PROFA. CLAUDIA A. SONDA

INGLES 2DO GRADO: G, H, I, J, K

SEMANA 11

ACTIVIDAD 1.

ATENCION SEGUNDO "J" : Ya que no tendremos clase esta semana te recomiendo que veas los videos antes de resolver las actividades, se que van a poder realizarlas correctamente.
Recuerda que la proxima vez que nos veamos aclarare las dudas y daremos un repaso.


ACTIVIDAD 2

Actividad 3

Observa el siguiente video y anota los ejemplos de oraciones afirmativas de verbos regulares e irregulares.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=moYDA4jbPy4

Actividad 4

observa el siguiente video y anota los siete ejemplos que se dieron de cambio de oraciones afirmativas a negativas.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GYGVWF_j2LU&t=185s

Actividad 5

Realiza en la lectura las siguientes actividades.

1. Circle in red the title of the news

2. Circle in blue what animal is Deep Blue?

3. Circle in yellow who wrote the note?

4. Circle in pink the day when the note was published

5. Circle in green the place where the news was published

6. Circle in orange the words and numbers that describe Deep Blue

7. Circle in purple all the regular verbs in past (ed)

8. Find and circle the following verbs

 

 

present

past

Meaning

 

Caught

 

 

Thought

 

 

Swam

 

 

Was

 

 

spent

 

 

 


LOS ANGELES -- The average great white shark clocks in between 11 and 15 feet long, but one great white spotted just a few times in recent years blows her brothers and sisters out of  the wáter


Her name is Deep Blue and, at an estimated 20 feet long and possibly still growing, she's widely considered to be among the largest great white sharks ever caught on camera. It's thought that she could be more than 50 years old.


Mauricio Hoyos Padilla, a shark conservationist working for Discovery's "Shark Week," shot jaw-dropping footage of the massive creature off Mexico's Guadalupe Island in 2013. In the video, the gargantuan creature swam up to the crew's dive cage and poked around curiously before disappearing back into the blue.

Deep Blue swam back into the spotlight again in early 2019 off the coast of Hawaii, where she was spotted by a National Geographic documentary crew as she feasted on a whale carcass.

The underwater footage shot by photographer Mark Mohler showed marine biologist Andrew Gray and fellow photographer Kimberly Jeffries swimming just feet from Deep Blue, cameras in hand as they captured rare footage of the creature.

 

Based on the appearance of the shark's stomach, the crew also posited she could be pregnant -- though the sperm whale feast could also be responsible for her enlarged stomach.

In total, the crew spent three days observing Deep Blue and other mature female great whites who dropped by to feed on the whale carcass. Jeffries told National Geographic that wind and water conditions were perfect for shooting crystal-clear footage of the sharks.

While Deep Blue's theoretical journey from Guadalupe Island to Hawaii might seem like a long way for a shark to travel, the creatures have been known to traverse entire oceans. Scientists in the early 2000s tracked one great white's 12,400-mile journey from South Africa to Western Australia and back.


El mecanismo de entrega es el mismo de todas las semanas… resuelvo, tomo fotografías y mando mis evidencias al correo

ingles2doesc97vesp@gmail.com

La fecha límite de entrega es el día sábado 7 de noviembre hasta las 11:00 am.

Te dejo el enlace del documento de la actividad:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1CI5G2NAWVWI1vMYDyhR4MiNX6QdBkYO-/view?usp=sharing

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