Welcome – 2014

Goodbye 2013; welcome 2014…

Even though, today is the last day of 2013, I am not able to believe that ‘the year’ has come to an end. To me ‘time’ seems to fly every moment- even before I have realized the year has ended. I will miss 2013 as much I miss all the years that have gone by.

Each year has taught me something about life and how to live it. They have given me memories- both good and bad- that I ‘ll never forget. Some have given  me failures and some have given me success, but they have gone and will never come back. someone has said

” The best  preparation for ‘Tomorrow’ is live your ‘Today'”

New Year....image
Happy New Year

It doesn’t matter how long your life is, what matters is how much you live it. So, let us all welcome the year will all its happiness, sadness, adventures, successes, failures, achievements and everything that is new in it. Try to live a new ‘You’, to change all the ‘bad’ into ‘good’ and ‘fair’. Let’s stop complaining but to work out to solve all our problems. Let this year be special for every heart…….keep smiling 🙂

Happy New Year!

Season’s Greetings from Lifelong Learning: NOIDA

Season's Greetings from Lifelong Learning: NOIDA

A Look Back: This was Christmas 2010…is it any different this year

Dear Students,

Please post your experiences and greetings for the Christmas this year here… Look at the Power of Faith in this Photo Essay.

A Photo Essay. A Look Back: This was Christmas 2010….

I Re-blog it today and invite your comments further under our Describe the Picture Series (DTP)… Many Pictures from around the world on celebrations.

May you have a great day and the year ahead.

Best regards

Ashish

A Photo Essay. A Look Back: This was Christmas 2010…

Its a good Photo Essay… thanks to ‘Voices from Russia’. Enjoy your Christmas Carnival Time this year and Keep Learning Good English!

Voices from Russia

Iraqi Christian refugee in Amman (Jordan) prays in a Catholic church. Fully half of the Christian population resident in Iraq in 1980 have fled to Syria and Jordan, this process was accelerated by the present Republican-engendered war in Iraq. Before the war, 97 percent of the population was Muslim and 3 percent Christian (roughly two-thirds Chaldean Uniate Catholic and one-third Oriental Orthodox… the Protestant groups are derisory). Today… who knows? In Jordan, the population is 92 percent Muslim, 8 percent Christian (split between Catholic, Orthodox, and Oriental Orthodox… there are no Protestants to speak of). Jordan is the most tolerant of the Middle Eastern states towards Christianity, but most of its Christians have emigrated (in 1950, the Jordanian population was 48 percent Christian). Bear in mind… if you support Rush Limbaugh or Sarah Palin, you support the persecution of the Iraqi Christian community, as it’s now mainly a…

View original post 634 more words

Describe this Picture Animation from google

Describe this Picture Animation from google

First Day of Winter: Catchy Visual, Innovative, Colorful… Explain the animation. Its Knitting a sweater or pull-over.

Students of GET Selected: write/speak 5 sentences on what you see.

Students of Go Global: Explain what it means