March 31, 2011

"laugh"

What is laugh for?
Laugh is where we are happy
It comes, it goes us
Time and time over
It is to be happy in:
Where can we be live but laugh?



Poems based on Philip Larkin's poem “Days”

"Dreams"

What are dreams for?
Dreams are where we live
They come when you sleep
Time and time over
They make you fly
How could we live without dreams?



Poems based on Philip Larkin's poem “Days”

How to write numbers in English.

In American usage, four-digit numbers with non-zero hundreds are often named using multiples of "hundred" and combined with tens and ones: "One thousand one", "Eleven hundred three", "Twelve hundred twenty-five", "Four thousand forty-two", or "Ninety-nine hundred ninety-nine." In British usage, this style is common for multiples of 100 between 1,000 and 2,000 (e.g. 1,500 as "fifteen hundred") but not for higher numbers.
Americans may pronounce four-digit numbers with non-zero tens and ones as pairs of two-digit numbers without saying "hundred" and inserting "oh" for zero tens: "twenty-six fifty-nine" or "forty-one oh five". This usage probably evolved from the distinctive usage for years; 'nineteen-eighty-one'. It is avoided for numbers less than 2500 if the context may mean confusion with time of day: "ten ten" or "twelve oh four."


Expressing Numbers in English:
If a number is in the range 21 to 99, and the second digit is not zero, we should write the number as two words separated by a hyphen:
25 Twenty - five
57 fifty - seven
89 eighty-nine
Numbers over 100 are generally written in figures. However if you want to say them aloud or want to write them in words rather than figures you put 'and' in front of the number expressed by the last two figures. For example:

-203 two hundred and three (AmE: two hundred three)
-622 six hundred and twenty-two (AmE: six hundred twenty-two)
Numbers between 1000 and 1,000,000 is usually said or written in words as:

-1,803 one thousand, eight hundred and three (AmE: one thousand, eight hundred three)
-1,963 one thousand, nine hundred and sixty-three (AmE: one thousand, nine hundred sixty-three)
Four-figure numbers ending in 00 can also be said or written as a number of hundreds. For example, 1800 can be said or written as "eighteen hundred"
Saying years. We normally say a year in two parts. In the case of years ending in "00", we say the second part in "hundred":


1058 ten fifty-eight
1706 seventeen hundred and six (or 'seventeen oh six')
1865 eighteen sixty-five
1900 nineteen hundred


Cardinal numbers
0 zero
1 one
2 two
3 three
4 four
5 five
6 six
7 seven
8 eight
9 nine
10 ten
11 eleven
12 twelve
13 thirteen
14 fourteen
15 fifteen
16 sixteen
17 seventeen
18 eighteen
19 nineteen
20 twenty
21 twenty-one
30 thirty
40 forty
50 fifty
60 sixty
70 seventy
80 eighty
90 ninety
100 a/one hundred
1,000 a/one thousand
10,000 ten thousand
100,000 a/one hundred thousand

1,000,000 a/one million
1,000,000,000 a/one billion





Number Pronunciator


Please enter a number and I will try to pronounce
it.
Your number can be up to 303 digits long.





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March 15, 2011

Oxford

Oxford is old and historic. It's very important and the most famous university. It has bridges, museums, libraries...

In my opinion, one of the good things is that it has everything for example lot of shops, bars, restaurants, concerts, films... In this university you can cycle from one place to another

However there are things about oxford that I don't like. There are a lots of people in a small city.