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Genus der Substantive
Quiz by Johanna Blomstedt
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​Arbeitslosigkeit
das
die
der
​Aussehen
der
das
die
Arbeitslosigkeit
Aussehen
Geheimnis
Tanz
Opel
Häuschen
Bewegung
König
Silber
Neutralität
Kommunismus
August
Temperatur
Morgen
Zukunft
Whisky
Drama
Herbst
Honig
Physik
Rewrite it in present tense without a dialog and use names for the people: "S: Guten Tag! Sie haben ein Zimmer zu vermieten. Ist es noch frei? H: Ja, es ist noch frei. Bitte treten Sie ein! Hier in dieses Zimmer gleich neben der Wohnungstür. - Hier rechts ist das Bett mit dem Nachttisch. Am Fenster steht der Schreibtisch, und dort hinten in dem Sessel können Sie abends bequem sitzen und lesen; ich stelle noch eine Stehlampe in die Ecke. S: Ist dieser Schrank dort ein Kleiderschrank? H : Ja, in diesen Schrank können Sie Ihre Kleider hängen. Sie haben auch noch genug Platz für Ihre Wäsche. Ein Regal für Ihre Bücher hängt dort links. S: Haben Sie auch Zentralheizung? H : Leider nicht. Aber dieser Ofen heizt das Zimmer sehr gut. S: Und wo ist das Waschbecken? H : Zum Waschen können Sie ins Bad gehen. Ich bin allein in der Wohnung. Das Bad ist also fast immer frei. S: Können Sie mir das Zimmer aufräumen? H; Meine Putzfrau kommt täglich zum Aufräumen. Sie kann auch Ihre Wasche waschen. Sie heizt auch den Ofen. S: Kann ich meinen Radioapparat mitbringen? H : Aber sicher, Sie können bis 11 Uhr abends Radio hören. S : Ist das Zimmer auch ruhig? H : Ja, die Fenster gehen in den Garten. Das Zimmer ist sehr ruhig. S: Das Zimmer gefallt mir. Was kostet es denn im Monat? H: Die Miete ist nicht hoch. Sie zahlen im Monat für das Zimmer mit Heizung 280 Euro und 50 Euro für die Putzfrau. Die Wäsche bezahlen Sie extra. S: Kann ich auch Frühstück bekommen? H: Ja, für das Frühstück müssen Sie 75 Euro im Monat bezahlen. S: Das ist nicht zu viel. Ich miete das Zimmer. Kann ich schon heute einziehen? Dann hole ich jetzt meine Koffer. Die Miete bezahle ich sofort. H: Danke. Hier ist die Quittung. - Auf Wiedersehen! "
Genus
Grammatik: Genus und Deklination
L2-GENUS (Sicher Aktuell B2.1
Das Genus
Genetics, genre, genealogy, progeny, generator, Genesis, genesis, genus generation
Place the following in order from most broad to most specific. kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species 1 30 sec Q.Sort the correct characteristics into the correct Kingdoms. This is a sorting question 2 30 sec Q.Largest group in taxonomy kingdom 3 30 sec Q.A wolf's scientific name is Canis lupus. What is it's genus? Canis lupus taxonomy wolf 4 30 sec Q.What kingdom of organisms live in wet places, are single celled and have nuclei? Protista Animalia Plantae Fungi 5 30 sec Q.What type of fungi is this? (The tree is dead) saprophytic parasitic symbiotic kingdom 6 30 sec Q.How does this protist move? with a flagella with pseudopods with cell membrane with cilia 7 30 sec Q.How does this protist move? with cilia with pseudopods with nuclei with flagella 8 30 sec Q.Match the correct term to the description. This is a linking question 9 30 sec Q.How does this protist move? with pseudopods with cilia with flagella with nuclei 10 30 sec Q.How does this protist eat? with chloroplasts with pseudopods with cilia with cell membrane 11 30 sec Q.What is the name of this protist? paramecium 12 30 sec Q.What is the name of this protist? amoeba 13 30 sec Q.What is the name of this protist? euglena 14 30 sec Q.What type of fungi feed on other organisms and harm the hosts? parasitic symbiotic saprophytic pseudopods 15 30 sec Q.Match the following terms. This is a linking question 16 30 sec Q.Mycellium are a mass of hyphae. True False 17 30 sec Q.What are the long fibrous strands that allow the fungi to collect food and water called? hyphae fruiting body spores mycellium 18 30 sec Q.When a plant or fungi grows toward light we call that response_______. phototropism 19 30 sec Q.Gravitropism refers to how plants respond to gravity light touch temperature 20 30 sec Q.Fungi can reproduce with spores and hyphae spores only asexually only sexually only 21 30 sec Q.The variable the scientist changes independent 22 30 sec Q.Sort the correct descriptions into the correct boxes. This is a sorting question 23 30 sec Back to top
All living things are made up of one or more cells. A cell is the smallest unit that can carry on all of the processes of life. Beginning in the 17th century, curious naturalists were able to use microscopes to study objects too small to be seen with the unaided eye. Their studies led them to propose the cellular basis of life. Hooke In 1665, English scientist Robert Hooke studied nature by using an early light microscope, such as the one in Figure 4-1a. A light micro- scope is an instrument that uses optical lenses to magnify objects by bending light rays. Hooke looked at a thin slice of cork from the bark of a cork oak tree. “I could exceedingly plainly perceive it to be all perforated and porous,” Hooke wrote. He described “a great many little boxes” that reminded him of the cubicles or “cells” where monks live. When Hooke focused his microscope on the cells of tree stems, roots, and ferns, he found that each had similar little boxes. The drawings that Hooke made of the cells he saw are shown in Figure 4-1b. The “little boxes” that Hooke observed were the remains of dead plant cells, such as the cork cells shown in Figure 4-1c. SECTION 1 OBJECTIVES ● Name the scientists who first observed living and nonliving cells. ● Summarize the research that led to the development of the cell theory. ● State the three principles of the cell theory. ● Explain why the cell is considered to be the basic unit of life. VOCABULARY cell cell theory Robert Hooke used an early microscope (a) to see cells in thin slices of cork. His drawings of what he saw (b) indicate that he had clearly observed the remains of cork cells (300) (c). FIGURE 4-1 (a) (b) (c) Copyright © by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved. 70 CHAPTER 4 Leeuwenhoek The first person to observe living cells was a Dutch trader named Anton van Leeuwenhoek. Leeuwenhoek made microscopes that were simple and tiny, but he ground lenses so precisely that the magnification was 10 times that of Hooke’s instruments. In 1673, Leeuwenhoek, shown in Figure 4-2a, was able to observe a previ- ously unseen world of microorganisms. He observed cells with green stripes from an alga of the genus Spirogyra, as shown in Figure 4-2b, and bell-shaped cells on stalks of a protist of the genus Vorticella, as shown in Figure 4-2c. Leeuwenhoek called these organisms animalcules. We now call them protists. THE CELL THEORY Although Hooke and Leeuwenhoek were the first to report observ- ing cells, the importance of this observation was not realized until about 150 years later. At this time, biologists began to organize information about cells into a unified understanding. In 1838, the German botanist Matthias Schleiden concluded that all plants were composed of cells. The next year, the German zoologist Theodor Schwann concluded the same thing for animals. And finally, in his study of human diseases, the German physician Rudolf Virchow (1821–1902) noted that all cells come from other cells. These three observations were combined to form a basic theory about the cel- lular nature of life. The cell theory has three essential parts, which are summarized in Table 4-1. Anton van Leeuwenhoek (1632–1723) is shown here with one of his hand-held lenses (a). Leeuwenhoek observed an alga of the genus Spirogyra (b) and a protist of the genus Vorticella (c). FIGURE 4-2 TABLE 4-1 The Cell Theory All living organisms are composed of one or more cells. Cells are the basic units of structure and function in an organism. Cells come only from the reproduction of existing cells. (a) (b) (c) www.scilinks.org Topic: Cell Theory Keyword: HM60241 mb06se_csfs01.qxd 5/18/07 10:54 AM Page 70