The sports activity i often take part in is Football
That is also my favorite sport
The beautiful game is also the most popular sport in the world and is played everywhere, from streets to stadiums. People love the game because it’s fast, easy to learn, and lots of fun to play. Even better, people don’t need lots of expensive equipment – all you really need is a ball and two goal posts.
Modern rules were invented in Cambridge, England in 1848 (though they have changed a lot since then) and the sport soon became popular all over the world.
The World Cup is a fantastic celebration that brings people from many different nations together. There’s excitement everywhere – in schools, offices, pubs and even on the street.
It’s a fantastic opportunity for you to practice speaking English with people everywhere. So, of you want to talk about football and the World Cup with your English-speaking friends and colleagues, you’ll need to know some important football vocabulary.
2 TV is a popular media
And every TV has some TV programs that they are interesting
And i like News program best
A news program, news programme, news show, or newscast is a regularly scheduled radio or television program that reports current events. News is typically reported in a series of individual stories that are presented by one or more anchors. A news program can include live or recorded interviews by field reporters, expertopinions, opinion poll results, and occasional editorial content.
A special category of news programs are entirely editorial in format. These hostpolemic debates between pundits of various ideological philosophies.
In the early-21st-century news programs – especially those of commercial networks – tended to become less oriented on "hard" news, and often regularly included "feel-good stories" or humorous reports as the last items on their newscasts, as opposed to news programs transmitted thirty years earlier, such as the CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite. From their beginnings until around 1995, evening television news broadcasts continued featuring serious news stories right up to the end of the program, as opposed to later broadcasts with such anchors as Katie Couric, Brian Williams and Diane Sawyer.