miércoles, 12 de noviembre de 2014

HARVEST TIME-CHESTNUT-HEALTHY HALLOWEEN


                      



L@s alum@ de 4º de EP trabajaron en la asignatura de INGLÉS  los temas  relacionados con la cosecha(Harvest) Halloween  gastronómico saludable y el magosto  o fiesta  de  la castaña(Chestnut)

                                                                                                                      Aprendieron   más    sobre  nuestras tradiciones   y  las de otros paises .Repasaron el vocabulario y frases  relacionadas   con  los   temas impartidos.
Decoraron mandarinas y castañas a la vez que  se repasaban las partes del cuerpo.                           

   
         
The History of Halloween

   Many hundreds of years ago, a people called the Celts lived in Europe and on the British Isles. They had a festival in honor of these souls of the dead, and they called it Samhain. 
In time, the Roman Empire conquered the Celts and took over some of their beliefs as well. This included Samhain. The Romans combined it with their own festivals.

                         

Many ideas from the Roman days still survive in the United     States  and in other Western countries. Halloween is one of them.But how did we get the name Halloween?



In the 8th Century, the Catholic Church declared November 1 to be All Saints' Day. The church calendar had a number of days honoring saints already. November 1 was picked to be the day to honor all saints who didn't already have a day named in their honor. And the mass that the Catholic Church celebrated on November 1 was called Allhallowmas. This meant "mass of all the hallowed (saintly people.)" It was commonly called "All Hallows' Day."The night before became known as Allhallowe'en, which was short for "evening before All Hallows' Day." It was then shortened to what we now call it, Halloween.


                                                                                        

Head  - Cabeza    (to have a headache/tener dolor de cabeza)

Hair     - Cabello/vello    (to get a hair cut/tener un corte de pelo)

Face     - Cara/rostro    (I need a facecloth/necesito una toalla de cara)       

Forehead     - Frente    (to be face to face/estar frente a frente)

Eye/eyes - Ojo/Ojos    (keep your eyes open/mantén los ojos abiertos)



Ear / ears - Oreja / orejas (you have an ear infection/tienes infección de oídos)

Nose - Nariz    (to have a nose job/arreglarse la naríz)

Mouth - Boca    (close your mouth to eat/cierra la boca al comer)

Lips - Labios     (put some lip gloss on your lips/ponte algo de brillo a los labios)

Tooth / teeth - Diente / dientes     (brush your teeth/cepilla tus dientes)

Tongue - Lengua (I just bit my tongue/acabo de morderme la lengua)


Neck - Cuello (it hurts when I turn my neck/me duele cuando giro el cuello)

Body - Cuerpo    (shake you body/sacude tu cuerpo)

Shoulder / shoulders   - Hombro / hombros    

Elbow / elbows - Codo / codos (your elbows look dry/tus codos se ven secos)

Arm / arms - Brazo / brazos    (put your arms straight/pon los brazos rectos)

Hand / hands - Mano / manos (let me see your palm/déjame ver la palma de tu mano)

Finger / fingers     - Dedo / dedos de la mano (keep your fingers crossed/mantén tus dedos cruzados)



Stomach - Estómago    (to have a stomachache/tener dolor de estómago)

Back - Espalda (lay on your back/acuéstate de espaldas)

Leg / legs - Pierna / piernas    (I broke my leg/me rompí la pierna)

Knee / knees - Rodillas (seat on your knees/siéntate de rodillas)

Foot / feet - Pie / pies    (I have big feet/tengo pies grandes)

Ankles - Tobillos (to twist one’s ankle/torcerse el tobillo)

Toes - Dedos del pie    (Something bit me on my toe/algo me picó en el dedo del pie)