How To Learn English!
How To Learn English!
Here are some tips which may help you to master the English Language!
Speak without Fear
The biggest problem most people face in learning a new language is their own fear. They worry that they won’t say things correctly or that they will look stupid so they don’t talk at all. Don’t do this. The fastest way to learn anything is to do it – again and again until you get it right. Like anything, learning English requires practice. Don’t let a little fear stop you from getting what you want.
Use all of your Resources
Even if you study English at a language school it doesn’t mean you can’t learn outside of class. Using as many different sources, methods and tools as possible, will allow you to learn faster. There are many different ways you can improve your English, so don’t limit yourself to only one or two. The internet is a fantastic resource for virtually anything, but for the language learner it's perfect.
Surround Yourself with English
The absolute best way to learn English is to surround yourself with it. Take notes in English, put English books around your room, listen to English language radio broadcasts, watch English news, movies and television. Speak English with your friends whenever you can. The more English material that you have around you, the faster you will learn and the more likely it is that you will begin “thinking in English.” .
Listen to Native Speakers as Much as Possible
There are some good English teachers that have had to learn English as a second language before they could teach it. However, there are several reasons why many of the best schools prefer to hire native English speakers. One of the reasons is that native speakers have a natural flow to their speech that students of English should try to imitate. The closer ESL / EFL students can get to this rhythm or flow, the more convincing and comfortable they will become.
Watch English Films and Television
This is not only a fun way to learn but it is also very effective. By watching English films (especially those with English subtitles) you can expand your vocabulary and hear the flow of speech from the actors. If you listen to the news you can also hear different accents.
Listen to English Music
Music can be a very effective method of learning English. In fact, it is often used as a way of improving comprehension. The best way to learn though, is to get the lyrics (words) to the songs you are listening to and try to read them as the artist sings. There are several good internet sites where one can find the words for most songs. This way you can practice your listening and reading at the same time. And if you like to sing, fine.
Study As Often As Possible!
Only by studying things like grammar and vocabulary and doing exercises, can you really improve your knowledge of any language.
Do Exercises and Take Tests
Many people think that exercises and tests aren't much fun. However, by completing exercises and taking tests you can really improve your English. One of the best reasons for doing lots of exercises and tests is that they give you a benchmark to compare your future results with. Often, it is by comparing your score on a test you took yesterday with one you took a month or six months ago that you realize just how much you have learned. If you never test yourself, you will never know how much you are progressing. Start now by doing some of the many exercises and tests on this site, and return in a few days to see what you've learned. Keep doing this and you really will make some progress with English.
Record Yourself
Nobody likes to hear their own voice on tape but like tests, it is good to compare your tapes from time to time. You may be so impressed with the progress you are making that you may not mind the sound of your voice as much.
Listen to English
By this, we mean, speak on the phone or listen to radio broadcasts, audiobooks or CDs in English. This is different than watching the television or films because you can’t see the person that is speaking to you. Many learners of English say that speaking on the phone is one of the most difficult things that they do and the only way to improve is to practice.
Finally
Have fun!
Илтгэл бичих заавар
Илтгэл хэрхэн бичих вэ? |
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interp - 16
To translate into Mongolia
18 .Health and Welfare
http://countrystudies.us/mongolia/52.htm
Health-Care Systems
Mongolia's government has made great efforts to
provide modern medical care to the inhabitants. In the 1980s, medical care
was free and was provided through a hierarchy of clinics and hospitals. In
rural areas, the lowest level of the system was a medical station, staffed by
a physician's assistant, serving people within a thirty- to forty-kilometer
radius. Above this was a somon
medical station, staffed by a physician, serving a forty- to sixty-kilometer
radius; an inter-somon
hospital, serving a seventy- to eighty-kilometer radius; and an aymag general
hospital covering a 150- to 200-kilometer radius. The higher the level in the
system, the more numerous the medical specialties and the more sophisticated
the diagnostic equipment available. The lowest levels concentrated on acute
care, public-health work, and screening and referring cases up the hierarchy.
As of 1985, Mongolia had approximately 4,600
physicians, 24.8 per 10,000 people. There were also about 8,500 nurses and
3,800 physician's assistants; many of the nurses and the physician's
assistants specialized as midwives, although some medical personnel were
trained in midwifery only. Medical care was provided by almost 1,200 clinics
staffed by physician's assistants, 290 clinics staffed by physicians, and by
1986, 112 hospitals. The structure of medical specialties reflected both the
needs of the young and rapidly growing population and the concentration of
scarce resources on public health, control of epidemic diseases, and the
health of the working population. The most common medical specialty was
pediatrics, which accounted for 21 percent of all physicians in 1985. The
next most common were general practitioners, 15 percent; obstetricians, 6
percent; public health specialists, 6 percent; and physicians specializing in
the prevention and treatment of epidemic diseases, 6 percent. Government
statistics listed only twenty-seven (0.5 percent) oncologists and no
cardiologists; however, the existence of a large cancer research facility and
the practice of bypass surgery techniques suggest a greater interest in these
areas than the statistics indicate.
In spite of efforts to distribute medical
facilities and specialists evenly, there was a marked concentration of
physicians and hospitals in Ulaanbaatar and other major cities. In 1981
Ulaanbaatar had 49 percent of Mongolia's physicians and an average of 42.9
physicians per 10,000 people. The cities of Darhan and Erdenet had 21.7 and
18.8 physicians, respectively, per 10,000 people; low ratios of 9.5
physicians per 10,000 in Uvs Aymag and 10.2 per 10,000 in Hovsgol Aymag were
also reported.
Mongolia cooperated closely with the Soviet Union
in medical research and training. Soviet specialists held seminars in
Mongolia and helped to build and to operate such special facilities as an
oncology center and a 600-bed isolation hospital for infectious diseases in
Ulaanbaatar. Mongolia was an active member of Comecon's Commission on
Cooperation in Public Health, and it participated in World Health
Organization (WHO) projects on maternity and child health, environmental
protection, and training of medical technicians and mid-level health-care
personnel.
By 1981 Mongolia claimed to have eliminated
smallpox, typhus, plague, poliomyelitis, and diphtheria, and to have reduced
sharply the incidence of other infectious diseases. In the past, disease was
spread through the use of contaminated drinking water and from such sources
as lice, which were common among the herders, who seldom bathed or washed
their clothing. Clean drinking water for the herders, who often shared water
sources with their animals, continued to be a problem, but much effort was
put into health education. The Mongolian Red Cross, an organization that
cooperated with the Mongolian Revolutionary Youth League, focused on preventive
medicine and health education. It sent mobile teams to factories and herding
collectives to teach hygiene and sanitation and to hold special workshops on
infant care and the health needs of the elderly. Although traditional Mongols
were averse to bathing, their modern descendants patronized a network of
spas. Following the Soviet and East European pattern, Mongolia established
sanitoriums where workers and such deserving individuals as holders of the
Order of Maternal Glory went to rest, to take the waters, and to follow a
medically prescribed regimen of swimming, sunbathing, and moderate exercise.
The Council of Mongolian Trade Unions operated a network of sanitoriums that
used the country's many hot springs and mountain lakes. The network annually
could accommodate 20 percent of the country's factory and office workers
during the brief summer season. So popular were the spas that aymag authorities
established their own sanitoriums to provide therapeutic holidays for
collective herders.
Precautions Against AIDS
At the end of 1988, Mongolia had reported no cases
of acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). In 1987 an AIDS research
center was opened at the Institute of Hygiene and Virology, and its
specialists were trained in laboratory analysis by WHO experts. About 16,000
people had been checked for the disease by December 1988, but no carriers had
been found. All Mongolians who had been abroad for more than three months
were required to be tested. This was considered necessary because Mongolia
sends thousands of young people to study in other countries. Analysis of
donor blood and blood products had begun by mid-1988, and special
laboratories were being established in large hospitals. Foreign students
coming to Mongolia were required to be tested for AIDS, either in Mongolia or
abroad, and Mongolia accepted the results of tests performed in the United
States.
1.when did the history of modern medicine start in
Mongolia?
2. who found the first hospital in Mongolia?
3. how did
the policy medical develop during the socialist period?
4. When was the World Health Day celebrated in the
first?
|
interp - 15
To translate into Mongolia
1. Mongolian
fauna and flora
Flora
and fauna
Mongolian diverse and distinctive vegetation includes an important part of plant life in Asia. Species representing Siberian coniferous taiga forest, Central Asian steppe and desert, and the Altai and Sayan Mountains all occur here. Steppe plants from Kazakhstan grow beside Manchurian steppe flowers. More than 3,000 species of vascular plants, 927 lichens, 437 mosses, 875 fungi and numerous algae have been recorded. Many other species, however, remain to be classified.
Mongolia's flora includes almost 150 endemic plants and nearly 100 relic species. Over 100 plant species are listed in the Mongolian Red Book as rare or endangered. Like its vegetation, fauna of Mongolia represents a mixture of species from the northern taiga of Siberia, the steppe and the deserts of Central Asia. Fauna includes 136 species of mammals, 436 birds, 8 amphibians, 22 reptiles, 75 fish and numerous invertebrates.
Mongolian diverse and distinctive vegetation includes an important part of plant life in Asia. Species representing Siberian coniferous taiga forest, Central Asian steppe and desert, and the Altai and Sayan Mountains all occur here. Steppe plants from Kazakhstan grow beside Manchurian steppe flowers. More than 3,000 species of vascular plants, 927 lichens, 437 mosses, 875 fungi and numerous algae have been recorded. Many other species, however, remain to be classified.
Mongolia's flora includes almost 150 endemic plants and nearly 100 relic species. Over 100 plant species are listed in the Mongolian Red Book as rare or endangered. Like its vegetation, fauna of Mongolia represents a mixture of species from the northern taiga of Siberia, the steppe and the deserts of Central Asia. Fauna includes 136 species of mammals, 436 birds, 8 amphibians, 22 reptiles, 75 fish and numerous invertebrates.
Species endemic to Central Asia are found primarily
in the Gobi and desert steppe including the Mongolian subspecies of the Saiga
antelope tatarica mongolica, four species of jerboa and a vole that are endemic
to Central Asia. The birds include the Altai Snowcock Tetraogallus altaicus and
Kozlov's accentor Prunella kozlovi. Reptiles endemic to Central Asia include
eight species. Endemic fish include the Altai Osman Oreoloeuciscus potanini and
the Mongolian grayling Thymallus brevirostris. Numerous globally threatened and
endangered species occur in Mongoli
MONGOLIAN FLORA
There can be said to be three distinct types of
ecosystem related to flora - grassland and shrubs (52% of land surface), forests
(15%) and desert vegetation (32%). Crop cultivation and human settlements make
up less than 1% of Mongolia's territory. Although there is so much grassland
here, used for grazing, overgrazing is a problem in some areas.
Forests - The natural regeneration of Mongolian
forests is slow and the forests are often damaged by fires and insects due to
the harsh climate. 8.1% of Mongolia's territory is covered by forest totaling
140 species of trees, shrubs and woody plants. Trees are used as a source of fuel,
whether it is the larch, pine or birch in the north or the saxaul in the Gobi
Desert. Timber is cut in the north of the country for building.
Vascular and Lower Plants - There are 2823 species of
vascular plants, 445 species of moss, 930 species of lichen, 900 species of
fungi and 1236 species of algae. 845 species of plants are used in Mongolian
medicine, 1000 species for fodder, 173 for food and 64 for industry. There are
now 128 species of plant listed as endangered and threatened in the 1997 Mongolian
Red Book. These include 75 medicinal species, 11 for food and 16 used in
industry.
MONGOLIAN FAUNA
Anyone traveling in Mongolia may find it difficult to
distinguish between wild and domesticated animals as both roam freely on the
open steppe, for example, Wild Ass are seen among domesticated horses. Although
Mongolia doesn't have the large game such as lion, elephant and rhino that
attracts visitors to African parks, it does have many very rare and endangered
species such as the snow leopard, Argali and Ibex.
Mammals - There are 133 mammals in Mongolia, many of
which are endemic to Central Asia and Mongolia, including the Mongolian Vole,
Mongolian Gerbil, Gobi Jerboa, Kozlov's Pygmy Jerboa, Mongolian Jerboa and the
Mongolian Hamster. The white-tailed gazelle, Saiga Antelope, Przevalski horse,
Beaver and Siberian Ibex have been re-introduced to the areas where they have
become rare.
Wildlife.
The wildlife flourishes in Mongolia despite an extreme climate, the nomadic
fondness for hunting, the communist persecution of Buddhists who had set aside
areas as animal sanctuaries, and a penniless government, which lacks resources
to police nature protection laws. Your chances of seeing some form of wildlife
are good, though the closest you will get to a snow leopard, argali sheep or
moose is museum.
Despite the lack of water in the Gobi, some species
(many of which are endangered) somehow survive. These include (in Mongolian)
the wild camel (khavtgai), wild ass (khulanf, Gobi argali sheep (argal),
Gobi bear (mazalaii, ibex (yangir) and black-tailed gazelle Ikhar
stiult zeer). In the wide open steppe, you may see the rare saiga antelope.
Mongolian gazelle, the jerboa rodent (endemic to Central Asia) and millions of
furry marmots (tarvag) busy waking up after the last hibernation, or
preparing for their next.
Further north in the forests live the wild boar,
brown bear Ikhuren baavgai), antelope.
Birds.
Mongolia is home to over 400 species of birds. In the desert you may see the
desert warbler, houbara bustard and saxaul sparrow, as well as sandgrouse,
finch and the cinereous vulture (tas).
On the steppes, you will certainly see the most
common bird in Mongolia - the grey demoiselle cranes (ovogt togoruu) —
as well as varieties of hoopoes (ovoolj), the odd eagle (shonkhor)
and vulture (yol). Other steppe species include the upland buzzard,
steppe eagle, saker falcon, black kite and some assorted owls and hawks (sar).
Some of these will even swoop down and catch pieces of bread in mid-air if your
throw it up high enough.
These magnificent creatures, perched majestically on
a rock by the side of the road, will rarely be disturbed by your jeep or the
screams of your guide ('Look. Eagle!! Bird!! We stop?') but following the
almost inaudible click of your lens cap, these birds will move and almost be in
China before you have even thought about apertures.
In the mountains, you may be lucky to spot species of
ptarmigan, finch, woodpecker, owl and the endemic Altai snowcock (khoilog).
The lakes of the west and north are visited by Dalmatian pelicans, hooded
cranes, relict gulls, and bar-headed geese.
Eastern Mongolia has the largest breeding population
of cranes, including the hooded and Siberian varieties and the critically
endangered white-naped crane, of which only 4500 remain in the wild.
Fish.
Rivers such as the Selenge, Orkhon, Zavkhan, Balj, Onon and Egiin, as well as
dozens of lakes, including Khovsgol Nuur, hold about 380 species offish. They
include trout, grayling (khadran), roach, lenok (eebge), Siberian
sturgeon (khilem), pike (tsurkhai), perch (algana), the
endemic Altai osman and the enormous taimen, a Siberian relative of the salmon,
which can grow up to 1.5m long and weigh 50kg.
ENDANGERED SPECIES
According to conservationists, 28 species of mammals
are endangered. The more commonly known species are the wild ass, wild camel,
Gobi argali sheep, Gobi bear, ibex and the black-tailed gazelle; others include
otters, wolves, antelopes and jerboas.
There are 59 species of endangered birds, including
many species of hawk, falcon, buzzard, crane and owl. Despite Mongolian belief
that it's bad luck to kill a crane, the white-naped crane is threatened with
extinction. Serious numbers of falcons continue to be smuggled from Mongolia to
the Gulf states, where they are used for sport.
One good news story is the resurrection of the takhi
wild horse. The takhi - also known as Przewalski's horse - was actually extinct
in the 1960s. It was successfully reintroduced into two national parks after an
extensive breeding program overseas. For more on the takhi see the boxed text
"Takhi - The Reintroduction of a Species" in the Central Mongolia
chapter.
In preserved areas of the mountains, about 1000 snow
leopards remain. They are hunted for their pelts (which are also part of some
shamanist and Buddhist traditional practises), as are the snow leopards' major
source of food, the marmot.
Every year the government sells licenses to hunt 300
ibex and 40 argali sheep, both endangered species, netting the government over
US$500,000.
PROTECTED AREAS
For centuries, Mongolians have been aware of the need
for conservation. The area around Bogdkhan Uul mountain, near Ulaanbaatar, was
protected from hunting and logging as early as the 12th century, and was
officially designated as a national park over 200 years ago.
Today the Ministry of Nature & Environment (MNE)
and its Protected Areas Bureau (PAB) control the national park system with a
tiny annual budget of around US$100,000 per annum. This is clearly not enough,
but through substantial financial assistance and guidance from international
governments and non-governmental organizations, the animals, flora and
environment in some parts of the country are being preserved. Unfortunately, in
many protected areas the implementation of park regulations are weak, if not
non-existent.
The MNE classifies protected areas into four
categories which, in order of importance, are:
- Strictly Protected Areas Very fragile areas of great importance; hunting, logging and development is strictly prohibited and there is no established human influence.
- National Parks Places of historical and educational interest; fishing and grazing by nomadic people is allowed and parts of the park are developed for ecotourism.
- Natural Reserves Less important regions protecting rare species of flora and fauna and archaeological sites; some development is allowed within certain guidelines.
- Natural
& Historical Monuments Important places of historical and
cultural interest; development is allowed within guidelines.
In 2000 the government created five new national
parks and one new natural reserve. The 48 protected areas now constitute an
impressive 13.2% of the total land. The government is aiming for 30% coverage,
which will create the largest park system in the world. At the time of independence
in 1990, some put forth the proposal that the entire country be turned
into a national park!
The Bogdkhan Uul, Great Gobi and Uvs Nuur Basin
strictly protected areas are biosphere reserves included in Unesco's Man and
Biosphere Project.
Permits.
To visit these parks - especially a strictly protected area or national park
-you will need a permit, either from the local Protected Areas bureau office,
or from rangers at the entrances to the parks. The permits are little more than
an entrance fee, but they are an important source of revenue for the
maintenance of the parks.
Entrance fees are set at Т1000 per foreigner per day, plus an extra T300 to T3000 for a
vehicle, depending on whether it is driven by a Mongolian or a foreigner
(though just having a foreigner in the car is enough to qualify for the T3000
fee).
If you are not able to get a permit and are found in
a park without one, the worst penalty you're likely to suffer is being asked to
leave or pay a fine to the park ranger.
1.
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3.
4.
interp - 14
To Translate into Mongolia
14.
Khamar monastery
Khamar monastery was established in the 1820’s by famous 19th
century Mongolian educator and literary figure Danzanravjaa. The Monastery was
an important center of the Buddhist “red sect”, and seat of the Gobiin Dogshin
Noyon Khutagt / “Terrible Noble Saint Of the Gobi”/. An outspoken critic of the
society in which he lived , Danzanravjaa fought against the rigid class and
gender distinction of his day. He devoted great efforts to the cause of public education, which he
promoted at khamar Monastery through the establishment of an inclusive public
school , theatre, museum and library. The “ Namtar duulakh datsan” /
story singing college/ , established at Khamar monastery in the 1830s, is
recognized as being Mongolia’s first professional theatre. The nearby
“Khuukhdiin datsan” / children’s college/ offered basic and vocation, artistic
training for local children, who often went on to become singers and dancers
painters, sculptors, and other artists at the Monastery or in its theatre
company , in addition Khamar Monastery included a public library, museum,
poetry recital hall and other facilities , making it an important regional
cultural center, in the words of renowned Mongolian scholar Damdinsuren .
Ts.:”Khamar monastery was a perfectly harmonious location, having a river with
many fine trees along its south part and rocky mountains with dozens of caves
along its north; and the place was filled with the noise of hundreds of people playing the
famous Saran Khokhoo drama……….”.
The local public was involved in many
religious activities held at the Monastery , including the Tsam dance festival
and the Amaagiin Gandoi Ergekh ceremony. Under Danzanravjaa’s influence women
were especially encouraged to participate in these events; Khamar Monastery was
unique in 19th century Mongolia as a place where women were accorded
greater respect and privileged than men. Reflecting these liberal attitudes
Danzanravjaa composed the song Ulemjiin Chanar/ quality of Greatness/ - which
remains popular today – in praise of a woman’s qualities. To the north of the
monastery were a series of caves where monks would practice yogic exercises and
meditate in isolation for 108 days at a time , hardening their bodies whilst
expanding their physical and spiritual powers. At the rear of the present –day
monastery is a well initially Danzanravjaa claimed in his Adistet yosnii sudar
/blessed water sutra/ that this water was helpful in curing aliments to the
stomach, intestines, bile and liver, and provided special instructions for its
drinking and use. Fossilized dinosaur bones, petrified wood, and other rare
palaeontological remains are widespread
in the area surrounding the monastery. Palaeontologists working in the region have dug up most
notably a skeleton of the herbivorous dinosaur iguanodon , which lived in the
Cretaceous period between 80 and 200 million years ago, at its peak Khamar
monastery consisted of four main sections- East khuree, West khuree, Tsokhon
and Dunkher – comprising four colleges /datsan/ and the children ‘s school,
more than eighty temples, and a resident population of over five hundred lamas.
The monastery was completely destroyed by the military in 1938 during
Mongolia’s religious purge. Khamar Monastery was re-established in 1990s on the
initiative of Zuun – Bayan resident Zorigtbaatar. S. and others, with the
support of the local religious community. Currently two small ceremonial
temples and several religious monuments have been reconstructed , with more
than ten lamas now in residence at the monastery. Pans are underway to
reconstruct more elements of this historic site in the near future . We hope
you may enjoy your visit and support our endeavors to revive this valuable part
of Mongolia’s heritage.
1.when was the Khamar monastery re
–established?
2. who was the built the Khamar monastery?
3.what is the Mongolian first
professional theatre ?
4.have you ever been there?