Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Giftsfor Adults With Stroke

KFJ family

Odkaz - členové rodiny - výslovnost:  http://www.languageguide.org/im/family/fr/
      Vocabulaire:
narození la naissance
Batol the infant
detstva childhood f.
Školní Leta schooling
dospívání adolescence f.
Promocions graduation
narozeniny anniversary m. Kariera
career
zásnuby engagement f.
manželství marriage divorce
rozvod
středního Vekua middle-aged
důchod
Starý retirement age, e
SMRT death

's family again
The mother looked after the children. She stayed home, she was not working. She cleaned. The father worked. He got up early and left. He returned at noon for lunch. The mother prepared. Parents and children eating together. After the meal the mother washed the dishes. The father departed. He returned in the evening. The whole family ate together. After dinner the kids went to bed and parents remained in the living room and they chatted. During the day the children played and older children went to school. When children come home from school, they helped the mother with the household. The modern family

Parents working from morning to evening. The French remain committed within the family, but the family model has changed significantly over the last twenty years. The French family is without doubt one of the best examples of the way in which concillient tradition in France and novelties.
The current family consists of husband and their children. Not long ago that several generations lived under one roof. Today families come together, in full force to celebrate a baptism, a birthday, a wedding or to celebrate Christmas.
In marriages "modern" working woman. She wants to ensure a more independent existence. The French today is legally the equal of the home and tends to find a balance between her professional life, family and personal. In traditional marriages is "housewife" - it does not work and take care of the house and children.
traditional marriages are endangered. Modern couples often live together before marriage in so-called "marriages THE TEST" or "free unions" if they marry and become obvious later: the men and women age 27 to 25 years. In
family men share the housework. The workday begins at 8 am and ends at 6:00 p.m. on weekdays and the family is usually found around the table for dinner. Family life is organized differently for the weekend.
The French love to trasse morning walk and go to a cafe or restaurant. They meet on Sundays at the grandparents. There
was 271 598 marriages in France in 2004. In 81.2% of cases, both spouses are of French nationality. In 15.7% of cases, one spouse is a foreigner. The remaining 3.1% involve marriages between two foreign nationals. Fortunately, the marriage is no longer a social obligation to have children, let alone a certificate of morality to justify life couple. According to an INSEE survey in 1998, 29.6 million people living in couples, 24.8 and 4.8 million are married are not. But compared to Sweden where less than 10% of couples get married for two years together can still be found in France very conservative in this area. However, things are changing in 1986 when 68.8 of women between 21 and 44 were married, they were more than 54% in 1994. And the parents of 40% of children born in 2000 are not married couples.
were counted 194 children per 100 women in France in 2005 against only 168 in 1994. Even if it is not sufficient to ensure generational replacement (2.1 children per woman) fertility has increased in recent years. It is currently the second country in Europe for the birth after Ireland. And after European forecasts, the birth rate in Ireland is expected soon to pass under that of France. But the birth rate also varies by region. It is highest in the department of Mayenne (north-west region of the Loire), where there were 218 children per 100 women in 2003. At the extreme southern territory, Corsica has the lowest birth rate with only 154 children per 100 women. The birth rate still remains higher than those recorded in some EU countries where there are fewer than 130 children per 100 women.

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