957 resultados para Military history, Modern
Resumo:
Su contenido se adapta al plan de trabajo para Historia en la etapa 3 (key stage 3) de secundaria de la Qualifications and Currículo Authority (QCA), agencia encargada de desarrollar el currículo nacional inglés. Este recurso utiliza las fuentes históricas y las actividades no solo para explicar los temas sino, también, para ayudar a los estudiantes a investigar y reflexionar por sí mismos sobre los conceptos históricos aprendidos.
Resumo:
Cumple con los requisitos para la especificación OCR A2 de Historia, unidad F986, opción B. Estudia las causas y desarrollo de la controversia, la Europa Moderna, la brujería y la caza de brujas, enfoques e interpretaciones estructurales y funcionales, enfoques e interpretaciones culturales y psicoanalíticas, aproximaciones e interpretaciones de carácter regional y general. Este recurso comprende actividades que ayudan a la comprensión del contenido y a desarrollar en los estudiantes habilidades con la historia, análisis de situaciones y acontecimientos, breves biografías de personajes clave de la época, definiciones de palabras nuevas y consejos prácticos para los exámenes.
Resumo:
Eight years have passed since the EU launched its European Neighbourhood Policy, aimed at inducing its neighbours to the east to converge on modern European values and economic norms. In this Commentary, Michael Emerson reflects on the curious and circuitous turn of events in the region during this period. Michael Emerson is Senior Associate Research Fellow at CEPS.
Resumo:
Greek speakers say "ovpa", Germans "schwanz'' and the French "queue'' to describe what English speakers call a 'tail', but all of these languages use a related form of 'two' to describe the number after one. Among more than 100 Indo-European languages and dialects, the words for some meanings (such as 'tail') evolve rapidly, being expressed across languages by dozens of unrelated words, while others evolve much more slowly-such as the number 'two', for which all Indo-European language speakers use the same related word-form(1). No general linguistic mechanism has been advanced to explain this striking variation in rates of lexical replacement among meanings. Here we use four large and divergent language corpora (English(2), Spanish(3), Russian(4) and Greek(5)) and a comparative database of 200 fundamental vocabulary meanings in 87 Indo-European languages(6) to show that the frequency with which these words are used in modern language predicts their rate of replacement over thousands of years of Indo-European language evolution. Across all 200 meanings, frequently used words evolve at slower rates and infrequently used words evolve more rapidly. This relationship holds separately and identically across parts of speech for each of the four language corpora, and accounts for approximately 50% of the variation in historical rates of lexical replacement. We propose that the frequency with which specific words are used in everyday language exerts a general and law-like influence on their rates of evolution. Our findings are consistent with social models of word change that emphasize the role of selection, and suggest that owing to the ways that humans use language, some words will evolve slowly and others rapidly across all languages.