Making Inferences Level Seven Mrs. Hunsaker. The Origin of the Olympics Every four years, athletes of many countries meet in one of the world’s great.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The people Look for some people. Write it down. By the water
Advertisements

The Story of the Olympic Games
Dear friends, Let introduce me My name is Artyom. I'm 13. I live in Pyatigorsk. I go to school 18. I'm in the 8th form. I'd like to tell you some facts.
A.
The Ancient Greece Contribution: The Olympic Games
Ms. Sims/Crenshaw Travels to Ancient Greece. Ms. Sims/Crenshaw hopped on a plane and made their way to Greece. Greece is located in Europe.
Welcome to Ancient Greece
The Olympic Games. Epictetus on the Ancient Olympic Spectator Aren’t you devoured by the fierce heat? Aren’t you smashed in the crowd? Aren’t you upset.
7 th SS Chapter 11 Section 1 [Greek] Religious Practices Pages Objectives: Students will be able describe how the Greeks honored their gods and.
The Olympic Games By Madi. How it all started The Ancient Greek Olympics were a lot different than our Olympics now-a- days. The only people who were.
The Ancient Olympics The ancient Olympics grew out of religious festivals that many Greek cities held to honor their gods. Athletic contests, like foot.
Ancient Greek Olympics
The Olympic games Ancient and modern!. What are Olympics? Olympics are a great sporting event that happens every four years. They have nearly every sport.
Olympics In Greece. The most famous games held at Olympia, South- West of Greece, which took place every four years, and last for 5 days. The ancient.
The Olympic Games.
Ancient Greek facts  All competitors at the Ancient Olympics were naked, except perhaps a coating of oil.  One mother was so keen to see her son compete.
Unit 8 Sports The Olympic Games The Olympic Games Olympic motto The 29the Olympics The 27th Olympics The 1st Olympics The modern Olympics The old Olympics.
Questions: ► Did you watch the opening ceremony on that day? And who can use some words to talk about your afterthoughts? ► Do you know what is the greatest.
Try to guess the meaning of these symbols of sports. Here is some clue: figure-skating, football, skiing, tennis, skating, gymnastics, swimming. The first.
Lesson 38 THE OLYMPIC GAMES Revision Look at the pictures and tell what sports they are.
GREEK MYTHOLOGY I can explain how the Greeks used myths to explain their beliefs about the world and who the Greek gods and goddess were.
Ancient Games Ancient Games
PANKRATION: The Ultimate Game. The Greeks invented athletic contests and held them in honour of their gods. The Isthmos Games were staged every two years.
I am ready to test!________ I am ready to test!________
Sight Words.
(A competition) Let me see how much you know about the Olympic Games.
THE OLYMPIC GAMES Revision Look at the pictures and tell what sports they are.
Unit 1–European Exploration Lesson 2: Crossing the Atlantic.
Beliefs and Customs Ancient Greece Chapter 11 Lesson 2.
Making Inferences 5 th grade. With your PARTNER…. Decide who will be person A and person B Person A will read the passage aloud while person B follows.
 The Olympic Games is the leading international sporting event featuring summer and winter sports competitions in which thousands of athletes participate.
By Flora The ancient Olympics Where it all started The Greeks believed that Zeus, king of Mount Olympus, put Heracles and a few others in a running race.
Unit 2 The Olympic Games First Period.
Ancient Greek Olympics By: Jill Ranck Why did the Greeks have these contests?  Held the contests to honor the gods.  To show their gods how strong,
Book 2 Unit 2 the Olympic Games ks5u精品课件.
Some facts, figures and pictures
There are 95 Days left before the Olympics begin (This is from Monday April 23 rd )
Mr. Hardy Randolph IB Middle  Located in Southern Europe  North of the Mediterranean Sea  80% of Greece is mountainous  Mount Olympus is.
Sight Words.
«From the History of the Olympic Games» Author: Kruhmaleva Alena Form: 4 «A» School: №19 Teacher: Neretina Olga Sergeevna.
Welcome to Sydney THE OLYMPIC GAMES Read the description and speak out the names of the sports : 1.This is a very fast game. Each of the two teams has.
High Frequency Words.
By: Luli, Lucas b, Malcolm and Juana.. Ancient boxing had fewer rules than the modern sport. Boxers fought without rounds until one man was knocked out,
The Olympic Games Period 2 reading Group 4. Why do so many countries want to host the Olympic Games? Group 1. How many events are there for the Summer.
HISTORY OF THE OLYMPICS By John, Conytao and Briearna.
How much do you know about the Olympic Games?
The Olympic Games Chapter 4 Ancient Greece World History.
11-2 Notes: Beliefs and Customs. Greek Gods and Myths Greeks were polytheistic (worshipped many gods) Gods looked like humans but were more powerful,
Ancient Greece The Olympics 776 B.C.E.- Today
The Ancient Olympics.
Unit 2 The Olympic Games. Do you know the Olympic Games well?
Created By Sherri Desseau Click to begin TACOMA SCREENING INSTRUMENT FIRST GRADE.
1 2 How did the geography of Ancient Greece effect the government of the civilization?
Asia Europe AfricaAmerica Oceania The five rings stand for friendship of five continents.
The Story of the Olympic Games A Journey to Ancient Greece.
The Olympic Games.
Ancient Greek Civilizations
The Story of the Olympic Games
Unit 2 The Olympic Games.
Unit 2 The Olympic Games.
The Story of the Olympic Games
Unit 2 The Olympic Games.
THE OLYMPIC GAMES.
Olympic Games.
The Ancient Olympics.
Mrs. Duke Travels to Ancient Greece
THE OLYMPIC GAMES.
OLYMPIC HISTORY 1.The 5 Olympic Rings represent 5 major continental regions of the world. - Africa , Americas , Asia , Australia , Europe 2.The.
The Olympic Games.
Presentation transcript:

Making Inferences Level Seven Mrs. Hunsaker

The Origin of the Olympics Every four years, athletes of many countries meet in one of the world’s great cities for the Olympic games. The modern Olympics were first held in the year 1896, but the history of the games is far older than that. The very first Olympics were held in 776 B.C. in Olympia, a city in Greece. At these games, the athletes competed in only one event, a running race of one stadium (About 200 yards). Later, races of other distances were added, as well as boxing, wrestling, throwing contests, and chariot races. Only Greeks were allowed to participate, and the winners were honored in their towns for the rest of their lives. For many years, the Olympics were for men only. Women were not even allowed to watch. But eventually women did compete, and in 168 B.C. a woman named Belisiche was the winner of the chariot race. When the modern-day Olympics were introduced, it seemed proper to hold the first games where they had originated thousands of years before – in Greece.

The first modern – day Olympic games were for men only. were held in 168 B.C. were held in Greece.

In the ancient Olympic games people from many countries participated. the winners were treated as heroes. the losers were killed.

The word “Olympics” comes from the Greek word for sports. name of the place where the games were first held. name of the person who started the games.

Modern – day Olympics have been held for only the past 20 years. since 776 B.C. for more than 100 years.

A Celebrity Comet Halley’s Comet will be visiting us again in Its last visit was in It’s an infrequent visitor to Earth, coming around only once every 75 ½ years. That’s because its orbit around the sun takes it to the farthest reaches of the solar system. Halley’s Comet is named for Edmund Halley, the English astronomer who first explained what comets are. Before his time, the appearance of any comet caused panic around the world. Halley asserted that the bright comet visible from Earth in 1683 was the same one that had been reported in 1607, 1532, and He correctly predicted that it would reappear in Halley’s comet is always a spectacular sight. It’s so bright that it is sometimes visible even in daylight. Scientists sent five separate probes to study the comet in These probes sent back information that helps us understand comets.

Edmund Hailey was the first person to see the comet named after him. explained what comets really are. was an infrequent visitor to Earth.

Halley’s Comet last visited Earth in visits the Earth at regular intervals. may hit the Earth.

When a comet appears in the sky it can only be seen from a small part of the world. it’s usually only visible at night. it can never be seen without a telescope.

Before Halley’s time, most people believed that a comet was fireworks. scary. a flying saucer.

Is it a Fruit or a Vegetable? What is the difference between a fruit and a vegetable? You probably think you know – but a botanist might not agree with you. A fruit is the part of a plant that contains the seeds. A vegetable is any vegetative part of a plant – leaves, stems, roots, or tubers. Celery, cabbage, and carrots are vegetables; apples and oranges are fruits. Everyone would agree on those. But what about tomatoes, cucumbers, beans, and corn? Nearly everyone would call each of these foods vegetables – but to be strictly accurate, you would have to call them all fruits!

The part of a plant that bears the seeds is the fruit. vegetable. root.

Vegetative means poisonous. green. growing.

A peanut is really a fruit. a vegetable. neither fruit nor vegetable.

Scientific names for things aren’t always correct. are always hard to pronounce. Aren’t always the same as popular names.

Was There an Atlantis? Was there really ever such a place as Atlantis, the lost continent that sank into the sea? Or is the story of Atlantis only a myth? There’s no real evidence that such a place ever existed. An island – not a continent- called Atlantis appears on several maps drawn in the Middle Ages. But these same maps are filled with places that are completely imaginary- and on all of them the world is shown to be flat. All the early stories about Atlantis seem to be based on the one told by the ancient Greek philosopher, Plato. He describes Atlantis as having been located in the Atlantic Ocean, yet he says it was larger than Asia and Africa combined! And it’s not at all clear whether Plato believed the story, or was treating it only as a fable. But if it was only a fable, where did it come from? Could it have been from old stories about Knossos? This was a real city on the island of Crete, and the center of an advanced civilization. About 1,000 years before Plato’s time it was destroyed by a tremendous volcanic explosion. Could this have been the beginning of the Atlantis myth? We will probably never know.

The map-makers of the Middle Ages were wiser than most people. did not know very much about the world. did not believe the story of Atlantis.

The story suggests that Plato made up the story of Atlantis. was the first to write about Atlantis. came from Atlantis.

Plato wrote that Atlantis was a real place. between Asia and Africa. impossibly large.

Knossos was an imaginary place. was Plato’s home town. might have been the real Atlantis.

A Porpoise Named Jack Jack the porpoise was a friend to sailors for more than 30 years. Jack lived in the waters of French Passage, a dangerous stretch of sea near New Zealand. Whenever a ship appeared, Jack would swim ahead of it, guiding it through the hazardous current. One day a passenger on the ship Penguin shot at Jack and wounded him. Jack recovered from his wound and went on guiding ships. But from that day whenever the Penguin appeared in French Passage, Jack was nowhere to be seen.

Jack lived near New Zealand. near France. at Marine land.

French Passage is dangerous to ships because of rocks. the current. sharks.

Jack got even with the person who shot him. stopped guiding the Penguin. disappeared from French Passage.

The story suggests that Jack could tell one ship from another. Jack hated people after he was shot. Porpoises are as smart as people.

You are ready to move to the next level!