Déjà vu. Yesterday, I spent 15 minutes practising the Alphabet with Arielle before her Super jojo screen time and it reminded me so much of my younger days with my mommy. I remember being a restless child, with an ultra short concentration span, making it challenging for mummy to teach me. 🥲
With this new easel board, my active 3 year old toddler sat through the practice and the moment we were done, she started playing Teacher Arielle with Didi and I being her students. Not sure if I did the same when I was younger but I probably did because I saw myself in her.
The children had some play time with their new Swan easel which has a whiteboard, blackboard, acrylic board and drawing paper! Their fav boards are the acrylic board and whiteboard! I was most drawn to the acrylic board for it’s uniqueness and ability to handle painting too!
Made of Russian highest grade birch plywood makes this board very lasting and it’s German Osmo natural child-safe wood wax coating prevents stains. Made in Korea, @ is running a launch preorder promotion which will save you 20% off. The Swan Easel will be $270 instead of $340. Quote ZRT15 for 15% off storewide, excluding promotional items!
同時也有1部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過10萬的網紅MONGABONG,也在其Youtube影片中提到,Sharing with you guys my November/December snippets in this episode of #VlogmasWithMong! ✨ It’s been a rather fun month - Visiting a robotic cafe, 11....
「german quote」的推薦目錄:
- 關於german quote 在 Zoe Raymond Facebook 的最讚貼文
- 關於german quote 在 พ่อบ้านเยอรมัน Facebook 的最佳解答
- 關於german quote 在 Charles Mok 莫乃光 Facebook 的精選貼文
- 關於german quote 在 MONGABONG Youtube 的精選貼文
- 關於german quote 在 german quote - Pinterest 的評價
- 關於german quote 在 What is the correct way to denote a quotation in German? 的評價
- 關於german quote 在 Germany quotation marks broken in tinytex/rmarkdown 的評價
german quote 在 พ่อบ้านเยอรมัน Facebook 的最佳解答
"รู้จักกับหนึ่งในคนที่มี IQ สูงที่สุดในโลก"
เค้าผู้นี้พ่อบ้านเชื่อว่า เป็นไปไม่ได้เลยที่ ผู้ที่สนใจในภาษาในเยอรมันจะไม่รู้จัก
เพราะชื่อของเขาเป็นชื่อเดียวกับสถาบัน Goethe ที่ถือว่าเป็นสถาบันที่เผยแพร่วัฒนธรรมและภาษาเยอรมันไปทั่วโลก โดยชื่อเต็มก็คือ
"Johann Wolfgang von Goethe"
(โยฮันน์ วอล์ฟกัง ฟอน เกอเธ่)
และเชื่อมั้ยครับว่าเขาเป็นบุคคลที่สำคัญมากในประวัติศาสตร์ ของเยอรมัน และมีการคาดการณ์ว่า เขามี IQ สูงระหว่าง 210 - 225 เลยทีเดียว ซึ่งประวัติของเขานั้นได้รับการยอมรับในหลากหลายวงการ
ไม่ว่าจะเป็นด้านนักเขียน นักวิทยาศาสตร์ และนักปรัชญาชาวเยอรมัน ถึงขนาดว่า ไอนสไตน์ ที่เรารู้จักกันว่าฉลาดและเก่งแค่ไหนยังเคยเอ่ยถึงท่านว่า
“เกอเธ่คือมนุษย์คนสุดท้ายบนโลกที่รู้ทุกสิ่ง”
“The last man in the world to know everything.”
และนอกจากนี้เขายังมีความสามารถทางภาษาอังกฤษ ฝรั่งเศส ละติน และกรีก ซึ่งเป็นส่วนผลักดันให้งานเขียนของเขาได้ถูกเผยแพร่อย่างแพร่หลายจนทำให้ เกอเธ่เป็นเหมือนสัญลักษณ์ของวรรณคดีเยอรมัน คลาสสิกใหม่ของยุโรปและโรมัน และโด่งดังมากในช่วงปลายคริสต์ศตวรรษที่ 18 ถึงต้นคริสต์ศตวรรษที่ 19
***ซึ่งงานของเขาได้ส่งผลต่อแนวความคิดไปทั่วยุโรปและได้สร้างแรงบันดาลใจกับหลายๆ ท่านจนมาถึงปัจจุบัน***
*** เกร็ดความรู้เพิ่มเติม ***
ปัจจุบันบ้านของเกอเธ่ กลายเป็นอีกหนึ่งท่องเที่ยวที่สำคัญของคนที่มาเยือนเมือง Frankfurt
มี Quote คำคม ของเขามากมายแต่พ่อบ้านชอบประโยคที่ว่า
Without haste, but without rest. "ไม่รีบ, แต่ไม่หยุดพัก"
ในปีนี้สถาบันเกอเธ่ ก่อตั้งและดำเนินงานมาตั้งแต่ปีค.ศ. 1960 (พ.ศ. 2503) โดยองค์กรที่มีบทบาทสำคัญในการแลกเปลี่ยนวัฒนธรรมเยอรมัน - ไทย
โดยในปีค.ศ. 2020 (พ.ศ. 2563) นี้ เป็นวาระครบรอบ 60 ปีของการก่อตั้งสถาบันในประเทศไทย
#พ่อบ้านเยอรมัน #เยอรมัน #เยอรมนี #Germany #German #Goethe
ที่มาของข้อมูล: พ่อบ้านเยอรมัน, Business Insider, สถาบันเกอเธ่ และ Mthai
https://www.businessinsider.in/science/the-40-smartest-people-of-all-time/slidelist/46399922.cms#slideid=46399987
https://teen.mthai.com/variety/89222.html
https://phorbangerman.com/2017/05/27/%E0%B8%A3%E0%B8%B9%E0%B9%89%E0%B8%88%E0%B8%B1%E0%B8%81%E0%B8%81%E0%B8%B1%E0%B8%9A%E0%B8%AB%E0%B8%99%E0%B8%B6%E
german quote 在 Charles Mok 莫乃光 Facebook 的精選貼文
我今天早上在香港電台英文台的《給香港的信》,向香港人警告政府和保皇黨企圖以「假新聞」作藉口而引入對互聯網內容審查!
Beware: Hong Kong government and pro-establishment politicians are drumming up against "fake news" to justify introducing Internet censorship
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You may have recently seen a series of so-called government announcements in the public interest, or API, on TV, cautioning the public to be careful about the information they receive on the internet. The API tells the public to verify and fact-check before believing these information, and not to spread misinformation, or the consequences can be devastating.
The advice is reasonable. But the intention may be dubious. Why? It is because the government and especially the police force but have been one of the biggest sources of misinformation in Hong Kong, during the last six months of pro-democracy protests which followed the government’s attempt to ram through the extradition bill. Needless to say, government claims about the extradition bill must have been some of the best examples of spreading misinformation, or simply lies. Likewise, many of the recent claims made by the police about their actions in their almost daily press conferences since this summer must be also justifiably classified as misinformation.
So, it is quite clear to many that what the government is trying to do is to monopolise what is true and what is not. In recent weeks, more and more government officials and senior police officers, running out of arguments to justify their own versions as their truths, simply resort to attacking the other sides’ views as “fake news.”
Some may remember about two month ago, a letter from the police to Facebook was leaked on social media. In the letter, the Police requested the global social media company to remove a number of posts made by different users, based on the allegation that these posts were critical of the police and would potentially harm their reputation. Fortunately, the social media company did not comply with these requests.
The issue at hand is not fake news. The issue at hand is freedom of expression, disguised by the authority in the name of countering misinformation.
This week in the Legislative Council, in a written question put up by the Honourable Ted Hui, the police admitted to 621 removal requests made this year up to the end of November to local and international Internet and social media platforms, a whopping 18 times more than in 2018. The government response puts the blame on “a vast amount of fake news and baseless accusations that targeted the Police.” It is simply ludicrous for a government with the lowest approval and credibility ratings in history to say that. To many, this government which refuses to even allow an independent commission to investigate the police is itself the biggest source of fake news, and not to be trusted.
The government seems to be saying that truth must be approved by authority, and its version of facts cannot be disputed by anyone, especially those who hold a different political view.
So really, where do fake news come from? In August, Twitter, Facebook and YouTube removed over 200,000 accounts which were tied to the China government or state media, that were used purposely to smear the Hong Kong anti-extradition protests, and to spread misinformation about the protests.
Yet, it is now the Hong Kong government and pro-establishment political figures that are making noises about fake news, saying that in order to counter these so-called misinformation, legislation should be passed to ban fake news. They would point to such legislation in other countries such as Germany and France, or Singapore.
When I was in Berlin, Germany, two weeks ago, for the Internet Governance Forum, in a summit with legislators around the world, we compared notes about censorship attempts by different governments in the name of protecting the people, but in fact at the expense of curtailing freedom of expression. A German member of parliament told me in no uncertain term that, quote, misinformation is legal is Germany, end of quote. She said that freedom of expression is enshrined in the German Basic Law and not to be compromised by any other legislation. The new law was just an attempt to regulate contents that are narrowly defined such as relating to criminal defamation, hate crimes, or Holocaust denial. But, criticising the government is certainly a right that is legally protected at the highest level of their constitution. Even so, the legislations of such laws in Germany or France were still very controversial.
When I told this German legislator that pro-government politicians in Hong Kong are justifying removal of content on social media by quoting the German example, her response was — this must be an example of using misinformation to justify laws against misinformation, that is, plain censorship. Her conclusion, laws in one land cannot be copied to another, or there will be abuse.
Hong Kong, by comparison with Germany or France, does not have the democracy and the power vested in the people to protect our people’s own rights. One can reference the recent case of Singapore, where it also passed an anti-fake news law, and in recent weeks have started to enforce it against people posting messages on Facebook. When a member of the opposition party posted an opinion opposing certain government investment decisions, the Singaporean government decided that was fake news.
So beware of the government’s evolving attempts to censor the Internet and social media, by drumming up the negative side. The Big Brother wants to stifle opinions against it, because that is the rule number one of hanging on to the authority they wish to continue to dominate. We must continue to guard against Internet censorship because no one else will save us. It is our — the people’s own — free opinion vs the government’s version of the only truth — that is what it is all about. And it’s worth the fight.
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https://www.rthk.hk/…/progr…/lettertohongkong/episode/612602
#RTHK #LTHK #censorship #fakenews
german quote 在 MONGABONG Youtube 的精選貼文
Sharing with you guys my November/December snippets in this episode of #VlogmasWithMong! ✨ It’s been a rather fun month - Visiting a robotic cafe, 11.11 livestream behind the scenes, and settling @peppurr.thecat into our home! ?
Watch my November vlog here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jfr0eEPlN8k
Keep up with #VlogmasWithMong2020 ?: https://bit.ly/34hx6TQ
How has your Nov/Dec been? ❤️ Talk to me in the comments down below, always love chatting with you guys!
PLACES MENTIONED:
? Hotel Michael Resort World Sentosa
8 Sentosa Gateway, 098269
? Coocaça
541 Orchard Road
#01-01B Liat Towers
Singapore 238881
?Redholic
88 Tg Pagar Rd, Singapore 088509
? Ratio Café and Lounge
176 Orchard Rd, #05-06 Centrepoint, Singapore 238843
? Hans Im Glück German Burgergrill
Vivocity
1 Harbourfront Walk, #01-57 Vivo City, Singapore 098585
? Shimbashi Soba
Paragon
290 Orchard Rd, Singapore 238859
? Salon Vim
My stylist: @jay.ang
Quote “Mongabong” for 15% off!
435 Orchard Rd, #02-01B, Singapore 238877
? East Coast Park - Bougainvillea Park
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FAQ
Hello! My name is Mong Chin and I'm from sunny Singapore. I am 1.63m and I am Singaporean Chinese. I speak English, Mandarin and am currently learning Korean in my free time. I love all things beauty and fashion, and I also like to share my life here. I hope you guys enjoy watching my videos!
DISCLAIMER
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german quote 在 What is the correct way to denote a quotation in German? 的推薦與評價
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german quote 在 german quote - Pinterest 的推薦與評價
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