Search In this Thesis
   Search In this Thesis  
العنوان
A Pragmatic Study of Translation :
المؤلف
Harara، Nour Mohammad Atef.
هيئة الاعداد
باحث / نور محمد عاطف
مشرف / عبد الفتاح عبد الحليم
مشرف / محمد رمزي رضوان
مناقش / شاكر رزق
مناقش / احمد صلاح الدين عبد الحميد
الموضوع
oral pathology.
تاريخ النشر
2015.
عدد الصفحات
136 p. :
اللغة
الإنجليزية
الدرجة
الدكتوراه
التخصص
المناهج وطرق تدريس اللغة الإنجليزية
تاريخ الإجازة
1/1/2015
مكان الإجازة
جامعة قناة السويس - كلية الاداب - لغة انجليزية
الفهرس
Only 14 pages are availabe for public view

from 155

from 155

Abstract

.
Ar#cle (1)
CAIRO –(AFP)- Prime Minister EssamSharaf, wrote on his Facebook page that
”the blood of Egyptians is too precious for it to be spilled without a
response”.”Our glorious revolution was made to restore dignity, Egyptians’
dignity at home and abroad, and what was acceptable in Egypt before the
revolution is no longer acceptable after the revolution,” he wrote.
ةلاقملا (2)
Ar#cle (2)
CAIRO (Reuters)- Hosni Mubarak, struggling to cling on as Egypt’spresident in
the face of unprecedented protests over poverty, corruption and oppression,
said on Thursday he would transfer powers to his vice president.
In an address that failed to meet demands by protesters for him to step down
immediately, Mubarak, 82, appeared to step aside byhanding over the reins of
power to his deputy, Omar Suleiman, a former intelligence chief trusted by
Washington.
The armed forces, issuing what they labeled “Communique No.1”, announced
they were moving to preserve the nation and the aspirations of the people.
Protesters in Tahrir Square, waved their shoes in dismay at the speech,
shouting: “Down, Down, Hosni Mubarak” enraged by the fact that the
president had not stepped down.

.
Ar#cle (3)
CAIRO (Agencies) - Protesters who spent their second night in Cairo’s Tahrir
Square on Sunday vowed to keep up their sit-in despite a series of concessions
by the Egyptian prime minister. Hundreds who spent the night in the sweltering
heat blocked traffic around the square on Sunday morning.
”We managed to convince many of the employees not to go to work,” said
Ghada Shahbender, a human rights activist who has been protesting since the
start of the January 25 uprising. Protesters have vowed to stay in the square
until the demands of the revolutionare met, including an end to military trials
of civilians, the dismissal and prosecution of police officers accused of murder
and torture - before and after the revolution - andopen trials of former regime
officials. After nearly two weeks of mounting tensionmarked by clashes with
police, Prime Minister Essam Sharaf on Saturday pledged to meet the demands
of the protesters with a series of measures.
Sharaf said he ”issued direct orders to the interior minister to stop all police
officers accused of killing protesters from working”, in an address broadcast on
state television. He also ”ordered thecreation of apanel to review the trials [of
(127)
those accused of] killing protesters and of corruption as soon as possible”,
without waiting until after the judicial summer recess.
”We are still asking for no military rule of the country, and no pressure from
the military on the judiciary and the media,” saidhuman rights activist Dina
Mohammed, 24.”The longer we stay [in the square], the more they respond”.
”Sharaf deals as if theproblems were a water leak and instead of closing the
tap, he tries to collect the water with his hands,”said Magdy Mossaad.
Mubarak, who is in custody in a hospital in the Red Sea resort ofSharm ElSheikh, is to face trial along with his two sons Alaa andGamal on August 3.
Ar#cle (4) .