life story – Ingyenes Angol online nyelvtanulás minden nap https://www.5percangol.hu Tanulj együtt velünk Sun, 09 Mar 2025 22:24:31 +0000 hu hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.5 https://www.5percangol.hu/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/android-icon-192x192-1-32x32.png life story – Ingyenes Angol online nyelvtanulás minden nap https://www.5percangol.hu 32 32 P!nk: All I Know So Far – videó, szókincs, hallás utáni szövegértés, nyelvtani feladat https://www.5percangol.hu/szokincsfejleszto_feladatok/pnk-all-i-know-so-far-video-szokincs-hallas-utani-szovegertes-nyelvtani-feladat/ Tue, 10 Aug 2021 21:03:37 +0000 https://www.5percangol.hu/?p=41535

A videó első részében meghallgathatod P!nk saját lányának írt esti meséjét/életmeséjét. Egészítsd ki a ‘mese’ sorainak végét a megadott szavak egyikével.

A dal meghallgatása után a dalszövegben található számozott sorok jelentésbeli párjait próbáld megtalálni a következő mondatok/félmondatok közül.

A.I promise to be with you up to the Big Explosion

B.When you are dressed up in lies and left naked with the truth

C.Avoid filters and silence

D.If only I had been told that this life is ours to choose

E.Allow the walls to crack

F.But you can be shown how to live like your life is at risk

G.You can’t be told to change who you are

 

‘All I Know So Far’ by P!nk

I haven’t always been this way

I wasn’t born a renegade

I felt alone still feel afraid

I stumble through it anyway

1.I wish someone would’ve told me that this life is ours to choose

No one’s handing you the keys or a book with all the rules

The little that I know I’ll tell to you

2.When they dress you up in lies and you’re left naked with the truth

You throw your head back

And you spit in the wind

3.Let the walls crack

Cause it lets the light in

Let ‘em drag you through hell

4.They can’t tell you to change who you are (That’s all I know so far)

And when the storms out

You run in the rain

Put your sword down

Dive right into the pain

5.Stay unfiltered and loud

You be proud of that skin full of scars

That’s all I know so far

That’s all I know so far

That’s all I know, that’s all I know so far

That’s all I know, that’s all I know so far

You might give yourself away

Pay full price for each mistake

But when the candy coating hides the razor blade

You can cut yourself loose and use that rage

I wish someone would’ve told me that this darkness comes and goes

People will pretend but baby girl nobody knows

And even I can’t teach you how to fly

6.But I can show you how to live like your life is on the line

You throw your head back

And you spit in the wind

Let the walls crack

Cause it lets the light in

Let ‘em drag you through hell

They can’t tell you to change who you are (That’s all I know so far)

And when the storms out

You run in the rain

Put your sword down

Dive right into the pain

Stay unfiltered and loud

You be proud of that skin full of scars

That’s all I know so far

That’s all I know, that’s all I know so far

That’s all I know, that’s all I know so far

That’s all I know, that’s all I know so far

That’s all I know, that’s all I know so far

I will be with you ‘till the world blows up, yes

Up and down and through ‘till the world blows up, yeah

When it’s right or it’s all fucked up

Till the world blows up, till the world blows up

And we will be enough

And until the world blows up

Just throw your head back

And spit in the wind

Let the walls crack

Cause it lets the light in

Let ‘em drag you through hell

They can’t tell you to change who you are

And when the storms out

You run in the rain

Put your sword down

Dive right into the pain

Stay unfiltered and loud

You be proud of that skin full of scars

That’s all I know so far

That’s all I know, that’s all I know so far

That’s all I know, that’s all I know so far

That’s all I know, that’s all I know so far

That’s all I know, that’s all I know so far

7.I will be with you ‘til the world blows up

source: P!nk – All I Know So Far (Official Video), P!NK, Youtube

keys/megoldások: 1. D; 2. B; 3. E; 4.G; 5.C; 6. F; 7. A

 

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The oldest man in Canada is a 110-year-old Hungarian chess player https://www.5percangol.hu/news_of_the_world/the-oldest-man-in-canada-is-a-110-year-old-hungarian-chess-player/ Thu, 25 Aug 2016 15:52:05 +0000 https://cmsteszt.5percangol.hu/the-oldest-man-in-canada-is-a-110-year-old-hungarian-chess-player/ Zoltán Sárosy was just two months shy of his eighth birthday when Archduke Franz Ferdinand of the Austro-Hungarian Empire was assassinated in Sarajevo, setting in motion the crisis that led to the First World War. The young Hungarian boy was living on a military base on the Adriatic, where his father was a doctor in the army.

“One morning I came out of my room to see my mother packing. She said war is coming, we have to leave within 12 hours,” says Mr. Sárosy. Soon they were on a torpedo boat that took them to a port in Herzegovina and from there to a passenger ship to Trieste and finally to a train to Budapest.

It’s safe to say Mr. Sárosy is the only man in Canada who remembers where he was when the First World War started. He celebrated his 110th birthday on August 23, and while there are no individual Statistics Canada records to point to, that will likely make him the oldest man in Canada.

Today, Mr. Sárosy lives in a seniors’ home. Though he now uses a wheelchair to get around – at 102, he finally conceded he could use some help and got a mobility scooter – his mind is still sharp, perhaps from a lifetime of chess.

“He remembers the past but what amazes me is his short-term memory,” says Elena Yeryomenko, lifestyle program manager at the Chartwell Grenadier Retirement Residence Mr. Sárosy calls home. “It is phenomenal at this age to have such a sharp mind. He remembers his life as a child and he remembers what he had for breakfast.”

Mr. Sárosy is still curious about the new. The interview was being recorded on a smart phone, and he wanted to know how it works as a recorder. “A marvellous little machine,” he called it.

He has a computer he bought in 1999 to play chess. At the time he played correspondence chess where people from around the world would mail each other the next move. Since games could take four or five years, he felt that at 93 he might not be around to finish a game.

Mr. Sárosy was born in 1906 in Budapest, the second capital of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. He started playing chess in public parks at the age of 10.

“I was with my mother and I saw a boy playing chess and I asked, ‘What is that?’ The next day I was back at the park. That boy’s mother wouldn’t let me play with him but I found others,” said Mr. Sárosy.

He continued playing in school and at university in Vienna, where he studied international trade. He graduated in 1928 and returned to Budapest where he continued his chess career. He was soon a grandmaster.

“In 1943, I played in the Hungarian championship and gained the Hungarian [chess] master title,” he says.

Young Zoltán was fluent in Hungarian and German, a skill that probably saved his life in the Second World War. In 1944, he volunteered as a translator when other Hungarian men his age were drafted and sent to the Eastern Front.

At the end of the war he fled Hungary, worried that Russians might have him imprisoned for being a military translator. He left his wife and daughter behind. He later sent for them when he was in Canada, but his wife refused to leave Hungary so they divorced.

Once over the border in Austria, he managed to find a room in Salzburg, then moved to a refugee camp. He then drifted across Europe, ending up in Alsace, the German-speaking province taken back by France after the war. In 1950, he read that Canada was looking for immigrants and he went to Paris to get papers.

He arrived in Halifax on Dec. 27, 1950, and then took the train to Toronto. He soon found a room on Kendall Avenue and work laying tiles on an upper floor at the new Bank of Nova Scotia building at King and Bay in January, 1951.

“I started my career in Toronto at a high level,” he jokes.

He didn’t like working for other people. “I wanted to be independent, so I started selling cosmetics. Eventually I thought it was much better if I imported them myself,” he says.

After several years, he bought a convenience store which he ran until the late 1970s. All the while, he still played chess. He won his first championship in Canada in 1955 and was Canadian Correspondence Champion in 1967, 1972 and 1981. He is a member of the Canadian Chess Hall of Fame.

After divorcing his first wife, he married Heino Mallo, an Estonian immigrant, in Canada. His daughter from Hungary came to visit him in Canada at one stage with the intention of living here. “She didn’t want to stay, silly girl,” says Mr. Sárosy.

He and his wife lived on Royal York Road in Mimico, just west of downtown Toronto, a couple of hundred metres from Lake Ontario. His wife died in 1998 and he sold his house and moved into the Grenadier home in 2000. For the next decade he was completely mobile, did his own shopping and walked everywhere. When he was about 102 he started riding a mobility scooter, and used that until two years ago.

Mr. Sárosy laughs when asked about the secret to his long life.

He has a couple of ideas: He tried smoking when he was a teenager, but he didn’t like it so he quit; he was a light drinker, just the occasional brandy. But he still hasn’t figured it all out quite yet.

“I’m still working on the formula. However, when I get it, I’ll go to the patent office,” he says. “I’m like an old used car with rusty body, wobb ly wheels but a good engine.”

source: theglobeandmail.com

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