● 2.Airways ● 3.Roadways ● 4.Waterways ● 5.Railways ● 6.Pipelines ● 7.Conclusion 1.What is transport? Means by which a shipment is moved from point “A” to point “B”, such as by air, rail, road or sea. 2.Airways Air freighting is commonly used by businesses for the delivery of goods from distant suppliers. This type of transport is useful to deliver products within short time limits, fragile goods and products that are not bulky. Products in high demand and in short supply may also be air freighted in order to meet customer demands. The value ratio will be a determing factor. 3.Road Road a very popular mоde of transport used by suppliers and business to deliver orders. Many transport companies provide scheduled delivery days and next day delivery services, depending upon your needs. Goods can be packet/grouped in box or in containers which are also used for sea transportation. 4
Unhealty 3. Main 4. Shared 5. Passing 6. Keen Ex2. 1. Lose 2. Aroused 3. Shiw 4. Share 5. Hold 6. Take 7. D 8. A 9. E 10. F 11. B 12. C Ex3. 1. Places 2. Source 3. Lack 4. Spark 5. Building 6. Site ISSUE Ex1. 1. Cares, about 2. Avoid 3. Raised 4. Resolve 5. Addressed Ex2. 1. B 2. F 3. D 4. A 5. C 6. E Ex3. 1. Emotive 2. Real 3. Complex 4. Politically s ensitive 5. Pressing 6. Good 7. Wide 8. Sound 9. Broad 10. Growing ITEM Ex1. 1. Missing 2. Essential 3. Main 4. Valuable 5. Important 6. Bulky 7. Next 8. Faulty Ex2. 1. D 2. F 3. E 4. A 5. B 6. C Ex3. 1. Each 2. Single 3. Particular 4. Individual 5. Ten JUDGEMENT Ex1. 1. D 2. C 3. E 4. A 5. B Ex2. 1. Reserve 2. Form 3. Confirmed 4. Pass 5. Trust 6. Rely on Ex3. 1. A distinct lack of judgement 2. In my judgement 3. Against my better judgement 4. An error of judgement KNOWLEDGE Ex1. 1. Denies 2. Provides 3. Broaden 4. Live with 5. Use 6. Have Ex2. 1. Common 2. Working 3. General 4. Prior 5. Basic 6. Wide 7. Specialist 8. Full Ex3. 1
located between the two wheelwells. In most cars, only the edge of the rocker panel is visible when the doors are closed since it supports the bottom of the door. The rocker panel can feature the manufacturer's logo and is usually polished for aesthetic appeal. In light trucks, it can also work as a step to facilitate easier entry into the vehicle. · Roof rack: a set of bars secured to the roof of a motor car.[1] It is used to carry bulky items such as luggage, bicycles, canoes, kayaks, skis, or various carriers and containers. · Spoiler: an automotive aerodynamic device whose intended design function is to 'spoil' unfavourable air movement across a body of a vehicle in motion, usually described as drag. Spoilers on the front of a vehicle are often called air dams, because in addition to directing air flow they also reduce the amount of air
o Large film size (4x5, 5,7, 8x10) o Sharp detail o What you see in the viewfinder is exactly what you will get on the negative. o You can change the position of the film and lens relative to each other to correct distortion. DISADVANTAGES o Bulky and heavy o Must use a tripod. o Image on the viewing screen is not bright so you have put a focusing cloth over your head and the back of the camera. o The image appears reversed and upside down on the viewing screen. o Rapid shooting is difficult. Used for:
......... the chocolate bar he had in his pocket - .......... to find that it had melted! When he thought about it, he realised ......... had happened. The radar waves coming from the machine ......... he had been standing next to had melted his chocolate. Later, experiments showed that radar waves contain microwaves that could heat food .......... faster than traditional ovens. His company went .......... to develop and market the first microwave ovens in 1954. They ......... huge, bulky and expensive, but since ........., microwave ovens have become smaller, giving .......... the compact models we see in our kitchens today. Exercise. Which household appliance is it? You wash clothes in it. It's a washing machine. You ring your friends and talk. It's a mobile phone. You clean with it. It's a patch. It cleans your dirty plates, silverware and pans
- ionisatsioon - muud keemilised omadused Gly increases the flexibility of the polypeptide backbone since there is no steric hindrance from the side chain - this permits sharp turns or bends and the ability to fit in tight spots. Gly residues are often highly conserved, and often found at turns. Ala with its small side-chain is found equally in the interior and on the surface and is a very abundant amino acid in proteins. Val, Leu, Ile with their bulky hydrophobic side-chains are stiffer due to steric hindrance, their bulk also tends to make them helix breakers. Hydrophobic side chains are most commonly found in the interior, i. e. buried, of proteins. The aromatic amino acids have a b-methylene to provide some flexibility; they are non-polar, although Tyr has the polar phenol group. Aromatic side-chains tend to pack together at 90°C , rather than side-to-side. Trp has the largest side-chain.
printed books. Traditionally, book papers are off white or low white papers (easier to read), are opaque to minimize the show through of text from one side of the page to the other and are (usually) made to tighter caliper or thickness specifications, particularly for case bound books. Typically, books papers are light weight papers 60 to 90 g/m² and often specified by their caliper/substance ratios (volume basis). For example, a bulky 80 g/m² paper may have a caliper of 120 micrometers (0.12 mm) which would be Volume 15 (120×10/80) where as a low bulk 80 g/m² may have a caliper of 88 micrometers, giving a volume 11. This volume basis then allows the calculation of books PPI (printed pages per inch) which is an important factor for the design of book jackets and the binding of the finished book. Different paper qualities are used as book paper depending on type of book:
, or 3,740 Ibs. on each half wing. wing spar can forget about that part of This 3,740 Ibs. now corresponds to As to the loading material, we can use bags of lead shot (expensive) water in 1, 2 or 5 gallon cans (bulky), TOTAL iron (or lead or gold!) bars, or sand- bags (best). Let us assume we are
Emotive prose (I. Galperin "Stylistics") 19. Scientific prose style (I. Galperin "Stylistics") 20. Language of the drama (I. Galperin "Stylistics") 21. Publicistic style (I. Galperin "Stylistics") 22. The style of official documents (I. Galperin "Stylistics") 23. Newspaper style (I. Galperin "Stylistics") *- very bulky questions they will be split into several parts at the exam. FGI 1081 Stylistics (I. Ladusseva) 1 STYLISTIC TERMS: Understatement (nonce-words) Style Zeugma Common Coll. Voc. Stylistics Semantically false chain Special Coll. Voc.: The styl. of lg
photovaltaic cells). The success of PV in space generated commercial applications for this technology. The simplest photovoltaic systems power many of the small calculators and wrist watches used everyday. More complicated systems provide electricity to pump water, power communications equipment, and even provide electricity to our homes. Some advantages of photovoltaic systems are: · Conversion from sunlight to electricity is direct, so that bulky mechanical generator systems are unnecessary. · PV arrays can be installed quickly and in any size required or allowed. · The environmental impact is minimal, requiring no water for system cooling and generating no by-products. 8.2 Solar thermal heat Solar thermal(heat) energy is often used for heating swimming pools, heating water used in homes, and space heating of buildings. Solar space heating systems can be classified as passive or active.
piece -ef paper discovered in the shoe heel of a woman suspected of working with German espionage in Mexico turned out to bear a message in invisible ink. Fortunately, it proved one of the simpler kinds, which can be developed by heat. But it sparked the establishment of a secret- ink subsection whose expert chemists could detect writing in an invisible ink disguised as a perfume with an actual odor and with only one part in 10,000 of solid matter. The Germans later replaced inks in so bulky and conspicuous a form as liquids with chemicals that were impregnated into scarves, socks, and other garments. They had only to be dipped in water to create the writing fluid. These miracles of the test tube, called F and P inks by the I British chemists who taught the Americans much of what they knew, were so precisely formulated that they would react with only one other chemical to form a visible compound. Eventually, the Allied chemists discovered a reagent that brought out
tray of untouched food in front of them. They weren't gawking at me, unlike most of the other students, so it was safe to stare at them without fear of meeting an excessively interested pair of eyes. But it was none of these things that caught, and held, my attention. They didn't look anything alike. Of the three boys, one was big -- muscled like a serious weight lifter, with dark, curly hair. Another was taller, leaner, but still muscular, and honey blond. The last was lanky, less bulky, with untidy, bronze-colored hair. He was more boyish than the others, who looked like they could be in college, or even teachers here rather than students. The girls were opposites. The tall one was statuesque. She had a beautiful figure, the kind you saw on the cover of the Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue, the kind that made every girl around her take a hit on her self-esteem just by being in the same room. Her hair was golden, gently waving to the middle of her back
But 99% of the time both genders want exactly the same thing: less fat and a bit more muscle in the right places. Guess what? In these 99 cases out of 100, men and women should therefore do exactly the same thing. On average, women have less than one-tenth (often less than one-fortieth) the testosterone of men. This biochemical recipe just doesn't support rapid muscular growth unless you're an outlier, so, for the duration of this book, please suspend any fear of "getting bulky." Even if you are a fast-responder, as you observe changes, you can omit pieces or reduce frequency. Don't worry about waking up looking like the Hulk the morning after a single workout. It won't happen, as much as men wish it did. There will be plenty of time to tweak and fine-tune, to cut back or shift gears, as you go. One potential objection from the scientists in the group: But don't women have more slow- twitch muscle bers? Doesn't that mean women should train di erently
perfection.1 The Third Symphony (April), completed a year later, definitely illustrates the disposition of Kuulberg. The work has the high spirits of a carnival. A multifarious series of actors and scenes appear, none of them dealt with at any great length. There is swing, humour and fireworks, however, Kuulberg cannot get a hold of this merry bustle. The Third Symphony is a Divertissement, but not in the classical sense. In retrospect the earlier works of Kuulberg’s bulky symphonic output deserves greater attention. As do his ballets Mont Valérien (1971) and Pöördlava (Rotating Stage, 1973). As a novel phenomenon and common denominator in his ballet music one should consider his deep sensitive psychology. The short but varied life of an Estonian student Boris Vilde (Mont Valérien), later a fighter in the Resistance who meets a tragic end reflects Kuulberg’s ability to almost momentarily change his expressions to 1 Dina Daragan
"Something's wrong. What is it?" The now-familiar electricity crackled to life between us, the pull made fiercer by my temper. "You." "Me?" His thumbs stroked over my shoulders. Releasing me, he withdrew a lone key from his pocket and plugged it into the panel. All the lights cleared except for the one for the top floor. He wore black again, with fine gray pinstripes. Seeing him from the back was a revelation. His shoulders were nicely broad without being bulky, emphasizing his lean waist and long legs. The silky strands of hair falling over his collar tempted me to clench them and pull. Hard. I wanted him as pissy as I was. I wanted a fight. "I'm not in the mood for you now, Mr. Cross." He watched the antique-style needle above the doors mark the passing floors. "I can get you in the mood." "I'm not interested." Cross glanced over his shoulder at me. His shirt and tie were both the same awesome cerulean as his irises
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10)tha hichhe hadbeenstanding nextto hadmeltedhischocolate. Later, experiments showed that radarwaves :cntainmicrowaves thatcouldheatfood11)muchfaster thantraditional ovens Hiscompany went12)onto develop andmarket thefirstmicrowave ovens in 1954They13)were huge,bulky :"d expensive, butsince14)then, microwave ovens havebecome smaller, giving15)usthecompact models weseein :;r krtchens today. KeyWordTransformations r l . l d r o m&s F i x e d
10)tha hichhe hadbeenstanding nextto hadmeltedhischocolate. Later, experiments showed that radarwaves :cntainmicrowaves thatcouldheatfood11)muchfaster thantraditional ovens Hiscompany went12)onto develop andmarket thefirstmicrowave ovens in 1954They13)were huge,bulky :"d expensive, butsince14)then, microwave ovens havebecome smaller, giving15)usthecompact models weseein :;r krtchens today. KeyWordTransformations r l . l d r o m&s F i x e d
10)tha hichhe hadbeenstanding nextto hadmeltedhischocolate. Later, experiments showed that radarwaves :cntainmicrowaves thatcouldheatfood11)muchfaster thantraditional ovens Hiscompany went12)onto develop andmarket thefirstmicrowave ovens in 1954They13)were huge,bulky :"d expensive, butsince14)then, microwave ovens havebecome smaller, giving15)usthecompact models weseein :;r krtchens today. KeyWordTransformations r l . l d r o m&s F i x e d