فقرة  برزنتيشن بحث موضوع ملخص   جاهز باللغة الانجليزية  انشاء
ـ موضوع انجليزي عن ابدا قصير كيفية كتابة موضوع تعبير باللغة الانجليزية توجيهي قواعد كتابة تعبير بالانجليزي طريقة سهلة لكتابة تعبير بالانجليزي موضوع تعبير انجليزي يصلح لكل المواضيع كتابة تعبير بالانجليزي عن نفسك دولة عاصمة كيفية باللغة الانجليزية كتابة تعبير بالانجليزي عن المستقبل وصف تعبير انجليزي يصلح لكل المواضيع موضوع انشاء شامل لكل المواضيع موضوع تعبير عربي يصلح لجميع المواضيع موضوع تعبير انجليزي جاهز برجراف ينفع لاى موضوع تعبير عن وطني نبذة معلومات عامة my country   عن الوطن قصير جدا طويل paragraph presentation اين  في اي قاره عاصمة السياحة  مملكة  لمحة عن  نقاط الاهتمام الوجهات عادات وتقاليد الشعوب
الشامل  قائمة مدن جمهورية  the great wall of information برزنتيشن تقرير
جمهورية دولة حول  تكاليف المعيشه السياحة في  للطلاب عرض ملخص مختصر حول الحياة والعادات والتقاليد فى  لمحة تعريفية بالانجلش تلخيص قصير كلمة تحدث  تقرير انجليزي عن اي دوله مقدمة خاتمة عدد سكان  مدن  الوجهات العرب المسافرون نقاط الاهتمام مساحة معلومات
معلومات عن هونغ كونغ بالانجليزي
هونغ كونغ عاصمة اي دولة
السياحة في هونغ كونغ
هونج كونج العرب المسافرون
هونغ كونغ نقاط الاهتمام
خريطة هونج كونج
ديزني لاند هونغ كونغ
هونج كونج فيزا
رحلتي الى هونج كونج
هونغ كونغ البريطانية

ID card
■ Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China since 1 July 1997. Includes New Territories, Kowloon Peninsula and 261 islands, including Hong Kong Island.
■ 7.2 million inhabitants.
■ Currency: Hong Kong dollar 1HK $ = 0.10 €.
■ Languages: Cantonese, English and Mandarin.
■ Time difference: GMT + 6 (summer), + 7 (winter).
■ Electricity: 220 volts.
■ Winter (Dec-Feb): 15 ° C; summer (June-Sep): 30 ° C, hot and humid, rain and cyclones sometimes over 200 km / h.

Nothing predisposed the "Sterile Rock", this enclave of fishermen recovered by the British Empire, to become the eldorado of the business! On either side of Victoria Harbor, its coast encloses the most beautiful bay in the world fringed with proud buildings.

On the island of Hong Kong, where the city bends to the whims of the relief, extends the district of Central, which one compares to an Asian Manhattan, and its collection of skyscrapers built with strong dollars; on the Kowloon peninsula, attached to southern China, is Tsim Sha Tsui district, with its planetarium, its legendary Peninsula hotel, and its palaces with plunging views. Between West and East, between future and past, between skull and humble traditions, the heart of Hong Kong balance! At the foot of flashy malls, showcases of major international brands, or behind hectic avenues, small markets cling; the romantic Star Ferry, crisscrossing the bay, the funicular climbing the Peak have retained their cachet of the nineteenth century. While in Causeway Bay, on the harbor of Aberdeen and in the islands, villages, houses on stilts and the last sampans resist ... This is the unique charm of Hong Kong!

In this city without half measure, we would live outside day and night, from Granville Road, where the creators work, to the clutter of Temple Street, from a paradisiac beach to the panoramic swimming pools of the hotels, from the lounge where we enjoy a drink at the top of a building in the canteens where you devour the elbow-to-elbow ...




The Peak

Offering a wall of support for the buildings of the Mid-Levels, the highest peak of the city (552 m) reminds, by its proximity, that nature is close. To admire the panorama of its summit, a funicular of the Belle Epoque, the Peak Tram, which crosses the slope with force, promises a breathtaking ascent! Arrived at Victoria Peak, wonderful walks (10 to 60 min) await the walker, in a tropical landscape where the most expensive residences of the world nestle. Unless you prefer the terrace of the Peak Tower, overlooking the city.

Central

Concentrated on three ends of arteries, Central is the nerve of Hong Kong, the business district, white-collar and fluent English. Its skyscrapers, competing in beauty, make the reputation of the bay, forming a mirror gallery, to contemplate a ferry or to explore on foot. Thus is revealed Exchange Square, the Glass Exchange; The Center, striped with neon lights; Two IFC, 416 m high; the iconic Bank of China Tower by Ieoh Ming Pei; or the towers of the Lippo Center, whose interlocking cubes evoke koalas climbing trees ...

Hong Kong Convention & Exhibition Center

One of the main exhibition halls, whose silhouette mimics that of the Sydney Opera House, took on a symbolic value for the role he played: in 1997, it was completed as soon as possible, for the ceremony of the retrocession to China. The curvaceous roof, similar to the wings of a bird, has been criticized: the wicked languages ​​have compared it to a turtle. From above, however, it is a manta ray that is emerging on the sea ...

Museum of Art

This would be a scandal to the Hong Kong Cultural Center, whose windowless building ignores the bay in front of him! Well protected from the day, the art museum, rich with 15,700 old works, shelters most of its funds, including paintings of Asian landscapes. On the opposite bank, a charming antenna, the Flagstaff House Museum of Tea Ware, displays some of the collections, on the theme of tea.

Temple Street Night Market

A stone's throw away from Nathan Road, lined with narrow streets, the most famous Hong Kong market goes into a trance by the light of the lamp. Once night falls, tourists and city dwellers, jostling among stalls cheap trinkets (and negotiable), food stalls (hygiene station) and fortune tellers. Sometimes there is also an opera singer ... What does it matter, then, what you buy!

Mong Kok

It is difficult to imagine the cultivated fields that, until the mid-twentieth century, preceded the most populous district of Kowloon. The intense concentration of buildings, built for a growing population, and the conditions of life in this oven have favored the development of the mafia. No danger, however: the stranger can quietly sneak between the displays of the Ladies Market, heart vibrant Mong Kok!

Museum of History

From the primary era to the retrocession, here is a fascinating journey in a building of the 21 st century, where technology brings to life an ignored history, that of the "Sterile Rock". Let yourself be immersed: sound and light enliven a depopulated jungle, resuscitate the sepia photos of British Hong Kong, or the terrible Japanese bombing.

Lantau

Still quite deserted, despite the establishment, north of the airport and a Disneyland, the largest island of the archipelago also holds the most curiosities! A few MTR stations greet the giant Po Lin Buddha, who emerges above the trees in a hiker's paradise: trails and climbing mountains (including Lantau Peak, 934 m above the China Sea). ), to the typical village of Tai O. To the east, the ferry serves Silvermine Bay, a quiet seaside resort.

Ten Thousand Buddhas Monastery

From the bottom up, thousands of Buddhas populate this picturesque monastery, nestled in the trees. Yuet Kai, the monk builder, who did not decompose after his death, rests in a glass shrine. At the end of a climb of 400 steps, encouraged by a multitude of golden statues, one reaches a pagoda dug out of niches, where miniatures observe a panorama, and the temple, where abound 12,800 other effigies!

Hong Kong Heritage Museum

Local pride, this rich museum designed in the image of a Chinese Siheyuan (house on courtyard) combines Hong Kong's heritage with that of South China and aims at completeness: history of the New Territories, art, folklore, section intended for children, where they discover the fauna and flora, life in the villages ...
Mid-Levels / The Peak / Sheung Wan

To the south, steep streets climb the mountain. To the east, a funicular rises from a perched garden to reach the Peak. Up to the crested Mid-Levels, we let ourselves be carried away by an endless Escalator, through SoHo, trendy district and stopover for night birds: techno or retro bars, hidden in cellars or behind stalls! To the north, Queen's Road Central crosses an antique street and then heads for Sheung Wan, a continuous stall of medicinal products and concoctions. Despite the memory of the Union Jack, planted in 1841 in Possession Street, the West fainted ...

Central / Wan Chai

Futuristic vision in the business district where reflective towers rise: the rival banks of Hong Kong and China - one, silver skeleton, the other, ice mausoleum - the tallest skyscraper , Two IFC, which lights the bay like a lighthouse ... Around the Central subway station, the crowd is rushing to luxury shops, a drink or a pop of air at Lan Kwai Fong, while a carillon worthy of Westminster resonates near the former British Supreme Court. Towards Wan Chai, a jumble of cultural centers, restaurants and Sino-Western clubs has replaced the closed houses of the "Suzy Wong".

Happy Valley / Causeway Bay / East Coast

From Typhoon Shelter to Shau Kei Wan, the coastline bears witness to the coastal past: a British cannon, a fort to repel pirates ... and, in between, a temple to honor the deities of the sea facing the tip of Lei Yue Mun. At Causeway Bay, you can relish fish products and go shopping, while at the Happy Valley Racecourse, thoroughbreds and famous jockeys stir passions. Towards Quarry Bay, a stronghold of the shipbuilding industry, nightlife begins to stammer. To the south, the Hakka village of Chai Wan, nibbled by buildings, retains an old farmhouse.

Tsim Sha Tsui / Mong Kok / Cheung

On Tsim Sha Tsui, at the arrival of the ferries, Clock Tower - this colonial Big Ben -, the cultural center of Hong Kong, completed in 1989, and the Peninsula hotel mask the frenzy of Nathan Road, still boiling. This wide artery cuts the Kowloon Peninsula in two, under the neon signs of flashy restaurants and shopping malls. After a green break in Kowloon Park, markets of all kinds (for ladies, goldfish, etc.) are unearthed in the swarming area of ​​Mong Kok. To the north, in Cheung Sha Wan, in a new suburb built on ancient fields, one discovers a tomb two thousand years old.

Tsim Sha Tsui East / Kowloon City / Wong Tai Sin

Chatham Road, Princess Margaret Road, Waterloo Road, or three avenues for three worlds: the fast-paced Tsim Sha Tsui East, with its ready-to-wear boutiques, fabulous history and science museums, and Knustford Terrace, a pedestrian walkway. cosmopolitan bars where we sometimes dance outside; the recent Hung Hom, land gained on the sea, with spacious buildings with large windows; and the self-sufficient Kowloon City, city in the city, paradise of gastronomy. Further north, in Wong Tai Sin, are two popular places of worship: Sik Sik Yuen Wong Tai Sin, Taoist Temple, and Chi Lin Nunnery, Buddhist Monastery.

South of Hong Kong Island / Archipelago / Sha Tin

In the south of Hong Kong, tradition is resistant to modernity. Junks moored in Aberdeen Harbor alongside legendary floating restaurants. On the road to Stanley, famous for its indoor market, the resort Repulse Bay. To the east, the lost village of Shek O, preserved from urbanization. Less than an hour away from the ferry, there are islands that are ideal places to go green: Lamma and Cheung Chau, without a car, where you can enjoy seafood; Lantau, his giant Buddha, and Tai O, a timeless fishing village. In Sha Tin, in the New Territories, the surprise of the Ten Thousand Buddhas and the excellence of the Museum of Heritage.

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