Difference between revisions of "Lesson:What Is a Leap Year?/ExerciseL1"
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==Listening Exercise== | ==Listening Exercise== | ||
− | + | <html5media>http://thegrove.com.br/metodo/images/1/16/What_Is_a_Leap_Year_.mp3</html5media> | |
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<quiz display=simple> | <quiz display=simple> | ||
{Watch the video and complete the text according to what you can understand. | {Watch the video and complete the text according to what you can understand. | ||
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They noticed by { watching _8 } the stars, specifically the Sirius star. That the astronomical year was actually 365.25 days and they { noticed _7 } this by seeing the Sirius star slowly drifting out of sync. But the western world wasn't so fast to figure this all out. It wasn't until many centuries later when Julio Cesar with the help of an astronomer, discovered just like the Egyptians first did that a year is really 365.25 days and they { created _7 } the Julian calendar with the leap year that we know and love to fix that problem. Well done Julius! Well, not so fast. You see, if you want to get really exact about it, the astronomical year is actually 365.2422 days which is 11min. 14 sec. { shorter _7 } than the Julian calendar. And that means in a hundred and twenty eight years from now, if we use the Julian calendar, we'll be { off _3 } again by one full day. So today, we use a { revised _7 } version of the Julian calendar.<br> | They noticed by { watching _8 } the stars, specifically the Sirius star. That the astronomical year was actually 365.25 days and they { noticed _7 } this by seeing the Sirius star slowly drifting out of sync. But the western world wasn't so fast to figure this all out. It wasn't until many centuries later when Julio Cesar with the help of an astronomer, discovered just like the Egyptians first did that a year is really 365.25 days and they { created _7 } the Julian calendar with the leap year that we know and love to fix that problem. Well done Julius! Well, not so fast. You see, if you want to get really exact about it, the astronomical year is actually 365.2422 days which is 11min. 14 sec. { shorter _7 } than the Julian calendar. And that means in a hundred and twenty eight years from now, if we use the Julian calendar, we'll be { off _3 } again by one full day. So today, we use a { revised _7 } version of the Julian calendar.<br> | ||
− | It's called the Gregorian calendar because pope Gregory { initiated _9 } it. The Gregorian calendar is just like the Julian calendar, but it has got a few more rules, so while every fourth year is a leap year. Every year that's { divisible _9 } by 100 are now no longer leap years. That means that years 1700, 1800, 1900 those were not leap years even knowing they { normally _8 } would be. And here is another rule, if the year is also divisible by 400, then it is still a leap year. Which means that the year 2000 that was a leap year. And | + | It's called the Gregorian calendar because pope Gregory { initiated _9 } it. The Gregorian calendar is just like the Julian calendar, but it has got a few more rules, so while every fourth year is a leap year. Every year that's { divisible _9 } by 100 are now no longer leap years. That means that years 1700, 1800, 1900, those were not leap years even knowing they { normally _8 } would be. And here is another rule, if the year is also divisible by 400, then it is still a leap year. Which means that the year 2000, that was a leap year. And with all those complicated { rules _5 }, our calendars can stay in sync with the star for millennia to come. But, one more thing. Did you know that the Earth's { rotation _8 } is slowing at a rate of .005 seconds per year? And that means in about two { billion _7 } years we're gonna have to add one more leap year to { keep us _7 } in sync. But don't worry we've got { plenty _6 } of time to revise the calendar and fix that. |
</quiz> | </quiz> | ||
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Latest revision as of 18:36, 14 October 2016
Listening Exercise