Blistering- very strong Bare- without plants Intentional- done and purpose Constant- continuous Engaging- absorbing Fundamental- basic Irritatining- annoying Have/ Take Time to relax Take It easy Do An on-line crossword Book/ Have Tickets for a match Have An esctravagant dinner Have A party Have A close friends over Book A tabel for two Book/ Take A weekend break Ex 4 Kuuldav- audible Räme- raucous Vaikne- silent Kõrvulukustav- deafening Ahistav- harrowing Meeldiv- agreeable Hämmeldus-disconcerting Murettekitav- distressing Keeruline- challenging Kurnav- gruelling Vähenõudlik-undemanding Heidutav- daunting Külmutav- freezy Jahe- chilly Külm- windly Leebe, kerge- mild Ex 6 Mõõdukas; äärmuslik kliima- temberate; extreme climate Õrn: aromaatne õis- delicate; fragrant blossoms Rikkumata; risustatud rannajoon-pristine; littered coastline Õigustamatu; range määrus- unjustified; strict regulations Raske; aeglase liikumisega liiklus- heavy; slow-moving traffic
section (other than when describing the evaluation plan.) When performing an experiment, the method that you use to obtain an answer must be presented for someone else to validate the results. For example, when testing the emissivity of a material, the difference between using a thermopile and using an energy balance will affect the results. The absence of a methods section in your design report may be disconcerting because you might have spent up to half the semester considering different concepts before choosing one, but ultimately you won’t write about that process. The audience only cares about what you came up with and not how you got there. A design report is not a history (“first we tried this and that did not work so then we tried this and finally we got to this”), but instead is results oriented. If
from abroad. Newspapers, disproportionate # of Jewish sounding names, many convicted, some killed. Was Khrushchev antisem? Not in classic way, but a boy from the village. Had absorbed at church a certain deg of judeophobia. Possibly antisem, but not his driving force. Party slogans. Absolutely refused to recognize J suffering. Ukraine today demanding recognition of genocide, famine of 30s, millions died, wanting indemnities, etc. New Uk govt see SU past as kind of bad dream to genocide. Disconcerting to Ru. Pop rel begins to bubble up again, esp Islam and Orthodoxy. Islamic fundamentalism didn't really exist outside of Egypt in this time. Concerned about dual loyalties. Ambivalence on part of many, animosity on other parts. W religion come all sorts of things. Synagogue becomes again a problematic place. Restriction on J rituals, from matzah to circumcision. State more actively recruits informers w/in rel communities throughout Ru. Again, more concerned w Islam and Orthodoxy
I was sure I looked exactly the same as I had in Phoenix. Maybe it was just that the boys back home had watched me pass slowly through all the awkward phases of adolescence and still thought of me that way. Perhaps it was because I was a novelty here, where novelties were few and far between. Possibly my crippling clumsiness was seen as endearing rather than pathetic, casting me as a damsel in distress. Whatever the reason, Mike's puppy dog behavior and Eric's apparent rivalry with him were disconcerting. I wasn't sure if I didn't prefer being ignored. My truck seemed to have no problem with the black ice that covered the roads. I drove very slowly, though, not wanting to carve a path of destruction through Main Street. When I got out of my truck at school, I saw why I'd had so little trouble. Something silver caught my eye, and I walked to the back of the truck -- carefully holding the side for support -- to examine my tires. There were thin chains crisscrossed in diamond shapes around them
American cryptanalysts knew none of these details when the Japanese Foreign Office installed the Alphabetical Typewriter in its major embassies in the late 1930s. How, then, did they solve it? Where did they begin? How did they even know that a new machine was in service, since the Japanese government did not announce it? The PURPLE machine supplanted the RED machine,2 which American cryptanalysts had solved, and so probably their first clue to the new machine was the disconcerting discovery that they could no longer read the important Japanese messages. At the same time, they observed new indicators for the PURPLE system. Clues to the system's nature came from such characteristics of its ciphertext as the frequency of letters, the percentage of blanks (letters that did not appear in a given message), and the nature and number of repetitions. Perhaps the codebreakers also assumed that the new machine comprised essentially a more