Leidsid 33 sarnast õppematerjali, mis on seotud failiga "Briti-ameerika sõnad". Need materjalid aitavad sul teemat sügavamalt mõista.
korter, apartment, lift, ground, floor, centre, flat, theater, dialog, cinema, ringtee, traffic, circle, metroo, underground, kõnnitee, flats, building, first, kesklinn, crib, lutt, dummy, pacifier, mähe, vanker, colour, color, honour, honor, neighbour, neighbor, theatre, center, dialoog, dialogue, epiloog, reisija, traveler, kino, kinno, järjekordbecame the actual ruler of Russia for a couple of years until he was defeated in the power struggle and banished into exile. 23 Lai Street The buildings at Lai 19-23 belong to the City Theatre. It has a couple of small halls as well as some rehearsal rooms, and is planning to build a large auditorium in the present courtyard. All together the theatre has eight stages on which it performs, both indoor and outdoor, including towers and mills along the Old Town walls and Salme Cultural Centre in the nearby suburb of Kalamaja. The theatre performs both world classics and modern drama. It often shines the spotlight on new Estonian productions. Performances are given in different venues, and there is an outdoor stage for summer plays. Lai 23 is a typical merchant`s house in the Late Gothic style. It is a two-room building, the so- called diele-dornse house, in which a vestibule diele is a bigger room at the street side and
birthday present. As I ... --- 5 (2 want) to look cool riding up to the front steps, I ... (3 put) on my new skirt. When I ... (4 reach) the school, I ... (5 make) a big mistake and ... (6 smile) at my friends instead of watching where I was going. While I ... (7 wave) at my best friend, I couldn't brake, and I ... (8 hit) the steps. I ... (9 fail) off my bike and ... (10 tear) my skirt. What a great start to the new year! 4. Write the sentences. 1 fifteen the off in I'm minutes to cinema I'm off to the cinema in fifteen minutes. 2 was mum up the between tension and building me my The tention was building up between my mum and me. 3 of top the photograph chest on there of was a drawers There was a photograph on top of the chest of drawers. 4 the bike a idea she upon hiring hit of The hit upon an idea of hiring a bike 5 she with were up when filled her tears stood eyes My alarm went off alarm quarter to five. 7 exhibition his of best in ran the hall into friend he front
Eva's story. I'm so glad the inspiration struck twice! 1 "We should head to a bar and celebrate." I wasn't surprised by my roommate's emphatic pronouncement. Cary Taylor found excuses to celebrate, no matter how small and inconsequential. I'd always considered it part of his charm. "I'm sure drinking the night before starting a new job is a bad idea." "Come on, Eva." Cary sat on our new living room floor amid a half-dozen moving boxes and flashed his winning smile. We'd been unpacking for days, yet he still looked amazing. Leanly built, dark-haired, and green-eyed, Cary was a man who rarely looked anything less than absolutely gorgeous on any day of his life. I might have resented that if he hadn't been the dearest person on earth to me. "I'm not talking about a bender," he insisted. "Just a glass of wine or two. We can hit a happy hour and be in by eight."
What do you dislike about them? 10. Do you live together with your grandparents? Do you sometimes help them? What do you do? 11. What kind of people do you hate? 12. What do you like about your character? What would you like to change? 13. Which do you prefer working with papers or people? 14. If someone speaks rudely to you, will you answer back rudely? Very politely? Not answer at all? 15. What do you mostly spend your pocket money on: sweets? Books? Records? Cassettes? The cinema? 16. How many friends have you got? 17. Do you make a distinction between mates and friends? 18. What do you usually do with your friends? 19. Do you make friends easily? 20. Are you a loyal friend? 21. Do you think old people should live by themselves or together with their children? Why? 22. Do you like the place where you live or would you like to move somewhere else? Why? 23. Are people in big cities and in the country different? Why do you think so? 24
2 The party was very ________________________. Nobody wore casual clothes. 3 Heavy metal music is so ________________________. Can't you listen to something quiet? 4 We bought a ________________________ pizza because the restaurant was expensive. 5 These trousers are too ________________________. I need some bigger ones! 6 He's a very _____________________ basketball player and so scores more points than the short ones. 7 The rest of the flat is neat but her room is very ________________________. 8 It was a ________________________ thing to do, but he isn't very clever. 9 This test is ________________________. I want a fair one! 10 Don't laugh. This matter is not ________________________. It's very serious. Marks: /10
.................. (you/work) hard? 4 `................ (you/ever/work) in a factory?' `No, never.' 5 `Jane is away on holiday.' `Oh, is she? Where ....... (she go)?' 6. Exercise: 1 I was very tired when I arrived home. I .......... (work) hard all day. 2 The two boys came into the house. They .......... (play) football. 3 I was sad when I sold my car. I ........... (have) it for a very long time. 4 Mary was sitting on the ground. She was out of breath. She ....... (run). 5 We were good friends. We ........ (know) each other for a long time. 6 Irregular verbs Infinitive Past simple Past participle Translation be was / were been beat beat beaten become became become begin began begun blow blew blown break broke broken
Word File Here are some neuter nouns: ball forest building gymnasium broom playground cake rock computer sky card socks floor wind 41 Exercise 1 Fill in the blanks with the correct masculine or feminine nouns. Masculine Feminine 1 master 2 uncle 3 niece 4 lioness 5 tiger 6 empress 7 husband 8 son 9 mother 10 madam Exercise 2
2 Before starting this procedure, gather sleeve! 11 Remove the old oil and all tools from together all the necessary tools and materials. 5 Allow some time for the old oil to drain, under the vehicle, then (if applicable) lower the noting that it may be necessary to reposition vehicle to the ground. Also make sure that you have plenty of clean 12 Fill the engine with the specified quantity rags and newspapers handy to mop up any the container as the oil flow slows to a trickle. and grade of oil, as described in "Weekly spills
athlete, Olympic, diagnosis, prognosis, thesis, analysis, technology Literature o Epic, drama, poem, tragedy, comedy, theatre, epilogue, prologue, metaphor, Affixes o a-, geo-, halo-, hyper-, hypo-, mega-, meta-, -ology, -o-, photo-, tele-, Inflectional endings retained but spelt in the Latin style o Abiogenesis, aegis, analysis, anemone, antithesis, automaton, charisma, cinema, crisis, criterion, cytokinesis, diagnosis, dogma, drama, electron, enigma, genesis, gnosis, hoi polloi, kerygma, lalophobia, magma, osteoporosis, phenomenon, photon, rhinoceros, rhododendron, stigma, synthesis, thesis. With Latin endings o Brontosaurus, chrysanthemum, diplodocus, hippopotamus, Pliohippus Endings dropped or adapted
3) Early Modern English – 200,000 – 250,000 English becomes a polycentric language; polyglot, cosmopolitan language 4) Modern English – 500,000 words (OED) At present at least 1 billion lexical units 2. Core and periphery Core vocabulary – often short (monosyllabic) words of Germanic and Old Norse origin = ie core vocabulary of most frequent words, and vague fuzzy peripherial words. Core meaning is the meaning which is at the centre of the word.periphery – vague. Formal usage (often polysyllabic words) from Norman French (rank, courtliness,refinement). Learning, science, abstraction: Latin, and Greek. The core vocabulary is predominantly Germanic (the, I, you, etc.) Only 4 of the topranked one hundred words in the Brown Corpus are of foreign origin. 93 of the first one hundred words in the Brown Corpus are monosyllabic, and the remaining have two syllables (only, about, other, also, many even people)
In the early 1980s, East Indians started their assault of corporate America. They did not lay the assault with weapons or by meaningless demonstrations or calling people names. They moved one step at a time. In the New York area, Indians started buying up all the newsstands not belonging to an East Indian. In fact, their flagship company, the Hudson Group, which occupies the best real estate in places like Grand Central Station, Ports Authority, the World Trade Centre, and all the newsstand at all the New York City subway systems is alleged to charge over $3,000 to carry your newspaper in their stand. It is complete route of the former owners of the newsstands. Like generals, they laid their plans of assault. 8 One by one they started to shoot down their enemies by buying one newsstand at a time until the takeover was complete. They have duplicated this assault in most major American cities.
2 1 Water was pouring into the boat. 3 the hills 7 bee 4 like 9 hard 2 We clambered onto the rocks. 4 a mouse 8 a fox 5 judging 3 The wooden floor had rotted. Challenge! 4 The little boy was sobbing and Transcript Students' own answers pointing to his sister's ice cream. 5 The thief grabbed my bag and ran The photos are connected with the 1B Past and perfect tenses off
into those that remain. Cutting lines, pauses, and entire scenes sharpened the focus on the elements that were left, as if a large number of diffuse spotlights had been concentrated into a few bright beams aimed at select important points. P.S. Your Cat Is Dead enjoyed a brief theatrical run and then was distributed on DVD. After that adventure I concentrated for a time on traveling to give seminars for various international cinema and television training programs. M o s t recently I have xi THE WRITER'S JOURNEY ~ THIRD EDITION Christopher Vogler gone back to the H o l l y w o o d studio world with a tour of duty at Paramount Pictures and a number of consulting jobs for other studios. I tried my hand at a new form, writing the first installment of Ravenskull, a story for a "manga," a highly stylized
AND TALLINN. XXIX. ESTONIAN SYMPHONISTS ABOUT CREATIVITY. CONCLUSION APPENDIXES APPENDIX A. SELECTED PUBLICATIONS ON ESTONIAN HISTORY AND CULTURE IN GENERAL. APPENDIX B. BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ESTONIAN SYMPHONIC MUSIC APPENDIX C. RECORDINGS OF SYMPHONIC MUSIC. APPENDIX D. SCORES OF SYMPHONIC MUSIC PUBLISHED. APPENDIX E. CHRONOLOGY OF ESTONIAN SYMPHONIES. APPENDIX F. SOUND TAPES OF ESTONIAN SYMPHONIES IN THE ESTONIAN MUSIC INFORMATION CENTRE AT THE COMPOSERS UNION. APPENDIX G. SOME PROGRAMMES WITH ESTONIAN MUSIC AND CONDUCTORS. APPENDIX H. INDEX OF PERSONAL NAMES. APPENDIX I. SELECTION OF PHOTOGRAPHS. APPENDIX J. MUSICAL EXAMPLES. PIANO ARRANGEMENTS AND SCORE SAMPLES. APPENDIX K. USEFUL ADDRESSES. ABOUT THE AUTHOR ESTONIA AND THE ESTONIANS Estonia is situated on the southern shore of the Gulf of Finland, between the Baltic Sea and Lake Peipsi. The country is populated by Estonians who belong to the Western
.................................. 44 19 Total Station Surveying Target in the Field ..................................... 45 20 Modeled Targets on a Wide Flange Column .................................... 45 21 Duct Clashing With a Beam ............................................................. 46 22 Upper Level Shores .......................................................................... 48 23 Rigging for a Complex Lift Modeled in 3D ..................................... 49 24 Working Session in the Field Office ................................................ 50 25 Seattle Central Library Comparison Schedule ................................. 57 26 Denver Art Museum Data Exchange Diagram ................................. 60 27 4D Model of the Denver Art Museum.............................................. 61 28 Seattle Central Library Data Exchange Diagram .....
1. Basic Phrases ¡Buenos días! ¡Buenas tardes! ¡Buenas noches! bway-nohs dee-ahs bway-nahs tard-ays bway-nahs noh-chays Hello! / Good morning! Good afternoon! Good evening! / Good night! ¡Hola! / ¡Chao! Adiós. Por favor. oh-lah / chow ah-dee-ohs por fah-bor Hi! / Bye! Good bye. Please. Hasta la vista / Hasta luego. Hasta pronto. Hasta mañana. ah-stah lah vees-tah / ah-stah ah-stah prohn-toh ah-stah mahn-yahn-ah loo-ay-go See you soon. See you tomorrow. See you / See you later. (Muchas) Gracias. De nada. Bienvenidos (moo-chahs) grah-see-ahs day nah-dah
an impossibility. He didn't need to suffer along with me. And I never looked a free truck in the mouth -- or engine. "Well, now, you're welcome," he mumbled, embarrassed by my thanks. We exchanged a few more comments on the weather, which was wet, and that was pretty much it for Conversation. We stared out the windows in silence. It was beautiful, of course; I couldn't deny that. Everything was green: the trees, their trunks covered with moss, their branches hanging with a canopy of it, the ground covered with ferns. Even the air filtered down greenly through the leaves. It was too green -- an alien planet. Eventually we made it to Charlie's. He still lived in the small, two-bedroom house that he'd bought with my mother in the early days of their marriage. Those were the only kind of days their marriage had -- the early ones. There, parked on the street in front of the house that never changed, was my new -- well, new to me -- truck
with manufacturers for cipher machines. It developed new systems for the Navy. It comprehended such subsections as GI, which wrote reports based on radio intelligence from the field units, and GL, a record-keeping and historical-research group. But its main interest centered on cryptanalysis. This activity was distributed among units in Washington, Hawaii, and the Philippines. Only Washington attacked foreign diplomatic systems and naval codes used in the Atlantic theater (primarily German). Rochefort had primary responsibility for the Japanese naval systems. The Philippines chipped away at JN25 and did some diplomatic deciphering, with keys provided by Washington. That unit, which like Rochefort's was attached for administrative purposes to the local naval district (the 16th), was installed in a tunnel of the island fortress of Corregidor. It was equipped with 26 radio receivers, apparatus for
non-renewable fuels to meet most of our energy needs. 3.3 How Do We Measure Renewable Energy? 15 Each of the energy sources we use is measured, purchased, and sold in a different form. Many units of measurement are used to measure the energy we use. Learn more about converting energy units in the Units of Measurement section. NONRENEWABLE ENERGY Nonrenewable energy sources come out of the ground as liquids, gases and solids. Right now, crude oil (petroleum) is the only naturally liquid commercial fossil fuel. Natural gas and propane are normally gases, and coal is a solid. Coal, petroleum, natural gas, and propane are all considered fossil fuels because they formed from the buried remains of plants and animals that lived millions of years ago. Uranium ore, a solid, is mined and converted to a fuel. Uranium is not a fossil fuel. These energy sources are considered
PERFECTING SLEEP FitBit Sleep Analysis WakeMate Sleep Analysis Zeo--Good Sleep Example Zeo--Bad Sleep Example Monophasic Sleep and Polyphasic Sleep REVERSING INJURIES Barefoot Walker's Feet and Modern Man's Feet Static Back Static Extension Position on Elbows Shoulder Bridge with Pillow Active Bridges with Pillow Supine Groin Progressive in Tower Alternative: Supine Groin on Chair Air Bench ART, Before and After Thoraco-dorsal Fascia The Chop and Lift Full and Half-Kneeling Ideal Placement on One Line Tricep Rope Attachment Single-Leg Flexibility Assessment Down-Left Chop Ideal Placement Down-Left Chop Ideal Placement Turkish Get-Up Start and Finish of Two-Arm Single-Leg Deadlift RUNNING FASTER AND FASTER Hip Flexors Stretch Reverse Lunge Demonstration Untrained and Trained Start Positions Reverse Hyper(extension) on a Bench and Swiss Ball Enzyme Activity Graph Super Quad Stretch
form shape uniform fort strong fortify geo earth geography gram write telegram graph write autograph homo same homophone log speech, study of dialog logy speech, study of analogy man hand manage manu hand manual mater mother, home maternity matri mother, home matriarch medi middle mediocre miss send dismiss
4 unlike 11 set Dream' as a way of life with its particularly vigilant. One day he was 5 such as 12 unwind overemphasis on making money. coming came across a sheep's fleece 6 portrayed 13 slushy which a sheep shearer had been 7 like 5 1 protagonist 4 livelihood throwing thrown on the floor and 2 exonerated 5 integrity forgotten. It had given gave the wolf 2 1 like 5 like 3 deceit 6 reiterated a cunning idea. He decided that later 2 as 6 as he is was going to put on the fleece. 3 like 7 as 2D Lord of the Flies Thus disguised he would be able
16.5 Sound insulation of wooden buildings 305 16.6 Hygrothermal conditions in apartments 306 16.7 Performance of ventilation and indoor air quality 306 16.8 The microbiological damage of building materials and indoor air 307 16.9 The condition of utility systems 307 16.10 Analysis of energy consumption of wooden apartment buildings 308 16.11 The assessments and strategic attitudes of apartment owners 308 16.12 The economic analysis of improvement of energy performance of buildings 308 17 Kasutatud kirjandus 310 7 8 1 Sissejuhatus 1.1 Uuringu eesmärk
FGI 1081 Stilistika (Irina Ladusseva) Kab. 420 2 AP Ends with an exam; lasts only for 1 semester. At the exam you get 2 questions and an exercise (50 sentences: establish the device used, recognize it, and name it). Care about the pronunciation of the terms. Books: - I. Galperin "Stylistics" - I. Ladusseva "Rhythm and Text" - I. Ladusseva "Vocabulary and Style" - I. Ladusseva "Stylistic practice: Book I, Book II" - I. Ladusseva "A Guide to Punctuation" EXAMINATION TOPICS: 1. Style, stylistics, a survey of stylistic studies 2. Inherent connotations. Phonesthe
'Tis now struck twelve; get thee to bed, Francisco. FRANCISCO For this relief much thanks: 'tis bitter cold, And I am sick at heart. BERNARDO 4 Have you had quiet guard? FRANCISCO Not a mouse stirring. BERNARDO Well, good night. If you do meet Horatio and Marcellus, The rivals of my watch, bid them make haste. FRANCISCO I think I hear them. Stand, ho! Who's there? Enter HORATIO and MARCELLUS HORATIO Friends to this ground. MARCELLUS And liegemen to the Dane. FRANCISCO Give you good night. MARCELLUS O, farewell, honest soldier: Who hath relieved you? FRANCISCO Bernardo has my place. Give you good night. Exit MARCELLUS 5 Holla! Bernardo! BERNARDO Say, What, is Horatio there? HORATIO A piece of him. BERNARDO Welcome, Horatio: welcome, good Marcellus. MARCELLUS What, has this thing appear'd again to-night? BERNARDO I have seen nothing. MARCELLUS
AMBER AND RUSSET - LATE COLOUR CHANGE GENES Copyright 2014, Sarah Hartwell The ancestors of the domestic cat were nondescript black/brown striped tabbies. Over the centuries, mutation produced a wide array of colours based on 2 different pigments. Eumelanin gives the blacks, browns and blues while phaeomelanin gives the reds, fawns and creams. A few other genes give further variations on those colours such silvers, colourpoints and solids/selfs. Mutations continue to occur and unexpected colours also turn up due to inbreeding where recessive genes, hidden for generations, start showing up. AMBER AND LIGHT AMBER During the 1990s, some purebred Norwegian Forest Cats in Sweden produced chocolate/lilac and cinnamon/fawn offspring. However, those colours are not found in the purebred Norwegian Forest Cat gene pool. Had the gene pool become polluted by someone, perhaps generations ago, breeding their Norwegian Forest Cat to another breed? Was it a spontaneous mutation? Crossing of those c
evidence of the phenomenon. During World War II, he was assigned to investigate plane crashes in which high-ranking officers were killed or injured. One case in- volved a famous air force general named Uzal Ent whose copilot got sick before a flight. Ent was assigned a replacement who felt honored to be flying alongside the legendary general. During takeoff, Ent began singing to himself, nodding in time to a song in his head. The new copilot interpreted the gesture as a signal to him to lift the wheels. Even though they were going much too slowly to fly, he raised the sIt's instructive that even though we often don't take a complex approach to personally important top- ics, we wish our advisors-our physicians, accountants, lawyers, and brokers-to do precisely that for us (Kahn &. Baron, 1995). When feeling overwhelmed by a complicated and consequential choice, we still want a fully considered, point-by-point analysis of it-an analysis we may not be able to achieve
The Project Gutenberg EBook of Pride and Prejudice, by Jane Austen This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org Title: Pride and Prejudice Author: Jane Austen Release Date: August 26, 2008 [EBook #1342] [Last updated: August 11, 2011] Language: English Character set encoding: ASCII *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PRIDE AND PREJUDICE *** Produced by Anonymous Volunteers, and David Widger PRIDE AND PREJUDICE By Jane Austen Contents Chapter 1 Chapter 22 Chapter 2 Chapter 23 Chapter 43 Chapter 3 Chapter 24 Chapter 44 Chapter 4 Chapter 25 Chapter 45
Otherwise, the input signals may not be readable. ! Caution Tighten the screws on the terminal block of the AC Power Supply Unit to the torque specified in the operation manual. The loose screws may result in burning or malfunction. ! Caution When connecting a personal computer or other peripheral device to the CPM1A, either ground the 0 V side of the CPM1A or do not ground at all. Depending on the method of grounding, the 24-V power supply may short-circuit; do not ground the 24-V side as shown in the following diagram. Example: Connections where 24-V Power Supply Will Short-circuit Non-isolated DC power supply
2 Professor, School of the Built Environment, University of Salford, Salford, UK. One of the founders of IGLC. Suggested TFV theory in 2000 as his PhD thesies. 10 give the construction industry one of the worst public images among the industrial sectors (Egan 1998; Koskela 2000; Santos 1999). The Centre for Integrated Facility Engineering, headed by Paul Teicholz at Stanford University, conducted research on labour productivity in the construction industry. The productivity of the construction industry in the US was studied in comparison with all non-farm industries over a period of forty years, from 1964 to 2003, as shown in the following figure. Figure 1.1 Labour productivity index for US construction industry and all non-farm industries from
SISUKORD 1. Sotsaalpsühholoogia......................................................2 2. Inimsuhete ajalooline areng...........................................7 3. Eneseteadvus..............................................................17 4. Sotsiaalne taju............................................................23 5. Hoiakud......................................................................30 6. Sotsiaalne mõju...........................................................35 7. Inimestevahelised suhted.............................................45 8. Inimsuhete ruumiline mõõde........................................49 9. Grupid ja gruppidevahelised suhted..............................54 9a Zimbardo vanglaeksperiment......................................62 10. Liider grupis..............................................................66 11. Agressiivsus ja prosotsiaalne käitumine......................77 12. Suhtlemine I........................................................
Kenneth Olsen founds Digital Equipment Corporation. 1958 At Texas Instruments, Jack St. Clair Kilby comes up with the idea of creating a monolithic device (integrated circuit) on a single piece of silicon.Later (in 2000) Kilby receives Nobel price in physics. Jack Kilby completes building the first integrated circuit, containing five components on a piece of germanium half an inch long and thinner than a toothpick. SAGE -- Semi-Automatic Ground Environment -- linked hundreds of radar stations in the United States and Canada in the first large-scale computer communications network. 1959 Fairchild Semiconductor files a patent application for the planar process for manufacturing transistors. The process makes commercial production of transistors possible and leads to Fairchild's introduction, in two years, of the first integrated circuit. Texas Instruments announces the discovery of the integrated circuit.
(bipatrid). How to get citizenship by birth: lex sanguinis blood principle, by birth, given to the child according to the citizenship of the parents (if parents are citizens of different countries different legislation can provide different solutions, they could choose or the child could choose); lex soli ground principle, given due to the place of birth, typical for Anglo- America and Latin-American, this can lead to dual-citizenship. Child if found without parents, he/she can still receive citizenship based on lex soli, even though lex sanguinis is used in the country. E.g. Russian and stateless person get a child in Estonia, then child receives Russian citizenship automatically, but later on there