احلام الربيع22
hello dear well it depends on the subject because i never done proposal in masters before. i'm still in university but i will try my best dear
hello dear well it depends on the subject because i never done proposal in masters before. i'm...
لو سمحت ياقمر اكتبيلي الموضوع اذا قدرت بكره لانه مستعجل

write an essay about your relationship with your brother and sister


ياريت مايكون طويل يعني صفحه واحده

وجزاك الله كل خير
:26: :26:
slll
slll
لو سمحت ياقمر اكتبيلي الموضوع اذا قدرت بكره لانه مستعجل write an essay about your relationship with your brother and sister ياريت مايكون طويل يعني صفحه واحده وجزاك الله كل خير :26: :26:
لو سمحت ياقمر اكتبيلي الموضوع اذا قدرت بكره لانه مستعجل write an essay about your ...
حبيبتي ممكن تكتبيلي مقال عن. بس لازم يحتوي على فكرة رئيسيه وفكرتين فرعيه يعنيtopic sentens وsupport sentens1 وsupport sentence 2و
وconcluding sentenceويفضل وما عليك امر انه يكون على الخاص ومشكورة مقدما على المساعدةبس لازم قبل يوم الخميس
dalo3a zoje
dalo3a zoje
لو سمحت ياقمر اكتبيلي الموضوع اذا قدرت بكره لانه مستعجل write an essay about your relationship with your brother and sister ياريت مايكون طويل يعني صفحه واحده وجزاك الله كل خير :26: :26:
لو سمحت ياقمر اكتبيلي الموضوع اذا قدرت بكره لانه مستعجل write an essay about your ...
An Adult Brother Sister Relationship I consider myself to be extremely lucky for having apart from two caring and loving parents, also a brother-who entered my life three and a half years after I was born-to turn to whether I am happy or in distress. Being the oldest child in our family, I was usually the one that had to listen to all the parenting advice before my brother was old enough to take a stand. Although our relationship has been through a lot of ups and downs, now that we both technically belong to the adult group of the family, I consider my brother to be one of the most caring and smart individuals I know and consider him to be irreplaceable in my life.

I catch myself often traveling back in time and remembering with nostalgia those instances that we felt compelled to fight over a toy or a T-shirt, although we both knew that trouble was on its way since we were supposed to wash our hands and get ready to sit down at the dinner table with our parents. I smile when I recall those Sunday mornings that I had to run to my brother's bedroom as my mother entered his room in order to begin narrating his favorite story. Although I do not remember how this became a family "ritual" that lasted throughout our childhood-since the usual practice for kids is to listen to fairytales before getting to bed-my mother was always ready to repeat the story of the righteous young man and his successful fight against the misunderstood monster that frightened the inhabitants of an imaginary village. The tone of her voice and the moral of the story always made us wake up with a feeling of excitement that everything in life is possible. Well, I am proud to admit that my brother is a living proof of that old saying. Without hesitating and by being confident of his abilities and his willingness to experience the world, he was the one that took first the step of traveling abroad, studying the subject matter of his choice, becoming a young promising professional in his field of expertise, buying a house, and still keep his friends close and my parents happy with his life's choices.

The truth is that our relationship has changed considerably over the years. While at the beginning was more or less similar to any brother-sister relationship you have been probably exposed to, although we were not jealous of each other, somehow we managed through similar experiences and common life goals to establish a very sincere and open channel of communication. Maybe it seems too honest at times for me to handle with confidence, but the fact remains that I am grateful to have the opportunity of speaking with my brother whenever I please, to give him my advice when he asks for it and not to be afraid to raise an argument that might not find him in agreement.

Having an adult brother-sister relationship is one of those things in life I cherish and consider myself extremely lucky for being able to enjoy. My sincere wish for both of us is to continue opening up each other, understand and respect our differences, learn from each others mistakes, and of course, increase the frequency of our visits to one another. One thing I miss terribly is his face. He is one of the people I know I can laugh with and cry in front of without later feeling embarrassed I did. I consider this feeling to be unique; at least for me.
شمعةالدار
شمعةالدار
An Adult Brother Sister Relationship I consider myself to be extremely lucky for having apart from two caring and loving parents, also a brother-who entered my life three and a half years after I was born-to turn to whether I am happy or in distress. Being the oldest child in our family, I was usually the one that had to listen to all the parenting advice before my brother was old enough to take a stand. Although our relationship has been through a lot of ups and downs, now that we both technically belong to the adult group of the family, I consider my brother to be one of the most caring and smart individuals I know and consider him to be irreplaceable in my life. I catch myself often traveling back in time and remembering with nostalgia those instances that we felt compelled to fight over a toy or a T-shirt, although we both knew that trouble was on its way since we were supposed to wash our hands and get ready to sit down at the dinner table with our parents. I smile when I recall those Sunday mornings that I had to run to my brother's bedroom as my mother entered his room in order to begin narrating his favorite story. Although I do not remember how this became a family "ritual" that lasted throughout our childhood-since the usual practice for kids is to listen to fairytales before getting to bed-my mother was always ready to repeat the story of the righteous young man and his successful fight against the misunderstood monster that frightened the inhabitants of an imaginary village. The tone of her voice and the moral of the story always made us wake up with a feeling of excitement that everything in life is possible. Well, I am proud to admit that my brother is a living proof of that old saying. Without hesitating and by being confident of his abilities and his willingness to experience the world, he was the one that took first the step of traveling abroad, studying the subject matter of his choice, becoming a young promising professional in his field of expertise, buying a house, and still keep his friends close and my parents happy with his life's choices. The truth is that our relationship has changed considerably over the years. While at the beginning was more or less similar to any brother-sister relationship you have been probably exposed to, although we were not jealous of each other, somehow we managed through similar experiences and common life goals to establish a very sincere and open channel of communication. Maybe it seems too honest at times for me to handle with confidence, but the fact remains that I am grateful to have the opportunity of speaking with my brother whenever I please, to give him my advice when he asks for it and not to be afraid to raise an argument that might not find him in agreement. Having an adult brother-sister relationship is one of those things in life I cherish and consider myself extremely lucky for being able to enjoy. My sincere wish for both of us is to continue opening up each other, understand and respect our differences, learn from each others mistakes, and of course, increase the frequency of our visits to one another. One thing I miss terribly is his face. He is one of the people I know I can laugh with and cry in front of without later feeling embarrassed I did. I consider this feeling to be unique; at least for me.
An Adult Brother Sister Relationship I consider myself to be extremely lucky for having apart...
السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته
أهلين أختي دلوعة ... جزاك الله كل خير على جهودك اللي تبذلينها لمساعدة الاخوات ..ومن فرج عن مسلم كربة فرج الله عنه كربة من كرب يوم القيامة...أسأل الله أن يسخر لك زوجك ويرزقك بالذرية الصالحة السليمة المعافاة ويحفظ عليك دينك وجواحك ويرزقك ماتمنين دنيا وأخرة<<<<< ماتطر أبد


حبيبتي بغيت Essey من 250 كلمة يتحدث عن الكتاب وأنه خير صديق ....


بارك الله فيك.
dalo3a zoje
dalo3a zoje
السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته أهلين أختي دلوعة ... جزاك الله كل خير على جهودك اللي تبذلينها لمساعدة الاخوات ..ومن فرج عن مسلم كربة فرج الله عنه كربة من كرب يوم القيامة...أسأل الله أن يسخر لك زوجك ويرزقك بالذرية الصالحة السليمة المعافاة ويحفظ عليك دينك وجواحك ويرزقك ماتمنين دنيا وأخرة&lt;&lt;&lt;&lt;&lt; ماتطر أبد حبيبتي بغيت Essey من 250 كلمة يتحدث عن الكتاب وأنه خير صديق .... بارك الله فيك.
السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته أهلين أختي دلوعة ... جزاك الله كل خير على جهودك اللي تبذلينها...
آمين يا رب العالمين اله يسمع منك حبيبتي
A good book is the best friend: books open pathways to new worlds. Children who don't read perform more poorly in school and miss out on a profound source of pleasure and inspiration
Books are main characters in the any house. Every night, and at any time of the day on weekends -- parents curl up with their children to lose themselves in the smooth pages. They sip hot chocolate, perhaps passing the book around, the adults and older children each reading a few pages aloud. Together they have read books that are worlds apart in style and content.
Books fire the imagination, unlike watching the screen, where it's someone else's imagination. When you're reading a book, you have to fill in all the blanks, and I think it does more for your synapses to fill in the blanks.
There is power in the written word, reading specialists and educators agree. Reading presents children with a wealth of ideas and experiences and can model expressive, elegant writing. It is a cornerstone of school success, a skill and passion worth nurturing and supervising.
In fact, reading ability accounts for 90 percent of success in content areas, says Reid Lyon, a National Institutes of Health research psychologist and an adviser to President George W. Bush on early-childhood development and education. After grades three or four, Lyon says, "Children's vocabulary is much more reliant on written interchange rather than oral interchange, and most of your vocabulary on college tests comes from reading."In addition, children who don't read "not only fail in school, but also drop out in substantially higher rates and tend to get in trouble with the law" Lyon adds. That dropout rate, emphasized in a 1993 National Longitudinal Transition Study conducted by SRI International in a granted program, was 38 percent for children with a learning disability but only 25 percent for children who experienced no compromise in reading skills.
"If, by the end of high school, children are not reading, then they are at much greater risk of not completing high school or of graduating than their non-reading-disabled peers," says Sheldon Horowitz, director of professional services at the National Center for Learning Disabilities, a nonprofit education organization headquartered in New York.
Beyond the tangible benefits, reading is a profound source of pleasure that can be shared between parents and children, book advocates say. "Kids value what they see their parents valuing when they're little;' says Lee Galda, a University of Minnesota professor who specializes in children's literature and language arts."If you really want to make sure your children value reading, you have to spend time on it. Read with them, not just to them. You're choosing to turn off the TV, not talking on the phone. You have a book, they have a book."