Título : | The War of the Worlds | Tipo de documento: | texto impreso | Autores: | H.G. Wells, Autor ; L. Brander, Adaptador | Mención de edición: | 1ª | Editorial: | Oxford [United Kingdom] : Oxford University Press | Fecha de publicación: | 1972 | Colección: | Oxford Progressive English Readers | Número de páginas: | 92 p | Il.: | il. col. | Dimensiones: | 22 cm | ISBN/ISSN/DL: | 978-0-19-638234-0 | Idioma : | Inglés (eng) | Clasificación: | :Inglés:Literatura:Lecturas Adaptadas:Sin Audio:B1
| Etiquetas: | guerra invasión estrellas destrucción fuga huída marcianos extraterrestres adaptadas clásicos B1 3500 | Resumen: | No one would have believed, in the last few years of the nineteenth century, that human affairs were being watched closely by minds greater than man's and yet as human as his own. As men went about their affairs they were watched and studied, perhaps almost as closely as a man might study the creatures that live in a drop of water.
No one at that time gave a thought to the older worlds of space. If they did think about them at all, they never imagined that the other planets could be a threat to human life. The most that men imagined was that there could possibly be some life on Mars, but that any men there would be less intelligent than ourselves, and would be in need of our help. | Nota de contenido: | 3500 headwords |
The War of the Worlds [texto impreso] / H.G. Wells, Autor ; L. Brander, Adaptador . - 1ª . - Oxford (Great Clarendon Street,, ox 2 6 D P, United Kingdom) : Oxford University Press, 1972 . - 92 p : il. col. ; 22 cm. - ( Oxford Progressive English Readers) . ISBN : 978-0-19-638234-0 Idioma : Inglés ( eng) Clasificación: | :Inglés:Literatura:Lecturas Adaptadas:Sin Audio:B1
| Etiquetas: | guerra invasión estrellas destrucción fuga huída marcianos extraterrestres adaptadas clásicos B1 3500 | Resumen: | No one would have believed, in the last few years of the nineteenth century, that human affairs were being watched closely by minds greater than man's and yet as human as his own. As men went about their affairs they were watched and studied, perhaps almost as closely as a man might study the creatures that live in a drop of water.
No one at that time gave a thought to the older worlds of space. If they did think about them at all, they never imagined that the other planets could be a threat to human life. The most that men imagined was that there could possibly be some life on Mars, but that any men there would be less intelligent than ourselves, and would be in need of our help. | Nota de contenido: | 3500 headwords |
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