Vajad kellegagi rääkida?
Küsi julgelt abi LasteAbi
Logi sisse
Ega pea pole prügikast! Tõsta enda õppeedukust ja õpi targalt. Telli VIP ja lae alla päris inimeste tehtu õppematerjale LOE EDASI Sulge

Hispaania keel kirjapilt + audio allalaadimise lingid 53lk - sarnased materjalid

verb, noun, verbs, amos, sent, esta, star, tense, adjective, here, follow, infinitive, sing, sted, express, land, present, part, estar, pronoun, other, nouns, come, tener, regular, forms, mean, hang, spanish, there, arse, plural, change, perfect, thin, estÃ, ones, singular, ello, formal, person, before, ella, able, pronouns, subject, eras, thing, cien
thumbnail
32
doc

Hispaania keele grammatika

15 võõrkeeles saate tegusõnu pöörata ka minu kodulehel lisa osas. Verbos regulares él / nosotros / vosotros / ellos / yo tú ella, usted - as - as - as, ustedes bajo - as -a - amos - áis - an Presente de como - es -e - emos - éis - en indicativo subo - es -e - imos - ís - en Futuro bajaré - ás -á - emos - éis - án imperfecto comeré - ás -á - emos - éis - án

Hispaania keel
300 allalaadimist
thumbnail
7
doc

Proyecto Final: Transducción Entre Idiomas

simplecico! ¿Lobitos en tal gestico? Llégate acá, putico, que no sabes nada del mundo ni de sus deleites. ¡Mas rabia mala me mate, si te llego a mí, aunque vieja! Que la voz tienes ronca, las barbas te apuntan. Mal sosegadilla debes tener la `punta de la barriga. Pármeno: ¡Como `cola de alacrán! Celestina: Y aún peor: que la otra muerde sin hinchar y la tuya hincha por nueve meses. Pármeno: ¡Hi, hi, hi! (Finch p 36) Esta cita se occure en el primer capítulo, cuando Celestina y Pármeno están hablando en privado fuera de la casa de Calisto. Celestina, Calisto ha visitado por primera vez y está hablando a Pármeno sobre "amor impervio", así como mostrar la facilidad con que se excita sexualmente. Esta es una de las primeras escenas explícitas de la novela. La primera mención del amor viene con Calisto encuentra con Melibea por primera vez. Aquí habla palabras encantadoras que no ofender a mucha gente

Hispaania keel
4 allalaadimist
thumbnail
29
docx

Inglise keele struktuur

consider, considers, considered Open vs. Closed class words: In linguistics, a closed class (or closed word class) is a word class to which no new items can normally be added, and that usually contains a relatively small number of items. Typical closed classes found in many languages are adpositions (prepositions and postpositions), determiners, conjunctions, and pronouns.[1] Contrastingly, an open class offers possibilities for expansion. Typical open classes such as nouns and verbs can and do get new words often, through the usual means such as compounding,derivation, coining, borrowing, etc. [2] Syntax: studies how words group together to make phrases and sentences. Sentences are not simply random strings of words; they conform to specific patterns determined by the syntactic rules of the language. The syntactic rules in a grammar must account for the grammaticality of sentences, word

Inglise keel
106 allalaadimist
thumbnail
5
doc

La Celestina Ejercicio de Traducción

1 Ryker Huffman Spanish 432.001 4-15-2013 La Celestina Ejercicio de Traducción Esta cita es en el auto uno, cuando Celestina y Sempronio hablan en privado. Calisto y Pármeno se acercan, de la habitación, y empiezan a escuchar la conversación. Celestina puede oír que se están acercando e instruye Sempronio "escucha y déjame hablar lo que a ti y a mí me conviene." Después de escuchar a algunos de la conversación diseñada por Celestina y Sempronio, Calisto y Pármeno salen y Celestina y Sempronio continúan de hablar en privado.

Hispaania keel
5 allalaadimist
thumbnail
40
docx

English structure revision for the exam

sentences. They are attached together with a free morpheme because otherwise they have no meaning. For example: Cat- Cat/s, work- work/ed, left-hand/ed/ness. S can show plurality, -ed can show tense etc.  Morph – The concrete realisation of a morpheme. For example: outrageous- Out/rage/ous consists of three morphs which represent morhpemes.  Allomorph – Is a variant of a morpheme. It

Inglise keel
6 allalaadimist
thumbnail
17
pdf

Ssubtiitrite lugemiskiirus

ition. However, the introduction of DVD in the audiovisual market at the end of the previous decade, together with digitalization of television broadcast and the rise of accessibility policies in Spain have helped consolidate subtitling as an al- most necessary tool to watch audiovisual content in our country. Many scholars have devoted their research efforts to subtitling, having most of them started back in the 1990s. It is not intended to make here a detailed review of all their contributions, since some of them like Díaz Cintas (2003) and Chaume (2004) have carried out this task with rigor and completeness. Instead, this pa- per is intended to focus on the viewer as the key element of subtitling reception, and more specifically, on the viewer's ability to read subtitles, which is usually ex- pressed by means of two different parameters: characters per second and words per minute.

Sissejuhatus erialaõppesse
1 allalaadimist
thumbnail
159
pdf

English Grammar Book 1

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the written permission of the publisher. ISBN 1-59905-201-6 Printed in the United States of America 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Introduction Grammar is a very old field of study. Did you know that the sentence was first divided into subject and verb by Plato, the famed philosopher from ancient Greece? That was about 2,400 years ago! Ever since then, students all over the world have found it worthwhile to study the structure of words and sentences. Why? Because skill in speaking and writing is the hallmark of all educated people. Lesson by lesson, this book provides basic instruction in the eight parts of speech--nouns, pronouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, prepositions, conjunctions, and

Inglise keel
188 allalaadimist
thumbnail
22
docx

Grammar Terminology

marker tunnus (mitmuse, oleviku, lihtmineviku, tingiva kõneviisi, käskiva kõneviisi, kaudse kõneviisi, umbisikulise tegumoe, ma- tegevusnime, oleviku kesksõna, mineviku kesksõna) derivational affix liide, tuletusliide, tuletusafiks (e.g. postwar, anti-American, wiser, greenish) parts of speech sõnaliigid English Estonian Definition Example noun (proper, common, nimisõna, Refers to words which denote classes and categories of book, water, sincerity, Mary, concrete, abstract) substantiiv things in the world, including people, animals, Estonia inanimate things, places, events, qualities, and states. Nouns can be divided into proper nouns and common

Inglise keel
10 allalaadimist
thumbnail
5
odt

History of english review questions and answers 2016

15 monophtongs, (7 long, 7 short, 1 central), 4 diphtongs, 17 consonants. Free variaton of R, and it was pronounced everywhere. Very much Germanic in character. Quite some special consonants that no longer exist. About morphology: synthetic with numerous aglutinating tendencies. System of tenses Germanic, but with a reduction of tenses. Paradigmatic leveling; Stress shift; Word order; Loan words (Old Norse, Old French). Dual pronouns. Determiners - no separate definite article. Strong and weak verbs. Word order relatively free with tendencies towards SVO. SVO, SOV, VSO most common. Adposition and podposition were both possible (eesliide ja tagaliide). About syntax: clauses were joined much simpler than nowadays, using and, then etc. Because of case syncretion the word order in a sentence became much more important to be able to tell the difference between words. FIRST CONSONANT SHIFT (GRIMM'S LAW)

Inglise keele ajalugu
18 allalaadimist
thumbnail
42
pptx

Inglise keele põhitõed algajale

) How much is the dress? ◦ HOW MANY – (kui mitu?) How many rackets do you have? PRESENT SIMPLE ◦ That's the way to express habits, facts, thoughts and feelings. It is used with general statements and actions that happen sometimes, always, usually,... ◦ Key words: often, always, never, every day, month,..., usually, sometimes, generally, normally, rarely, seldom, whenever, on Mondays, Tuesdays,... I, YOU + PLURAL DON'T (do not) + VERB TO BE, CAN, MUST --> VERB + NOT       They go to school. They don't go to school. They are not (aren't) at home. I like oranges. I don't like oranges. The boys are not (aren't) in the park. We hate peppermint. We don't hate peppermint. I am not (I'm not) hungry.

Inglise keel
23 allalaadimist
thumbnail
46
doc

Käänded Euroopa keeltes

En la habitacion hay un receptor de television. (`Toas on (üks) televiisor.') Los libros estan en la estanteria. (`Raamatud on riiulil.') Eessõna sobre abil väljendatakse eesti keele seest- või alalütleva käände vastet. Sapo las noticias sobre el deporte de las revistas. (`Spordiuudiseid saan (teada) ajakirjadest.') Sõnasõnalt: Ma hangin uudiseid spordist ajakirjadest. El periodico esta sobre le mesa. (`Ajaleht on laua peal.') Seestütleva käände vastet väljendame ka eessõna de abil. De donde saca Vd. las noticias. (`Kust Te hangite uudiseid?') 13 V. Juga, Grammatika. ­ Hispaania keele õpik, 1979, Tallinn, lk 21-57 13 Eessõna desde abil väljendatakse eesti keele seest- või alaltütleva käände vastet.

Keeleteadus
7 allalaadimist
thumbnail
38
ppt

Chpt 12 Verb Tenses

Moved to Cali 2005 Was Born Traveled to Europe Husband 1978 School graduates @ Oxford 1999 Started Got married School 1983 2008 2 The Six English Verb Tenses Three Simple Tenses Simple continuous Present ­ You walk. You are walking I run. I am running. Past ­ You Walked You were walking. I ran. I was running. Future ­ You will walk. You will be walking. I will run. I will be running. Three Perfect Tenses Perfect continuous

Inglise keel
4 allalaadimist
thumbnail
10
doc

Golden Grammar rules

3. Use the simple present ­ play(s), rain(s) etc ­ to talk about habits and repeated actions. I play tennis every Saturday. (NOT I am playing tennis every Saturday.) It usually rains a lot in November. 4. Use will ..., not the present, for offers and promises. I'll cook you supper this evening. (NOT I cook you supper this evening.) I promise I'll phone you tomorrow. (NOT I promise I phone you tomorrow.) 5. Don't drop prepositions with passive verbs. I don't like to be shouted at. (NOT I don't like to be shouted.) This needs to be thought about some more. (NOT This needs to be thought some more.) 6. Don't use a present tense after It's time. It's time you went home. (NOT It's time you go home.) It's time we invited Bill and Sonia. (NOT It's time we invite Bill and Sonia.) 7. Use was/were born to give dates of birth. I was born in 1975. (NOT I am born in 1975.) Shakespeare was born in 1564. 8. Police is a plural noun.

Inglise keel
10 allalaadimist
thumbnail
22
pdf

Inglise keele praktilise grammatika mõisted

adjective + preposition omadussõna + eessõna proud of, good at, married to adverb particle Some verbs are followed by adverb particles. Examples are: put on, take off, give away, bring up, call in. Sometimes the particle is detached from the verb and put after the object. •He took his boots off. •They called the doctor in. apposition a grammatical construction in which two usually adjacent nouns having the same referent stand in the same syntactical relation to the rest of a sentence (as the poet and Burns in “a biography of the poet Burns”) back-reference In grammatical analysis, the term reference is often used to state a relationship of identity which exists between grammatical units, e.g

Inglise keel
21 allalaadimist
thumbnail
4
doc

Contitional sentences

talk about sth. that is always true (such as a scientific fact), or that was always true in the past. In this type of conditional we can use when instead of if. E.g., If/When you mix blue and red, you get purple. If/When you don't water flowers, they die. (present simple in both parts of the sentence) If/When I asked her to come with us, she always said no. (past simple in both parts of the sentence) 1 First conditional If-clause present simple; Main clause future tense (or: can, must, may, etc., + bare infinitive) Used to talk about the consequences of a possible action (a real or very probable situation in the present or future). E.g., If I write my essay this afternoon, I will have time to go out tonight. (or: I might go out tonight). (It is still morning, and it is quite possible that I will do this.) NOTE: With type 1 conditionals we can use unless + affirmative verb (= if + negative verb). E.g., I will not be able to come unless Joe gives me a lift

inglise teaduskeel
46 allalaadimist
thumbnail
17
doc

Inglise keele stilistika

elegant use of language by developing and polishing stylistic devices. In the 18th century, an individualistic-psychological view on style and stylistics emerges. The late 19th and and early 20th centuries witnessed a utilitarian approach to stylistics. The tendency to regard stylistics as an applied science has been particularly marked in english- 1 speaking countries. It was believed here that the main aim of stylistics is to improve the style of the writer and of a textbook, that is to show how better to express one's thoughts. Of foreign linguists, it is the french Ch.Balley, G.Marduzeon who in the 20th century made a definite contribution. This happened because of the centuries-old tradition in France of interest in style. The classical works on english stylistics are those by the german scholars: Ph.Aronstein, M.Deutschbein, I.Galperin

Stilistika (inglise)
22 allalaadimist
thumbnail
16
pdf

Modal verbs

Modal Verbs Table of Contents Introduction ......................................................................... 2 Characteristics of Modal Verbs ............................................. 2 When to use the Modal Verbs ............................................... 3 Expressing permission.......................................................... 3 Expressing obligation ........................................................... 3 Making offers........................................................................ 5 Making requests ................................................................... 6 Expressing possibility/probability......................................... 7

Akadeemiline inglise keel
25 allalaadimist
thumbnail
37
doc

Inglise keele jaotusmaterjal

Spell in turns some names using the alphabet for international airlines. 1 KLM 9 ENIRO 2 FARWEK 10 SAUREX 3 TALLEGG 11 MIZDE 4 VESITERM 12 LADA 5 STOW 13 SCHWUNG 6 KALEV 14 MAIASMOKK 7 YAMAHA 15 ISKU 8 ESTRAVEL 2 Affirmative tense Use Signal Words Negative/Questions · action in the present taking always, Present Simple A: He speaks. place once, never or several every ..., N: He does not speak. normally, often, Q: Does he speak? times

Inglise keel
29 allalaadimist
thumbnail
7
pdf

Present simple and continious

Present Simple and Continuous Table of Contents Present Simple ..................................................................... 2 The spelling of endings in the Present Simple ....................... 2 When to use the Present Simple ........................................... 3 The verb 'be' ......................................................................... 4 Present Continuous.............................................................. 5 The spelling of endings in the Present Continuous................ 5 When to use the Present Continuous.................................... 6 State verbs and event (action or dynamic) verbs ................... 7 Present Simple In the Present Simple we use the verb without an ending. I work you live

Inglise keel
7 allalaadimist
thumbnail
20
doc

Leksikoloogia konspekt (uus)

allusion, anachronism, dexterity  Scientific (17.-18. century) o Nucleus, formula, vertebra, corpuscle, atomic, carnivorous, incubate, aqueous, molecule  Latin abbreviations o i.e – id est – that is to say  Latin adjectives for english nouns o Nasal, oral, solar, paternal, maternal, lithic, lunar, filial  Actual inflected Latin verbs used as nouns o Audio, audit, caveat, video.  Endings dropped or adapted, often through French o add, addition, additive, agent, agentive, aqueduct, candle, colo(u)r, colossal, consider, contemplate, decide, decision, erupt, eruption, general, generic, hono(u)r, hono(u)rable, honorary, igneous, ignite, ignition, ignoble, illiteracy, illiterate, immoral, immortality,

Inglise keel
14 allalaadimist
thumbnail
12
pdf

Passive

The Passive Voice Table of Contents The Passive Voice................................................................................. 2 Tenses in the Passive Voice ................................................................ 2 Modal Verbs and Future in the Passive Voice ................................. 3 The Passive with ’get/have’ ................................................................ 4 When to use the Passive ..................................................................... 5 Verbs with two objects ........................................................................ 5 The Passive with ’by/with’ .................................................................. 6

Akadeemiline inglise keel
27 allalaadimist
thumbnail
15
doc

Inglise keele variandid (Varieties of English)

Most oftenly pronounciation is the most significant/different. Deviations from the standards: 1. Multiple negations ­ ,,I didn't do nothing." 2. Ain't ­ negative of ,,have" or ,,be" 3. ,,Never" used to refer to a single occasion in the past ­ ,,I never done it" (I didn't do it) 4. Extension of 3rd person ending ,,s" to 1st and 2nd person forms ­ ,,I/You wants" (used by the working class) 5. Regularisation of ,,be" ­ ,,Me/You/They was" 6. Regularisation of some irregular verbs ­ draw/drawed/have drawed; go/went/have went 7. Optional ,,-ly" ending on adverbs ­ ,,He writes real quick." 8. Unmarked plurality on amounts of measurement after numerals ­ 10 pound, 20 year 9. Different forms of the relative pronoun ­ ,,The man what lives there."/ ,,The man as lives there." 10. Regularisation of reflexive pronouns ­ myself; herself; hisself; theirselves 11. Distinction between main and auxiliary verb ,,do" ­ ,,You done it, did you?" 2) The spread of English

Inglise keel
49 allalaadimist
thumbnail
4
doc

Inglise keele kordamine

· With ,,Always" to express anger or irritation at a repeated action (You're always forgetting..) TIME EXPRESSIONS USED WITH PRESENT CONTINUOUS: now, at the moment, at present, these days, nowadays, still, today, tonight etc. Present Perfect · Action happened at an unstated time in the past. Emphasis on the action, time is unimportant or unknown. (I have washed the car) · Action started in the past and continues up to the present, especially with stative verbs (I have known her for six years) · Recently completed action (I have finished my essay) TIME EXPRESSIONS USED WITH PRESENT PERFECT: for, since, already, always, just, ever, never, so far, today, this week/month etc. lately, recently, still (in negations) etc. Present Perfect Continuous · To put emphasis on the duration of an action which started in the past and continues up to the present (We have been cleaning the house all morning)

Inglise keel
204 allalaadimist
thumbnail
137
pdf

Brian Weiss - Muchas Vidas Muchos Maestros

alma, la mente, la continuación de la vida después de la muerte y la influencia de nuestras experiencias en vidas anteriores sobre nuestra conducta actual. Obviamente, las ramificaciones son ilimitadas, sobre todo en los campos de la medicina, la psiquiatría, la teología y la filosofía. Sin embargo, la investigación científicamente rigurosa de estos temas está todavía en mantillas. Si bien se están dando grandes pasos para descubrir esta información, el proceso es lento y encuentra mucha resistencia tanto por parte de los científicos como de los legos. A lo largo de la historia, la humanidad siempre se ha resistido al cambio y a la aceptación de ideas nuevas. Los textos históricos están llenos de ejemplos. Cuando Galileo descubrió las lunas de Júpiter, los astrónomos de su época se negaron a aceptar su existencia e incluso a mirar esos satélites, pues estaban en conflicto con las creencias aceptadas

Ajakasutuse juhtimine
1 allalaadimist
thumbnail
4
docx

Home reading - Veracruz

The grit and grime of the oil industry and the frantic sorting of fish ­ this is what many outsiders think of as the essence of Veracruc Yet there is an other ­ a calmer, quieter Vera cruz ­ down any country road.In the fishing village of Mandinga, for example a cool Gulf breeze softens the humid afternoon heat as the town's residents ­ mestizos partly descenced from African slaves ­ go about their business along dusty streets that Alfonso."so they come back.At least here they alwayshave a job" And hey have their music.Of all Veracruz's cosmpolitian influences ­ food laced with Italian spices, heading practices from Arfica, sensual dances from Cuba ­ it is music that speaks to the souls of the state 6.7 millon people.Beneah sun-drenched palm trees,tris of string musicians isteners el son jaroaocho,a blend of styles from aroud the world that has become the typical music of Veracruz.Between numbers ­ androunds of beer and bpiled shrimp ­

Inglise keel
21 allalaadimist
thumbnail
10
docx

Present Tenses.

The Present Simple is the most basic tense in the English language. It is an interesting tense because it can be used Present Simple to express the future. Generally, though, we use it to Basic form describe the present activities or to talk about routines or Subject + Verb + -s (present form)  John lives in New York.  We play football every day.  You are really kind.  The meeting starts at 3 PM. Use the Present Simple:  with state verbs.  to talk about situations in life that last a relatively long time.  when an event is certain to happen in the future.  to talk about events that we can't change (for example, an official meeting or a train departure).

Inglise keel
4 allalaadimist
thumbnail
8
doc

Big grammar theory

· child / children · woman / women · man / men · person / people · goose / geese · mouse / mice · barracks / barracks · deer / deer · tooth / teeth · ox / oxen Nouns: hair is; knowledge is; news is; police are; cattle are; government is/are; means is/are; series is/are; species is/are; scissors are. 2. Nouns: Genitive case: After a singular noun. Use's · girl's cat · mum and dad's house · Paul's and Fred's birthdays · children's playground After a plural noun. Use only the apostrophe'. · witness' (s) car · boys' room · my sisters' husband Time expressions: · Yesterday's news. A ten- minute walk --> ten minutes' walk Of form: · Car door / the door of the car · My friend / a friend of mine

Inglise keel
79 allalaadimist
thumbnail
10
pdf

Past simple and continious

...................................... 3 Past Continuous .................................................................. 4 When to use the Past Continuous......................................... 4 Used to & would................................................................... 5 Unfulfilled past events.......................................................... 5 Past Simple Regular Past Simple forms end in -ed. I worked he danced we apologized Some verbs have an irregular past form. I left he wrote The Past Simple is the same in all persons except in the past tense of be. I/he/she/it was (in the singular) you/we/they were (in the plural) To form a negative or a question in the Past Simple, use did and the verb in the original form: Negative I/you/he/she/it/we/they did not stop/didn’t stop. Question Did I/you/he/she/it/we/they stop? Note! stopped stop.

Inglise keel
6 allalaadimist
thumbnail
4
docx

Reported speech reeglid

Reported speech is often also called indirect speech. When we use reported speech, we are usually talking about the past (because obviously the person who spoke originally spoke in the past). The verbs therefore usually have to be in the past too. For example: "I'm going to the cinema". He said he was going to the cinema. Basic tense chart The tenses generally move backwards in this way (the tense on the left changes to the tense on the right): present simple past simple I'm a teacher. He said he was a teacher past continuous. present continuous He said he was having lunch with his I'm having lunch with my parents. parents.

Inglise keel
62 allalaadimist
thumbnail
18
doc

Ajavormide teooria

· I play tennis. · She does not play tennis. USE 4 Now (Non-Continuous Verbs) · Does he play tennis? · The train leaves every morning at 8 AM. · The train does not leave at 9 AM. · When does the train usually leave? · She always forgets her purse. · He never forgets his wallet. Examples: · Every twelve months, the Earth circles the Sun. · I am here now. · Does the Sun circle the Earth? · She is not here now. · He needs help right now. USE 2 Facts or Generalizations · He does not need help now. · He has his passport in his hand. · Do you have your passport with you?

Inglise keel
37 allalaadimist
thumbnail
5
doc

Big grammar theory 2

7. Verb: The principal forms of the verbs: Verbil on 4 põhivormi: Regular verb Irregular verb 1. the base form Talk Speak üldoleviku tüvivorm 2. the past form/ -ed form Talked Spoke üldmineviku vorm 3. the past participle (-ed Talked Spoken participle) mineviku kesksõna 4. the present participle (- Talking Speaking ing participle) oleviku kesksõna The tenses: Expressing the future:

Inglise keel
101 allalaadimist
thumbnail
25
odp

Active tenses

ACTIVE TENSES Active form You use an active verb when you want to say that the subject of a sentence does something. · [Thing doing action] + [verb] + · +[thing receiving action] · Examples The professor (subject doing action) teaches (verb) · the students (object receiving action). · Mary (subject doing action) · washes (verb) · the dishes ( object receiving action). The tenses of the verb 1.Present (olevik) 2.Past (minevik) 3.Future (tulevik) 4.Future in the past (kaudne tulevik) Iga aeg võib esineda neljas eri rühmas 1.IndefiniteTenses (üldajad) 2.Continious Tenses (kestvad ajad) 3.Perfect Tenses (perfekti ajad) 4.Perfect Continious Tenses (perfekti kestvad ajad) Indefinite Tenses (üldajad) used to describe actions but do not state whether the action is completed or on- going märgivad tegevuse sooritamise fakti Peter visits us every day.

Inglise keel
13 allalaadimist
thumbnail
20
ppt

Traveling

Park or visit the exhibits at sister islands, like neighboring Lanai. the MoMa or the Met. While new Visitors regularly return to the sites, like the National September mainland singing praise for Maui, but 11 Memorial, are always popping the smart few just put down new roots up, the classics, like the Empire and pick up a Mai Tai. State Building, never get old. Montreal and Vancouver Why go: Here, it's as Why go: While it may not be as if Paris migrated to North grand as New York City or as America. Montreal boasts historic asMontreal, why Vancouver caught the attention of the elements of French culture with International Olympic Committee is a friendly Canadian feel. no mystery. This coastal Canadian Travelers adore the quaint city boasts a vast amount of outdoor

Inglise keel
1 allalaadimist


Sellel veebilehel kasutatakse küpsiseid. Kasutamist jätkates nõustute küpsiste ja veebilehe üldtingimustega Nõustun