Leidsid 33 sarnast õppematerjali, mis on seotud failiga "Ebareeglipärased tegusõnad (kõik)". Need materjalid aitavad sul teemat sügavamalt mõista.
cast, come, burn, dream, broadcast, burst, came, cost, dive, hear, hurt, knit, light, mean, bent, bade, bound, blow, broke, bred, brought, built, burned, burnt, bought, caught, chose, dealt, done, draw, dreamt, drive, fall, felt, fought, found, fled, forbid, forgot, forgive, froze, gotten, gave, given, went, gone, ground, grow, held, kept, know, laidbind bound bound siduma bite bit bitten hammustama bleed bled bled veritsema blow blew blown puhuma break broke broken lõhkuma breed bred bred Tekkima, tekitama bring brought brought Tooma Eetrisse andma, broadcast broadcast broadcast esinema build built built ehitama burn burned/burnt burned/burnt Põletama, põlema burst burst burst Lõhkema, tõusma buy bought bought Ostma Heitma, viskama, cast cast cast valama catch caught caught Püüdma
bind bound bound bite bit bitten, bit bleed bled bled blend blended blended bless blessed, blest blessed, blest blow blew blown break broke broken breed bred bred bring brought brought broadcast broadcast broadcast build built built burn burnt, burned burnt, burned burst burst burst buy bought bought cast cast cast catch caught caught choose chose chosen cleave clove, cleft cloven, cleft
Õnnistama Bless Blessed/blest Blessed/bles Puhuma Blow Blew Blown Murdma, purustama Break Broke Broken Kasvatama/aretama Breed Bred Bred Tooma Bring Brought Brought Raadio/tv kaudu edastama Broadcast Broadcast/-ed Broadcast/-ed Ehitama Build Built Built Põlema, põletama Burn Burned/burnt Burned/burn Lõhkema Burst Burst Burst Ostma Buy Bought Bought Viskama, valama Cast Cast Cast
24. blow blew blown puhuma; nuuskama, õhku laskma 25. break broke broken lõhkuma, purunema, purustama 26. breed bred bred sigitama, soetama, tekitama; tekkima; kasvatama; põll aretama; 27. bring brought brought tooma 28. broadcast broadcast broadcast (raadio või televisiooni teel) saatma või levitama, eetrisse andma; 29. browbeat browbeat browbeaten (kurja pilgu või kärkimisega) heidutama, hirmutama, araks tegema 30. build built built ehitama 31. burn burnt (burned) burnt (burned) põlema 32
andestama forgive forgave forgiven olema be was been andma give gave given omama have had had asetama lay laid laid ostma buy bought bought ehitama build built built otsima seek sought sought elama dwell dwelt dwelt painutama bend bent bent ennustama forecast forecast forecast paiskama cast cast cast haisema stink stank stunk paisutama swell swelled swollen haistma smell smelt smelt panema put put put hammustama bite bit bitten panema set set set heitma fling flung flung panustama bet bet bet heitma sling slung slung peitma hide hid hidden helistama ring rang rung pillama spill spilt spilt
bind bound bound siduma bite bit bitten hammustama bleed bled bled veritsema blow blew blown puhuma break broke broken lõhkuma breed bred bred Tekkima, tekitama bring brought brought Tooma Eetrisse andma, broadcast broadcast broadcast esinema build built built ehitama burn burned/burnt burned/burnt Põletama, põlema burst burst burst Lõhkema, tõusma buy bought bought Ostma Heitma, viskama, cast cast cast valama catch caught caught Püüdma
TO BLEED bleed bled bleeding bled TO BLOW blow blew blowing blown TO BREAK break broke breaking broken TO BRING bring brought bringing brought TO BUILD build built building built TO BURN burn burned, burnt burning burned, burnt TO BURST burst burst bursting burst TO BUY buy bought buying bought TO CATCH catch caught catching caught TO CHOOSE choose chose choosing chosen
Be,was,been-olema Bear,bore,born(e)-taluma Beat,beat,beaten-tukslema Become,became,become-saama Begin,began,begun-algama Bite,bit,bitten-hammustama Blow,blew,blown-puhuma Break,broke,broken-lõhkuma Build,built,built-ehitama Burn,burnt(burned),-II- -põlema Burst,burst,burst-lõhkema Buy,bought,bought-ostma Can,could,(been able to)-oskama Catch,caught,caught-püüdma Choose,chose,chosen-valima Come,came,come-tulema Cost,cost,cost-maksma Cut,cut,cut-lõikama Deal,dealt,dealt-nr. valima Dig,dug,dug-kaevama Do,did,done-tegema Dream,dreamt(dreamed),-II- -unistama Drink,drank,drunk-jooma Eat,ate,eaten-sööma Fall,fell,fallen-kukkuma Feed,fed,fed-toitma Feel,felt,felt-tundma Fight,fought,fought-kaklema Find,found,found-leidma Flee,fled,fled-põgenema Fly,flew,flown-lendama Forbid,forbade,forbidden-keelama Forget,forgot,forgotten-unustama Forgive,forgave,forgiven-andestama Freeze,froze,frozen-külmuma Get,got,got-saama Give,gave,given-andma Go,went,gone-minema Grow,grew,grown-kasvama Hang,hu
Blow blew blown meet met met Break broke broken pay paid paid Brong brought brought put put put Build built built read read read Burn burnt (Inf+ed) burnt (Inf+ed) ride rode ridden Burst burst burst ring rang rung Buy bought bought rise rose risen Can could (been able to) run ran run Catch caught caught say said said Choose chose chosen see saw seen Come came come seek sought sought
maksma(raha välja pay paid paid 21 andma) 22 ütlema say said said 23 müüma sell sold sold 24 särama shine shone shone 25 tulistama shoot shot shot 26 istuma sit sat sat 27 magama sleep slept slept 28 õppima learn learnt/ed learnt/ed 29 põletama burn burnt burnt 30 tegelema deal dealt dealt 31 kaotama lose lost lost 32 tähendama mean meant meant 33 kuulma hear heard heard 34 veerima spell spelt spelt 35 kalduma bend bent bent 36 ehitma build built built 37 (välja)laenama lend lent lent
Irregular verbs Present Past Past participle beat beat beaten be was, were been become became become begin began begun bite bit bitten blow blew blown break broke broken bring brought brought build built built burn burnt burnt burst burst burst buy bought bought can could been able catch caught caught choose chose chosen come came come cost cost cost cut cut cut deal dealt dealt dig dug dug do did done draw drew drawn drink drank drunk drive drove driven
1. Be was/were been olema 2. Bear bore born(e) kandma, taluma 3. Beat beat beaten- lööma 4. Become became become- saama kellekski , millekski 5. Begin began begun- alustama 6. Bite bit bitten- hammustama 7. Blow blew blown- puhuma 8. Break broke broken-murduma, murdma, lõhkuma 9. Bring brought brought-tooma 10. Build built built-ehitama 11. Burn burnt burnt-põletama 12. Burst burst burst-purskama, puhkema 13. Buy bought bought-ostma 14. Can could could-võima, suutma 15. Catch caught caught- kinni püüdma 16. Choose chose chosen-valima 17. Come came come-tulema 18. Cost cost cost- maksma, väärt olema 19. Cut cut cut-lõikama 20. Deal dealt dealt-kauplema, käsitlema, tegelema 21
sündima bear bore borne kasva(ta)ma grow grew grown peksma beat beat beaten rippuma hang hung hung kellekski saama become became become omama have had had algama begin began begun kuulma hear heard heard kalduma bend bent bent peitma hide hid hidden hammustama bite bit bitten lööma hit hit hit veritsema bleed bled bled hoidma hold held held puhuma blow blew blown vigastama hurt hurt hurt
Be was been Misunderstand misunderstood 2 Bear bore born Oversleep overslept overslept Beat beat beaten Pay paid paid Become became become Put put put Begin began begun Read read read Bite bit bitten Ride rode ridden Break broke broken Ring rang rung Build built built Run ran run Burst burst burst Say said said Buy bought bought See saw seen Catch caught caught Sell sold sold Can could Send sent sent Come came come Set set set Cost cost cost Shoot shot shot Cut cut cut Sing sang sung Deal dealt dealt Sink sank sunk Dig dug dug Slide slid slid Do did done Speak spoke spoken Dream dream dreamt Spend spent spent
BEGIN BEGAN BEGUN ALGAMA, ALUSTAMA BITE BIT BITTEN HAMMUSTAMA BLOW BLEW BLOWN PUHUMA BREAK BROKE BROKEN MURDMA, KATKI TEGEMA BRING BROUGHT BROUGHT TOOMA BURN BURNT BURNT PÕLEMA, PÕLETAMA BUILD BUILT BUILT EHITAMA BURST BURST BURST PUHKEMA BUY BOUGHT BOUGHT OSTMA CATCH CAUGHT CAUGHT KINNI PÜÜDMA CHOOSE CHOSE CHOSEN VALIMA COME CAME COME TULEMA COST COST COST MAKSMA, VÄÄRT OLEMA CUT CUT CUT LÕIKAMA DEAL DEALT DEALT KÄSITLEMA DO DID DONE TEGEMA
III vorm - Bet III vorm - Bitten Puhuma = Blow Lõhkuma, katki minema = Break I vorm Blow I vorm Break II vorm Blew II vorm Broke III vorm - Blown III vorm - Broken Tooma = Bring Ehitama = Build I vorm Bring I vorm Build II vorm Brought II vorm Built III vorm - Brought III vorm - Built Põlema, põletama = Burn Ostma = Buy I vorm Burn I vorm Buy II vorm Burnt II vorm Bought III vorm - Burnt III vorm - Bought Saama, võima, oskama = Can (Kinni) Püüdma = Catch I vorm Can I vorm Catch II vorm Could II vorm Caught III vorm - Puudub III vorm - Caught Valima = Choose Tulema = Come I vorm Choose I vorm Come
/ On top of the world, thanks. · OK, thanks · Not so bad, thanks. / Can't complain, thanks. · So so, thanks. / So and so, thanks. · Not so good, actually 1 The English alphabet Spelling Work with your partner and spell out first your name and then some names of places. Write down each letter as you hear it, and then say the word. The English alphabet on the phone: You might find the following alphabet (used by international airlines) useful when trying to spell a word on the telephone. A Alpha O Oscar Ä Alpha-Echo Ö Oscar-Echo B Bravo P Papa C Charlie Q Quebec D Delta R Romeo
me to explore. I was not merely across the country from my former home in San Diego, but seemingly worlds away. Two major metropolises-one endlessly temperate and sensually lazy, the other teeming with life and frenetic energy. In my dreams, I'd imagining living in a walkup in Brooklyn, but being a dutiful daughter, I found myself on the Upper West Side instead. If not for Cary living with me, I would've been miserably lonely in the sprawling apartment that cost more per month than most people made in a year. The doorman tipped his hat to me. "Good evening, Miss Tramell. Will you need a cab this evening?" "No thanks, Paul." I rocked onto the rounded heels of my fitness shoes. "I'll be walking." He smiled. "It's cooled down from this afternoon. Should be nice." "I've been told I should enjoy the June weather before it gets wicked hot." "Very good advice, Miss Tramell."
months -- but even if I had, I would not have imagined it like this. I stared without breathing across the long room, into the dark eyes of the hunter, and he looked pleasantly back at me. Surely it was a good way to die, in the place of someone else, someone I loved. Noble, even. That ought to count for something. I knew that if I'd never gone to Forks, I wouldn't be facing death now. But, terrified as I was, I couldn't bring myself to regret the decision. When life offers you a dream so far beyond any of your expectations, it's not reasonable to grieve when it comes to an end. The hunter smiled in a friendly way as he sauntered forward to kill me. 1. FIRST SIGHT My mother drove me to the airport with the windows rolled down. It was seventy-five degrees in Phoenix, the sky a perfect, cloudless blue. I was wearing my favorite shirt -- sleeveless, white eyelet lace; I was wearing it as a farewell gesture. My carry-on item was a parka.
In the twentieth century, his work was repeatedly adopted and rediscovered by 2 new movements in scholarship and performance. His plays re- main highly popular today and are consistently performed and reinterpreted in diverse cultural and political contexts throughout the world. Source: Wikipedia Also available on Feedbooks for Shakespeare: • Romeo and Juliet (1597) • Macbeth (1606) • A Midsummer Night's Dream (1596) • Julius Caesar (1599) • Othello (1603) • The Merchant of Venice (1598) • Much Ado About Nothing (1600) • King Lear (1606) • The Taming of the Shrew (1594) • The Comedy of Errors (1594) Note: This book is brought to you by Feedbooks http://www.feedbooks.com Strictly for personal use, do not use this file for commercial purposes. 3 Act I SCENE I. Elsinore
CHARACTERS MADAME PERNELLE, mother of Orgon ORGON, husband of Elmire ELMIRE, wife of Orgon DAMIS, son of Orgon MARIANE, daughter of Orgon, in love with Valere CLEANTE, brother-in-law of Orgon TARTUFFE, a hypocrite DORINE, Mariane's maid M. LOYAL, a bailiff A Police Officer FLIPOTTE, Madame Pernelle's servant The Scene is at Paris ACT I SCENE I MADAME PERNELLE and FLIPOTTE, her servant; ELMIRE, MARIANE, CLEANTE, DAMIS, DORINE MADAME PERNELLE Come, come, Flipotte, and let me get away. ELMIRE You hurry so, I hardly can attend you. MADAME PERNELLE Then don't, my daughter-in law. Stay where you are. I can dispense with your polite attentions. ELMIRE We're only paying what is due you, mother. Why must you go away in such a hurry? MADAME PERNELLE Because I can't endure your carryings-on, And no one takes the slightest pains to please me. I leave your house, I tell you, quite disgusted; You do the opposite of my instructions;
The majority of so-called Africans leaders want to stay in power until the day their bodies are put in the grave. Through buffoonery, utter mismanagement and downright stealing of the wealth of the masses, these leaders have so impoverished Africa that we are now nothing but a beggar continent. We beg for everything; we are more dependent on our colonial masters than when we received our independence from them. Africa owes the West more money than we and our generations to come can pay. I arrived in America in December of 1967as an official of what we believed was going to be a dynamic African nation – the young Republic of Biafra. But Biafra was defeated and Nigeria remained one, as a giant of Africa. In the last 32 years, I have watched with horror and outright helplessness as the downward slide of the African race continues to escalate. But rather than address the problems, we resort to blaming the Caucasians, Asians and others for our misfortune
DAVID KAHN Windsor Gate Great Neck, New York Paris A Few Words EVERY TRADE has its vocabulary. That of cryptology is simple, but even so a familiarity with its terms facilitates understanding. A glossary may also serve as a handy reference. The definitions in this one are informal and ostensive. Exceptions are ignored and the host of minor terms are not defined—the text covers these when they come up. The plaintext is the message that will be put into secret form. Usually the plaintext is in the native tongue of the communicators. The message may be hidden in two basic ways. The methods of steganography conceal the very existence of the message. Among them are invisible inks and microdots and arrangements in which, for example, the first letter of each word in an apparently innocuous text spells out the real message
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
" --Laura Roden, chairman of the Silicon Valley Association of Startup Entrepreneurs and a lecturer in Corporate Finance at San Jose State University "With this kind of time management and focus on the important things in life, people should be able to get 15 times as much done in a normal workweek." --Tim Draper, founder of Draper Fisher Jurvetson, financiers to innovators including Hotmail, Skype, and Overture.com "Tim has done what most people only dream of doing. I can't believe he is going to let his secrets out of the bag. This book is a must read!" --Stephen Key, top inventor and team designer of Teddy Ruxpin and Lazer Tag and a consultant to the television show American Inventor ALSO BY TIMOTHY FERRISS The 4-Hour Workweek Copyright © 2010 by Tim Ferriss All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Crown Archetype, an imprint of the Crown Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York. www.crownpublishing.com
I suppose. Our facial features are pretty similar same eyes, same-shaped 14 borrowed forehead. I've seen photos of her when 1E Phrasal verbs page 8 5 (possible answers) she was my age and apart from the 1 1 go ahead 5 come to eighties hairstyle we're the spitting 1 Well, you will go to bed late every night. 2 fall through 6 bring about image of each other! Some people 2 Well, you will refuse to wear a 3 tip off 7 go down with say that they can see a strong family
It will be increasingly important for the society, therefore, to understand the how and why of automatic influence. 'It is worth noting that I have not included among the six principles the simple rule of material self- interest: that people want to get the most and pay the least for their choices. This omission does not stem from any perception on my part that the desire to maximize benefits and minimize costs is unimportant in driving our decisions. Nor does it come from any evidence that I have that compli- ance professionals ignore the power of this rule. Quite the opposite: in my investigations, 1 frequently saw practitioners use (sometimes honestly, sometimes not) the compelling "1 can give you a good deal" approach. I chose not to treat the material self-interest rule separately in this book because 1 see it as a motivational given, as a goes-without-saying factor that deserves acknowledgment, but not ex- tensive description.
Author, Chicken Soup for the Soul ccc_tracy_fm_i-xviii.qxd 7/7/03 3:22 PM Page ix Contents Acknowledgments xi Introduction xiii Chapter 1 Change Your Thinking 1 Chapter 2 Change Your Life 18 Chapter 3 Dream Big Dreams 40 Chapter 4 Decide to Become Rich 52 Chapter 5 Take Charge of Your Life 77 Chapter 6 Commit to Excellence 90 Chapter 7 Put People First 118 Chapter 8 Think Like a Genius 136 Chapter 9 Unleash Your Mental Powers 154 Chapter 10 Supercharge Your Thinking 179
golden. Shadow had a few golden hairs on his paw, but did not turn golden until he was a year old when his coat turned to pale beige. By 3 years old he was entirely pale golden. Shadow was bred to a genetically golden female, but the pairing only produced silver offspring. However, at least one of his silver offspring later turned pale golden. Other descendents of Contessa also went through the late colour change. During the 1980s, several other breeders of Shaded Silver and Chinchilla Persians came forward to report that their cats had developed reddish, brownish or golden-coloured fur along their spines as they aged. Many of the cats had no golden in their ancestry. At first it was dismissed as an unavoidable genetic fault where silver was incompletely dominant and did not hide the recessive golden colour. A common ancestor of all the colour-changing Silver Persians was a stud cat called Kelly Lane Andromeda (in the UK) whose descendents were exported to the USA in the 1950s and 1960s
.....................................................120 Is That So?..................................................................................................121 The Ego and the Present Moment .............................................................122 The Paradox of Time...................................................................................124 Eliminating Time.........................................................................................125 The Dreamer and the Dream.......................................................................127 Going Beyond Limitation...........................................................................128 The Joy of Being.........................................................................................130 Allowing the Diminishment of the Ego......................................................130 As Without, So Within................................................................................132
the six feature films as an epic on the theme of father-son relationships • New illustrations and diagrams that give additional depth to the mythic principles • A final chapter, "Trust the Path," an inspiring call to adventure for those who want to discover themselves through writing "This book is like having the smartest person in the story meeting come home with you and whisper what to do in your ear as you write a screenplay. Insightfor insight, step for step, Chris Vogler takes us through the process of connecting theme to story and making a script come alive. " - Lynda Obst, Producer, Sleepless in Seattle, How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days; Author, Hello, He Lied "This is a book about the stories we write, and perhaps more importantly, the stories we live. It
Section 3 Vocabulary and Reading 60 questions Comprehension 45 minutes Vocabulary 30 questions Reading Comprehension 30 questions SECTION 1: LISTENING COMPREHENSION This section of the TOEFL test your ability to understand spoken American English. You will hear taped conversations to which you will make responses. Part A and B contain samples of informal American English. Idiomatic expressions and two-word verbs are common in these parts. Single Statement In Part A you will hear a single statement made by a man or a woman. In your test booklet, there are four sentences. You must choose the sentence that is closest in meaning to the one you heard. YOU WILL HEAR:
Leonard Stein, trans. Eithne Wilkins and Ernst Kaiser (London: Faber and Faber, 1964). 2 See his article “Eesti muusika iseloomlik ilmend” (The characterising expression of Estonian music), in Eesti Kultura II (Tartu: Postimees, 1913). Primary Source. What I mean here is not so much a certain style but the essence of the music we would like to adopt. This is neither old nor new, because it is born from the Absolute. This cannot be put into words but recognised only. We hear and sense it in the Indian raga, the Gregorian chant, the mass of Palestrina, the passion of Bach and the symphony of Beethoven. At the side of such music modern poly-stylistics may be just a desperate quest. The values in Estonian music and their reception in the world indicate that first of all the works of Rudolf Tobias, Eduard Tubin and Arvo Pärt are recognised and appreciated. The reasons for this simply flow from their music.