Spanisch lernen Audio - Das Gerundium: ECOS audio 02/12 - El gerundio
Saltando, mirando, queriendo, amando: Die Musiker von "Los Amigos Invisibles" helfen uns beim Lernen des Gerundiums, das ja im Spanischen so häufig verwendet wird. Musikalisch geht es weiter im Interview des Monats mit dem baskischen Dirigenten und Akkordeonisten Enrique Ugarte.

Ansonsten sind wir in Extremadura auf der Vía de la Plata unterwegs und besuchen außerdem die mexikanische Kolonialstadt Querétaro.

Hören und Verstehen ist der beste Weg zum perfekten Spanisch. Das spanische Sprachtraining bietet Ihnen in ca. 60 Minuten interessante Beiträge, Interviews und Hintergrundberichte aus der gesamten spanischsprachigen Welt. Die Texte werden von Muttersprachlern vorgetragen.

Ob verschiedene Dialekte oder Ausdrucksweisen - mit ECOS Audio lernen Sie ganz leicht die verschiedenen Facetten der spanischen Sprache kennen. Neben O-Ton-Interviews und Kultur-Tipps enthält jeder Audio-Download eine umfangreiche journalistische Reportage und einen sprachlichen Schwerpunkt zu spanischer Grammatik und spanischem Wortschatz.

Inhalt: mp3-Download inkl. 28-seitigem Booklet mit allen gesprochenen Texten zum Nachlesen und zweisprachigem Glossar (PDF-Format), Sprache: Spanisch, Erscheinungsweise: Monatlich.
1301386397
Spanisch lernen Audio - Das Gerundium: ECOS audio 02/12 - El gerundio
Saltando, mirando, queriendo, amando: Die Musiker von "Los Amigos Invisibles" helfen uns beim Lernen des Gerundiums, das ja im Spanischen so häufig verwendet wird. Musikalisch geht es weiter im Interview des Monats mit dem baskischen Dirigenten und Akkordeonisten Enrique Ugarte.

Ansonsten sind wir in Extremadura auf der Vía de la Plata unterwegs und besuchen außerdem die mexikanische Kolonialstadt Querétaro.

Hören und Verstehen ist der beste Weg zum perfekten Spanisch. Das spanische Sprachtraining bietet Ihnen in ca. 60 Minuten interessante Beiträge, Interviews und Hintergrundberichte aus der gesamten spanischsprachigen Welt. Die Texte werden von Muttersprachlern vorgetragen.

Ob verschiedene Dialekte oder Ausdrucksweisen - mit ECOS Audio lernen Sie ganz leicht die verschiedenen Facetten der spanischen Sprache kennen. Neben O-Ton-Interviews und Kultur-Tipps enthält jeder Audio-Download eine umfangreiche journalistische Reportage und einen sprachlichen Schwerpunkt zu spanischer Grammatik und spanischem Wortschatz.

Inhalt: mp3-Download inkl. 28-seitigem Booklet mit allen gesprochenen Texten zum Nachlesen und zweisprachigem Glossar (PDF-Format), Sprache: Spanisch, Erscheinungsweise: Monatlich.
10.48 In Stock
Spanisch lernen Audio - Das Gerundium: ECOS audio 02/12 - El gerundio

Spanisch lernen Audio - Das Gerundium: ECOS audio 02/12 - El gerundio

Spanisch lernen Audio - Das Gerundium: ECOS audio 02/12 - El gerundio

Spanisch lernen Audio - Das Gerundium: ECOS audio 02/12 - El gerundio

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Overview

Saltando, mirando, queriendo, amando: Die Musiker von "Los Amigos Invisibles" helfen uns beim Lernen des Gerundiums, das ja im Spanischen so häufig verwendet wird. Musikalisch geht es weiter im Interview des Monats mit dem baskischen Dirigenten und Akkordeonisten Enrique Ugarte.

Ansonsten sind wir in Extremadura auf der Vía de la Plata unterwegs und besuchen außerdem die mexikanische Kolonialstadt Querétaro.

Hören und Verstehen ist der beste Weg zum perfekten Spanisch. Das spanische Sprachtraining bietet Ihnen in ca. 60 Minuten interessante Beiträge, Interviews und Hintergrundberichte aus der gesamten spanischsprachigen Welt. Die Texte werden von Muttersprachlern vorgetragen.

Ob verschiedene Dialekte oder Ausdrucksweisen - mit ECOS Audio lernen Sie ganz leicht die verschiedenen Facetten der spanischen Sprache kennen. Neben O-Ton-Interviews und Kultur-Tipps enthält jeder Audio-Download eine umfangreiche journalistische Reportage und einen sprachlichen Schwerpunkt zu spanischer Grammatik und spanischem Wortschatz.

Inhalt: mp3-Download inkl. 28-seitigem Booklet mit allen gesprochenen Texten zum Nachlesen und zweisprachigem Glossar (PDF-Format), Sprache: Spanisch, Erscheinungsweise: Monatlich.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940170807314
Publisher: Spotlight Verlag GmbH
Publication date: 03/14/2012
Series: ECOS Audio 02
Edition description: Unabridged
Language: German

Read an Excerpt

Chapter 1: 27 Things Cops Know About Shots Fired

1. Some handguns, especially the higher quality models, will fire underwater. The range will be greatly diminished but they’ll still be deadly up close. You keep this in mind in case you ever find yourself in a swimming pool or creek engaging an armed suspect. Your gun may work just fine in the drink. But then again, the suspect’s might too.

2. When you approach someone on the street to talk to them and they turn their right side away from you, it sets you on high alert. That’s because it’s human nature for suspects carrying concealed firearms to turn their gun side (which is more often than not their right side) away from the police. This is not normal behavior for law-abiding people, who tend to talk to you face to face. You also want to watch the style and manner of dress of the people you approach. Criminals carrying concealed weapons often wear baggy untucked shirts or have their coats partially unbuttoned in winter, so they can have ready access to their weapon. They also like to keep their gun hand tight against their body as they walk in order to secure it, and, because their gun shifts position as they move, they make a series of sometimes subtle and sometimes not-so-subtle pats, taps, and tugs to ensure the firearm is still in place. These are known as “gun retention movements” in police parlance, a phrase you want to include in the report when you make a firearm arrest.

3. If you’re trying to help a seriously injured gunshot victim and hear his ragged breathing, it probably isn’t breathing at all. It’s what’s known as agonal respirations, the hard rattle in the throat immediately preceding death. You still do what you can for them. You try to staunch the bleeding. You start CPR. But they’re already well on their way to the next world. Your life-saving efforts aren’t altogether futile, but only because it’s better to be doing something, like chest compressions, than just sitting there watching them die.

4. It will go against your natural instincts to fire your weapon through a solid surface in order to hit your target, but if it comes down to it, you can effectively shoot outgoing rounds from a seated position through your own squad car windshield with a minimum of glass spray. However, if you are fired upon through the same windshield, the glass blowback will cut your eyes and face and the trajectory of the incoming rounds won’t lose any of their accuracy.

5. Shootings, particularly those that are gang-related, set into motion a wearying circle of retaliatory violence. The reports of shots fired keep pouring in all over the district, everyone’s out, everyone’s settling scores and as a cop, all you can do is investigate each one to the best of your ability, scramble to keep up and pray for rain. You know that while some shooting victims are innocents caught in the crossfire, many are career criminals who get shot because of some drug or gang-related activity they indulged in. That’s why you pat them down for weapons, even if they’re on a stretcher moaning in pain. You might find the gun they returned fire with. Nobody’s your friend out there and today’s victim is often tomorrow’s suspect.

6. A handgun is the great equalizer in a fight. If you’re armed, you don’t need determination or training to prevail. You don’t need courage or physical strength or fortitude. All you need is a trigger finger and the ability to exert around eight pounds of pressure with it. That’s why the best cops are the ones who don’t get overly confident when taking on suspects of small stature, or guys who don’t look like much. If they have a gun, they can end you no matter what your mile-and-a-half time is or how much you can bench-press.

7. Shotguns are heavy, especially if you have nothing to brace them on. It’s enervating to hold them level at a target for an extended period of time. You want to lower the weapon mid-crisis and rest your leaden shoulders but then you’ll feel like a wimp and a bad guy might riddle you with bullets. You just hope the situation resolves itself before your arms drop the hell off your torso.

26. Pre-Columbine, the police response to an active shooter (i.e. a gunman who is in the process of killing people) was to hold the perimeter and wait for the Tactical squad to enter with their long guns and ballistic shields. Active street cops resented these regulations, because they wanted to get in there and do their job. There was no time to wait for Tactical. Columbine showed they were right. The longer you wait, the worse it gets, because the active shooter probably has no expectation of going home alive and he is in a person-rich environment. So now police departments have completely revamped their approach. Now as a patrol cop, you and whomever you can round up go in right away with the mission of locating, isolating, and engaging the shooter. This means listening for the sounds of gunshots. This means stepping over the dead and ignoring the wounded. Until the shooter is neutralized, nothing else matters.

27. Once in a while, even with the deep-rooted cynicism that comes with the job, you’ll get a casualty so raw that it gives you a moment of pause. Like a seven-year-old girl who is struck by stray gunfire while playing outside her house and who dies at the scene in front of her family. One minute she is skipping rope. The next, she’s gone. And you read the rest of the news headlines that day. The government is unveiling a new food pyramid, which recommends one more serving of vegetables and one fewer of grains, and the price of gas is up three cents and Paris Hilton has a new fragrance out. And it all seems so stupid and petty. And no, the whole world doesn’t come to a grinding halt just because a little girl is murdered on some corner in some city in America. But maybe, just for a little while, it should.

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