Companies who discharge pollution into rivers, lakes and seas should be liable for cleaning up the environment. It could be argued that there are lot of pollution. Pollution is caused by many different companies and factories. Usually the most contaminating factories are manufacturing companies. They should be liable for cleaning up the environment because they cause this pollution. Also they should be financial punished. It is partly true, but it is comprehensible thanks to producing company's pollution into rivers, lakes and seas. There are built many factories near water, like rivers. It does not mean that factories pollution more environments if it could build not near the water. Factories which are built near water pollution environment as much as they are not built near water. It is clear that companies should be liable for cleaning up the environment. Thanks to
· POST-postal · CLOSE-closure · SHORT-subshort, shorten, · CONFIDENT-confidence · COURAGE-courageous · EXCESS-excessive · ADVERTISE-advertisement · SOLVE-solution · RECENT-recently · PAY-payment · CONFUSE-confusion · EQUAL-equality · DONATE-donation · BABYSIT-babysitter · LIAISE-liaison · ENTHUSE- enthusiasm · ACT-action · QUALIFY-qualifized, qualification · INTEND-intendable · EXTEND-extension, · ACCURATE-accuracy · COMPREHEND-comprehensible · DEPEND-dependent KERMO MAISTE · LONG- Length, lengthen · HARD-harden · HOT- heat · SPELL-spelling · MUSIC-musician, musical · ACCIDENT-accidently · ELECT,DISCUSS-election,discussion · STUPID, SIMILAR- stupidity,similarity · EXIST-existence · APPLY-applicate · AGREE-disagree · DONATE-donation · HAPPY-happiness · ACTIVE-interactive, activity · OPTIC-optician · DESTROY-destoying · SHY-shyness · ARROGANT-arrogance
those of other workers; (b) the operation of workplaces when workers are present takes place under the supervision of a person in charge; (c) work involving a special risk is entrusted only to competent staff and carried out in accordance with the instructions given; (d) all safety instructions are comprehensible to all the workers concerned; (e) appropriate first-aid facilities are provided; (f) any relevant safety drills are performed at regular intervals. 2. The employer shall ensure that a document concerning safety and health, hereinafter referred to as 'safety and health document`, covering the relevant requirements laid down in Articles 6, 9 and 10 of Directive
Topic London Tallinn English College Tallinn 2007 1. Introduction London is the capital city of the United Kingdom and the largest urban area in England. The ancient City of London, to which the name originally belonged, still maintains its medieval boundaries, but the name "London" has long applied more to the whole metropolis that has grown up around it. London has been an important settlement for over two millenniums. It is also one of the world's leading business, financial and cultural centres and its influence in politics, education, entertainment and even fashion contribute to its status as a major global city. London is a major tourist attraction with four world heritage sites, several royal parks and numerous iconic landmarks such as the Houses of Parliament, Towe Bridge, the Tower of London, Westminster Abbey and the London Eye. 2. History Although there is some evidence of a permanent settle...
◦ paladar blando/ velo paladar/ velo (pehme suulagi ): zona prevelar, zona postvelar dientes: ◦ dientes superiores/incisivos superiores (ülahambad ) ◦ dientes inferiores (alahambad ) Alvéolos (alveoolid e hambasombud ) labios: ◦ labio superior (ülahuul ) ◦ labio inferior (alahuul) La fonación es el trabajo muscular realizado para emitir sonidos inteligibles (comprehensible, understandable), es decir, para que exista la comunicación oral. El objetivo último de la fonación es la articulación de palabras, a través del proceso por el cual se modifica la corriente de aire procedente de los pulmones y la laringe en las cavidades supraglóticas como consecuencia de los cambios de volumen y de forma de estas cavidades. Poner el aire en vibración para originar ondas sonoras. En un gran número de sonidos se hace mediante la acción de las cuerdas vocales.
Value remains beyond analytical means.2 The first Estonian symphonists (Tobias, Kapp, Lemba) began with a classical- romantic background applying historically defined subdivisions: action, mediation, playfulness, and closure. With all this complexity there must be for the listener a 1 Heimar Ilves, personal conversations with Uno Soomere, October 1974. 2 Eino Tamberg, interview with Annika Koppel, Postimees, 17 Apr. 1998. recognisable value-judgement core: it may be comprehensible either semantically or absolutely. We must not forget that all change and transition in Estonian symphonism, in whatever period, never dominated all the composers. Perseverance, poise and conservatism1 have shown, usually later than sooner, that all is not gold that glitters from afar, and chasing “fresh-isms” may prove to be a naïve and infantile stimulation. “Concrete” music, instrumental (absurdist) theatre, “happenings” – such affairs
nomic growth. This means more reforms and more initiatives in a range of fields aimed at further improvement of investment climate and progress in terms of the ease of doing business. In this brochure we offer information about the legal framework which is highly important in the process of starting up and running a business in Georgia. The brochure consists of three parts Start up a Business, Privatization and the Labor legislation. Each part consists of chapters outlining in most comprehensible language the content of the leg- islative base regulating the corresponding field. Furthermore, relevant legislative acts and articles are provided at the end of each chapter. Unfortunately, the format of the brochure does not enable full incorporation of every relevant detail and information and can thus not serve as a substitute for professional legal advice. Nev- ertheless, we did our best to make the brochure comprehensive and catch main aspects and rules
Russet kittens to date have been larger at birth than their siblings and somewhat on the large side as adults. RECESSIVE BROWN - THE ENIGMATIC BARRINGTON BROWN GENE Copyright 2010 Sarah Hartwell This page pulls together what is known about Don Shaw's Barrington Brown gene, a form of recessive brown/colour dilution only reliably recorded in a colony of laboratory cats, none of which are believed to have left the laboratory. To make this comprehensible to the non- genetics expert I have referred to "copies of genes" or "versions" of genes although the correct terminology is "alleles". There is also a brief guide to Shaw's terminology at the end as Shaw's writing pre-dated modern "standard" symbols and terminology. Don Shaw was an early feline geneticist in the USA. During the 1950s and 1960s, there was no standard form of genetic coding and Shaw used his own system of genetic coding which can be difficult to read today
qualities. Like the major arcana cards of the Tarot, they stand for the aspects of a complete human personality. Every good story reflects the total human story, the universal human condition of being born into this world, growing, learning, strug gling to become an individual, and dying. Stories can be read as metaphors for the general human situation, with characters who embody universal, archetypal qualities, comprehensible to the group as well as the individual. THE M O S T C O M M O N A N D USEFUL ARCHETYPES For the storyteller, certain character archetypes are indispensable tools of the trade. You can't tell stories without them. T h e archetypes that occur most frequendy in stories, and that seem to be the most useful for the writer to understand, are: HERO M E N T O R (Wise Old Man or Woman) THRESHOLD GUARDIAN HERALD SHAPESHIFTER SHADOW ALLY TRICKSTER
In a country like Guyana, there were no similar others for a Jonestown resident but the people of Jonestown itself. What was right for a member of the community was determined to a dispro- portionate degree by what other community members-influenced heavily by Jones-did and believed. When viewed in this light, the terrible orderliness, the lack of panic, the sense of calm with which these people moved to the vat of poi- son and to their deaths seems more comprehensible. They hadn't been hypnotized by Jones; they had been convinced-partly by him but, more important, by the principle of social proof-that suicide was the correct conduct. The uncertainty they surely felt upon first hearing the death command must have caused them to look around them for a definition of the appropriate response. It is worth particular note that they found two impressive pieces of social evi- dence, each pointing in the same direction. The first was the initial set of their
routine to the secret instructions to ambassadors. Even at its most complete, however, it can illuminate but part of the intelligence picture. The solutions allude to persons and facts and basic policies half known or unknown to the interceptor; they presuppose a common knowledge not at his disposal; they do not include information exchanged by personal contact, letter, telephone. Most messages mean little standing alone; only context makes them comprehensible. Cryptanalysis thus complements other forms of intelligence, overt and covert, just as they complement it. Perhaps it is the incompleteness of cryptanalytic intelligence that led to American officials' apparently disbelieving it at the time of the Suez crisis, despite its seemingly unimpeachable authenticity. Just after that crisis had passed its peak, George Wigg, a Labor Member of Parliament, told newspapermen that the United States had broken British, French,