Hire 💕 8617697112 North Sikkim Call Girls Service Call Girls Agency
Present continuous &art
1.
2. Affirmative
I
am
You are walking
We
They
_____________
He
She is walking
It
I am
stop-ping
We are run-ning
He is swim-ming
Present Continuous
Form:
Interrogative
Am
I
Are
you walking?
we
they
_____________
he
Is she walking?
it
Spelling:
dance-ing
eat-ing
drive-ing
carry-ing
ride-ing play-ing
Negative
I
’m not
You aren’t walking
We
They
______________
He
She isn’t walking
It
4. • I’m sorry. I _____________[not/ understand].
don’t understand
• Be quiet, please. I ____________ [study].
am studying
• He ________[love] cartoon films.
loves
• Tom _________[sometimes / go] to the park
after school.
sometimes goes
• Kikki __________[fly] to London next
Saturday. Here’s her ticket.
is flying
5. •
•
A gifted Norwegian painter and printmaker, Edvard Munch not only was his country's
greatest artist, but also played a vital role in the development of German
expressionism. His work often included the symbolic portrayal of such themes as
misery, sickness, and death. The Cry, probably his most familiar painting, is typical in
its anguished expression of isolation and fear.
The Scream (or The Cry)
1893; 150 Kb; Casein/waxed crayon and tempera on paper (cardboard), 91 x 73.5 cm
(35 7/8 x 29"); Nasjonalgalleriet (National Gallery), Oslo
6. This watercolour version of
“Coming Down from Mont
Blanc” was painted by John
Singer Sargent around 1909
and shows a couple of friends
bringing Sargent’s pack llamas
down the mountain.
Sargent was one of the first to
use pack llamas to carry his
easel and supplies.
7. •
If you ever get a chance
to see the “Oyster
Gatherers of Cancale”
by John Singer Sargent
in The Corcoran Gallery
of Art in Washington,
DC, look very carefully
at the left-hand side
and you may be able to
see where some llamahating restorer has
carefully painted out the
llama.
9. •
Salvador Dali painted
many versions of
“Persistence of Memory”
around 1931 and our
favourite one naturally is
this one which shows
Salvador Dali’s pet llama
which he obviously called
“Dali Llama”.
It is displayed in the
Museum of Llama Art in
Mount Lehman, British
Columbia.