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Learn how to parallel park. The easiest video lesson (by Parking Tutorial)

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Parking tutorial. The art of parking Parallel parking of cars in 3 minutes. Basic video lesson You need to stop the car between two parked cars parallel to the edge of the road. This is called parallel parking for cars. In order to drive from such a place easily … Distance must be at least times the length of your vehicle. Let’s contemplate the parallel parking on the right side of the road. Step 1 Most cars have a small rear door window … … This window is usually in the form of a triangle. Therefore, the vehicle is in its starting position. The driver looks over his shoulder through the triangular window with the back door … … and drives the car back in a straight line. When the end of the rear of the car appears to the right of this window … … turns the steering wheel to the right. Our car begins to return to the empty place. Step 2 The driver looks in the left side mirror. When the right corner of the rear-facing car appears in the mirror … … The driver makes the steering whee...

The 2019 BMW X4 Isn’t for Everybody — And That’s the Point

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[MUSIC PLAYING] CARLOS LAGO: That right there is the new 2019 BMW X4. It’s a slightly more premium, slightly more sporty variant of the X3 that has a slope down roof. Kind of like the BMW X6. We’re gonna drive it for the first time today. [MUSIC PLAYING] From the driver’s seat, unsurprisingly, the X4 drives similarly to the X3. And I’m actually happy to get to talk about that because I went to Portugal to drive the X3 and film a video on it, and I got the flu immediately after landing. So no video. But I’ve since reviewed that vehicle and driving this car for the first time, and the similarities are very easy to spot. The dash looks identical. Forward visibility is excellent. You get the same powerful 6 cylinder engine and this model, which is the M40i. Of the two, this is the M40i, which is the top version. Beneath that, is an xDrive30i. The xDrive30i comes with a two liter turbocharged 4 cylinder, about 250 horsepower, or so. And this M40i has a turbocharged straight 6 with 3...

12 Smart Psychological Tips You’d Better Learn

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Get ready for 12 smart psychological tips everyone should know. You don’t necessarily have to be an expert in psychology to understand what’s going on in people’s heads and use it to your advantage. There are some psychological tips that work on a subconscious level. That help you win another person’s trust get somebody’s approval and relax when you’re stressed out in today’s video. Brightside is sharing 12 tips that will work every time and can help you out in any situation. So, if you’re ready to get what you want in life with some help from psychology, then hit that thumbs up button Counting down from number twelve. When a group of people are laughing, each person looks at the individual he or she likes the most. After a good joke or in the middle of an interesting discussion, every person instinctively looks at the person they like the most This is because they want to make sure that the object of their desires approves of and shares their sense of humor. So in order to find...

Difference between SOMETHING, ANYTHING and NOTHING – Basic English Grammar

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Wanna speak real English from your first lesson? Sign up for your free lifetime account at EnglishClass101.com. Send your questions here! Send your questions to me at this website! This website, please. So I can find them all in one place. Hi everybody, welcome back to Ask Alisha, the weekly series where you ask me questions and I answer them. Maybe. First question! First question this week comes from Isik Alexander again. Hi, Isik. Uh, Isik says, “hi Alisha, what’s the difference between ‘store’ and ‘shop’?” Store and shop. I think this question is about nouns. The difference between the noun “store” and the noun “shop.” In American English, there’s really no difference between the two, however, we tend to use “store” more often than “shop.” As verbs, however, they’re quite different. To store something means to keep something away. Like, to store something in like a cupboard or to store something in your house, or to store something in a storage unit. You’re keeping that, usuall...

English Lesson 2 – What’s this? School English. | Learn English for kids with Gogo.

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What’s this? Look, Gogo! What’s this? It’s a box! Open it please, Gogo. What’s this? It’s a plate. What’s this? It’s a bowl. This is a knife. This is a fork. Gogo! Look! A shark! What’s this? It’s water. Hello! Watch new Gogo lessons with Erick and Nicole. Click here. Page 9. Unit 2. What’s this? Conversation. Listen and look. Page 10. Vocabulary. Listen and say. Page 10. Target. Listen and say. Page 11. Practice 1. Listen and number. Number 1. Number 2. Number 3. Number 4. Page 11. Practice 2. Your turn! Listen and answer. Page 12. Chant. Listen and chant. Book, pen, desk, chair. Page 12. Activity 1. Listen say and circle. Page 14. Alphabet. Number 1. Listen, point and say. Page 14. Number 2. Listen and chant. Duck, egg, fish. Page 6. Unit 2. What;s this? Number 1. Listen and circle. Page 9. Number 3. Listen to the chant and mark. Page 7. Point to the picture and say the word. Page 8. Point to the words that start with letter c. Now point to the words that start with letter d. ...

How to Understand Fast-Talking Native English Speakers | English Listening Skills

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Hi there, and welcome. In this video, I’ll tell you the four reasons why you have trouble understanding fast-talking native speakers of English. And of course, I’ll also tell you how to practice so that you can improve your listening skills and understand what you hear in movies, on TV shows, and in real-life conversations. So, let’s jump into it. The number one reason why native speakers are hard to understand is obviously speed. Now, when you listen to me or another teacher, you probably understand most of what we say, and that’s because teachers speak slower. We try to use simple language to make it easier for you. But native speakers don’t have that kind of consideration. They talk for other native speakers, so they talk fast. And what happens as a result is reductions, that is, words get reduced in fast speech. For example, words like “should have”, “could have” and “would have” become “shoulda”, “coulda” and “woulda”. “Kind of” becomes “kinda”, “going to” and “want to” get...

I Hate Fast Travel

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I hate fast travel. It certainly serves a useful function, but it’s a feature that’s power is easy to overlook and abuse. Fast travel has practically become a given in open-world games, which seems a little backwards because companies market their titles on massive worlds that they then let players move across in an instant with little to no cost or consequence. At its worst, it disconnects players from everything between point A and point B, shrinking worlds down to menu interaction and distracting players from the vision that developers most likely intended. It takes an expansive, non-linear experience and squeezes it into a tiny hallway where players are no longer on a journey, but rather a quick path to being “done” with a game. The obvious counter to everything I just said is to not use it, but that actually leads me to what I hate most about fast travelling: in too many titles, it feels unavoidable. And that’s mostly because the act of manually travelling to a specific loc...