astronauts could return to earth with their data.
However, after 8 months of operation, it went unused and finally fell from
orbit and dropped into Earth’s atmosphere on July 11, 1979. A few large
pieces of debris survive its fiery descent.
Joe Kerwin on board Skylab Today, the Space Shuttle, a ship carried into
space by rockets, has taken the place of the Skylab.
But unlike any space vehicle ever built, the Space Shuttle can return from
space and can be used again. The Space Shuttle returns to earth like a
glider. An important component of the Space Shuttle is its laboratory, often
referred to as Spacelab. Spacelab makes it possible for non NASA
scientists, engineers, and doctors to conduct experiments in orbit.
Today, the Space Shuttle, a ship carried into space by rockets, has taken the
place of the Skylab. But unlike any space vehicle ever built, the Space
Shuttle can return from space and can be used again. The Space Shuttle
returns to earth like a glider. An important component of the Space Shuttle is
its laboratory, often referred to as Spacelab. Spacelab makes it possible
for non NASA scientists, engineers, and doctors to conduct experiments
in orbit.
THE INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION (ISS)
U.S.A.
GREAT BRITAIN
SWITZERLAND SWEDEN SPAIN NORWAY NETHERLANDS CANADA
JAPAN
RUSSIA
BELGIUM
DENMARK FRANCE
GERMANYITALY NASA Astronaut Sunita (Suni) Williams gives us the best
inside tour of the International Space Station (ISS). How do astronauts live on
the ISS? How do they go to the bathroom? How to the eat food? What Kinds of
special equipment and technology do they need and use?
THE INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION (ISS)
The International Space Station (ISS) is a multi nation construction project that is
the largest single structure humans ever put into space. Its main construction was
completed between 1998 and 2011, although the station continually evolves to
include new missions and experiments. It has been continuously occupied since
Nov. 2, 2000.
THE INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION (ISS) The International Space
Station costs about $3 billion per year for NASA to operate, roughly a
third of the human spaceflight budget. As of
May 2022:
258 individuals from 20 countries have visited the International Space
Station.
The top participating countries include the United States (158 people) and
Russia (54 people).
THE INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION (ISS)
The ISS includes contributions from 15 nations.
NASA (United States),
Roscosmos (Russia)
European Space Agency
Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency
Canadian Space Agency.
Through a private company called Axiom Space, private astronauts are
starting to work on the orbiting complex, from time to time; additionally,
astronauts from other nations such as the United Arab Emirates do fly
occasionally to the ISS.
THE INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION (ISS) Current plans call for the
space station to be operated through at least 2024, with the partners discussing a
possible extension.
NASA has approved an extension to 2030, although Russia says it will withdraw
after 2024 to focus on building its own space station around 2028. ******
THE JAMES WEBB SPACE STATION
The James Webb Space Telescope took 30 years and $10 billion to
build, has flown over 1.5 million kilometres away from Earth. NASA has
promised the deepest image of our universe that has ever been taken, and
these first sets of images are only the first step in a long job of expanding
our view of the universe.
Where is the James Webb Space Telescope now?
The James Webb Space Telescope is now in L2 Orbit - its final
destination, about 1.5 million kilometres from Earth. This is a journey that
took roughly a month to complete.
SPACE SATELLITES
SPACE SATELLITES
What are the importance and uses of Satellites in our life?
1. Satellites send television signals directly to homes.
2. Satellites are used for communication.
- telephones, social media, and other apps, etc
*Satellites offer flight phone communications on airplanes.
*Communications satellites have the ability to rapidly communicate between
a number of widely dispersed locations. -the big manufacturing companies
and the department stores can perform inventory management
- provide instant credit card authorization and automated teller
banking services
3. Satellites are used in astronomy Astronomy satellites are the new
technology that is mounted on earth orbiting satellites or on the deep
space probes, and they can give us an unobstructed view without the
earth’s atmosphere interfering.
4. Satellites are used for navigation
Satellite-based navigation systems like the Global Positioning Systems
(GPS) enable anyone with a handheld receiver to determine his
location to within a few meters.
GPS locators are increasingly included in the car direction services,
GPS based systems are used by the civilians and the military for
navigation on land, the sea, and the air, and they are crucial in the
situations like a ship making a difficult course in a harbor in the bad
weather or the troops lost in unknown regions.
5.Satellites are used for surveillance There are surveillance or spy
satellites, Reconnaissance satellites are used to spy on other countries,
They provide intelligence information on the military activities of
foreign countries, They can detect missile launches or nuclear
explosions in space.
Reconnaissance satellites can pick up and record the radio and radar
transmissions while passing over a country.
Ocean surveillance satellites are used to search for the ships or the
submarines, They can spot the nuclear vessels, and new advancements may
allow them to scan the depths of the ocean, Early warning satellites are
primarily used by the armed forces, These basically protect the countries
from the sneak attacks, and they can be used to detect if other countries are
building or storing the nuclear warheads.
6. Weather Satellites are used for monitoring the weather
Satellites provide meteorologists with the ability to see the weather on a
global scale, They allow them to follow the effects of phenomena like the
volcanic eruptions and burning gas and oil fields to the development of
large systems like hurricanes.
7. Satellites are used in the field of oceanography,
Now marine scientists and marine biologists can detect everything that goes
on in the ocean, They use satellites to detect oceans effect on the
environment, they can analyze the wave patterns. They can monitor the
marine surface life and help them tell you what the water will be like, and
help them find out about the ocean life.
8. Satellites are the best sources of data for climate change research,
They monitor the ocean temperatures and the prevailing currents, The
data acquired by the satellite-borne radars were able to show that sea
levels have been rising by three mm a year over the last decade.
Imaging satellites can measure the changing sizes of the glaciers which
is difficult to do from the ground due to the remoteness and darkness
of the polar regions, The satellites can determine the long-term
patterns of the rainfall, the vegetation cover, and the emissions of the
greenhouse gases.
9. Satellites can take the search out of search and rescue
for the people in the distress in the remote regions,
Distress radio beacons directly linked to a search and rescue
satellite can lead the rescuers quickly and accurately to the land,
the sea, or the air emergency location.
10. Satellites can take photographs and observe the areas all over
the globe. Satellites can detect the underground water and the
mineral sources
Imaging satellites produce high-resolution data of the entire landmass
on earth which are used in the closely guarded military capability, but
now anyone with an internet connection can find his house using
Google Earth.
Hazard: Dangerous Phenomenon that may cause loss of life and many others
Exposure: The degree to which the element is at risk
Vulnerability: characteristics and circumstance of community to be susceptible to
the damaging effect of the hazard
Capacity: Combination of all strengths and resources available
Disaster: 20% of population 40% of Livelihood
Pacific Ring of Fire: Area where the most active volcano are located
Typhoon: From the pacific ocean
Hurricane: From the pacific ocean
Tsunami: A disaster where people who live near water are most affected
Landslide: movement of stones that cause the collapse of a part of land
Oil Spill: Has killed many coral reefs
Climate change: Change in climate pattern or the usual climate in the past many
years
Global warming: A gradual increase in the overall temperature of the earth
Green Gases: Protective layer that help the earth to not be too hot nor cold
Acid rain: Rainfall made sufficiently acidic by atmospheric pollution it causes