jueves, 18 de septiembre de 2014

sábado, 13 de septiembre de 2014

Present Simple Examples

Present Simple Examples


Gabriel Iván Contreras Olivas 5ºJ

How it´s Made Electric Motor

How it´s Made Electric Motor

Review

"Electric motors are made up of two main components. One stationary called the stator, the other a rotor that moves inside the stator. The stator has multiple wire coils running electricity through them that creates a concentrated magnetic field that turns the rotor creating mechanical power. (...)"

Vocabulary
  • Stationary - Estacionario
  • Stator - Estator
  • Rotor - Rotor
  • Coil - Bobina
"(...) Workers cap each coil with fiberglass insulation. Then they insulate the portion of the coil left outside the slots with fiberglass sheets. Then they insert fiberglass wedges to lock the coils inside the slots. (...)"

Vocabulary
  • Cap - Tapar
  • Fiberglass - Fibra de vidrio
  • Insulation - Aislamiento
  • Fiberglass insulation - Aislante de fibra de vidrio
  • Fiberglass sheets - Hojas de fibra de vidrio
  • Fiberglass wedges - Cuñas de fibra de vidrio
"(...) Now, using a cord made of heat and chemical resistant polyester, they bind the coils tightly to ensure they won´t move when the motor spins. This unit abound coils is known as the stator coil. (...)"

Vocabulary
  • Cord - Cable
  • Bind - Unir
  • Abound - Abundan
"(...) Now, they have to balance the rotor. If it´s off kilter the motor will vibrate hampering performance. They balance it the same way a mechanic balances car tires, only with 100 times greater precision. (...)"

Vocabulary
  • Kilter - Armonía
  • Hampering - Obstaculizar
  • Performance - Desempeño
"(...) Now, they heat the fan and install it over the back cover. The fan´s job is to cool the running motor, so that it doesn´t overheat and breakdown. (...)"

Vocabulary
  • Back cover - Parte trasera
  • Overheat - Sobrecalientamiento
  • Breakdown - Quebrar
"(...) Then install a cover on the front of the motor as well. They run the finished motor through various tests: to assemble other things, insulation strenght and perfomance. These industrial motors are designed for use in factories for running machinery such as conveyor belts, pumps, fans and compressors."

Vocabulary
  • Insulation strenght - Resistencia de aislamiento
  • Conveyor belt - Banda transportadora
  • Pumps - Bombas

Gabriel Iván Contreras Olivas 5ºJ

Biography of Jules Verne

Biography of Jules Verne

Synopsis

Often referred to as the "Father of Science Fiction," Jules Verne wrote his first novel, Five Weeks in a Balloon, at the age of 35. He went on to be the second most translated author on earth, writing books about a variety of innovations and technological advancements years before they were practical realities.

Early Years

Jules Verne was born on February 8, 1828, in the city of Nantes, France, a busy maritime port city. There, Verne was exposed to schooners and ships departing and arriving, sparking his imagination for travel and adventure. While attending boarding school, he began to capture his imagination in short stories and poetry. After Verne left boarding school, his father sent him to Paris to study law, as he himself had done before.

The Beginning of a Writter

While in Paris, instead of immersing himself in the law, Verne found himself attracted to the theater, and after obtaining his law degree and setting up a practice in 1850, he began writing numerous plays, dramas and operettas.
Encouraged by his friend, Alexandre Dumas (author of The Three Musketeers), Verne began a ten-year period living as a playwright, giving up the law entirely. He produced a group of not terribly successful stage plays. With his plays not generating enough income to live comfortably, Verne became a stockbroker to support himself. The job provided him with enough financial stability to marry Honorine de Viane, in 1857. That same year, he published his first book, Le Salon de 1857 ("The 1857 Salon").

The Novelist Emerges

In 1859, Verne and his wife took the first of about 20 trips to the British Isles, and the trip ended up being quite influential, inspiring Verne to write "Backwards to Britain". In 1861, his and Honorine's only child, Michel Jean Pierre Verne, was born.
While his novels had previously been roundly rejected by publishers, Verne's luck would soon change, along with the genre in which he began to write. After making the acquaintance of editor and publisher Jules Hetzel, who would become Verne's champion, Verne's literary career truly began, with the 1863 publication of Five Weeks in a Balloon. The book garnered wide acclaim, but poor sales. Regardless of the revenue created by the book, Verne knew that he had finally found his place in the world. He then immersed himself in his work with unbridled enthusiasm, and over the course of the next ten years, he would create many of his classic novels.

Verne´s Stride

In 1864, Verne published Edgar Allan Poe and His WorksAdventures of Captain Hatteras and Journey to the Center of the Earth. That same year, Paris in the Twentieth Century was rejected for publication, but in 1865 Verne was back in print with From the Earth to the Moon and Captain Grant’s Children.
Verne soon bought a ship, making his thirst for travel and adventure easier to quench, and he and his wife spent a good deal of time sailing the seas. Verne's own adventures sailing to various ports, from the British Isles to the Mediterranean, provided plentiful fodder for his short stories and novels.

In 1869 and 1870, keeping up an unbelievable momentum, Hetzel published both books of Verne’s Twenty Thousand Leagues under the SeaRound the Moon and Discovery of the Earth, but rejected Uncle Robinson, an early version of The Mysterious Island (a revised version would appear in print three years later).
At this point, Verne could comfortably live on his writing, and his reputation was spreading across the globe.

Later Years

Jules Verne stayed prolific throughout the 1870s, writing The Adventures of a Special Correspondent (1872), The Survivors of the Chancellor (1875), Michael Strogoff (1876), and Dick Sand: A Captain at Fifteen (1878), among several others. After Verne's long run with personal and professional success, however, he would find the 1880s to be less kind.
In 1886, a week after Verne was being shot by his favorite nephew Gaston (who had mental illness), Jules Hetzel died—an event that devastated the author. To add to his misery, Verne's mother died the following year.
Verne did, however, continue to travel and write, and Eight Hundred Leagues on the Amazon (1881), Robur the Conqueror (1886) and Master of the World (1904) are among his later publications. In 1905, while ill with diabetes, Verne died at his home in Amiens, France.

Legacy

In all, Verne wrote more than 70 books (most notably the 54 novels comprising the Voyages Extraordinaires), and conjured hundreds of memorable characters and countless innovations years before their time, including the submarine, space travel, terrestrial flight and deep-sea exploration.
His works of imagination, and the innovations and inventions contained within, have appeared in countless forms, from motion pictures to television. His writings on scientific endeavors have sparked the imaginations of writers, scientists and inventors for over a century.

Gabriel Iván Contreras Olivas 5ºJ