Поделитесь своими знаниями, ответьте на вопрос:
Florence Nightingale Florence Nightingale was a nurse. She lived in the 19th century. She was named after the city of Florence in Italy. Her family was rich.Florence was an unusual young woman for her time. She wanted to be a nurse and help people. Her family didn’t want her to become a nurse because hospitals were dirty. They were worried about her. In 1851, Florence went to Germany and learned all about nursing. In 1854, lots of British soldiers went to fight in the Crimean War. Army hospitals were filled with injured men, but there were no nurses and many men died. Florence and a team of nurses went to help. She brought the men fresh food, she cleaned the hospital beds and she used clean bandages on the wounded soldiers. At night, Florence walked around the hospital. She talked to the injured soldiers and helped the men to write letters to their families. She carried a lamp and the soldiers called her ‘The lady with the lamp’. When Florence returned to England, people called her a heroine because of her amazing work in the Crimean War. Queen Victoria wrote her a letter to say thank you. Формативное задание11) ответьте на вопросы ПОЛНЫМИ предложениями. За краткие ответы, не засчитывается.1. What did Florence want to be?2. When did she go to Germany?3. Why was she called 'The lady with the lamp'?4. Why did she go to Germany?5. How did she help the soldiers?6. What did she get from Queen Victoria?
The chances of the country’s … have never looked so remote. 2.
She felt so, as if there had been some strange … . 3. … had better
be slow, in order that it may be sure. 4. … like these will make the
devices more usable. 5. As the revolution proceeds an inevitable
class … is to happen. 6. I like people, but when people become
"customers" certain nasty … often take place. 7. The whole history
of knowledge can be represented by one single line of progress and
… . 8. Pure energy, in all its …, is absolutely unknown to man. 9.
The idea was largely discredited by Darwin's theory of …, first
published in 1859. 10. In the opening years of the French … the
two men in Europe who seemed omnipotent were Pitt and
Robespierre.