School is looking for highly motivated French teacher Requirements: · good communication skills Offers: · qualification in teaching · good working conditions · dedicated · promotion changes · fair-minded · training courses · full of energy and · flexible hours enthusiasm · great environment The salary will depend on experience and qualifications. Interested candidates should send their application together with a full CV and motivation form to [email protected] Application deadline is 3 November 2008.
Eleri Kliimask 10.b Why did we choose this film ? Funny enjoyable Family film young and old Good comedy The main themes damaged painting secret of a painting bunch of criminals Bad guys Good boys What it teaches to viewers ? Bravery Independents Courage Enthusiasm Who we recommend it to watch ? Kids grandparents family Filmmakers Director: Lembit Ulfsak Writers: Janno Põldma, Lembit Ulfsak Actors main characters: Tõnu Kark Margus Alver Kaur Sinissaar Dan Põldroos Ain Lutsepp Kalju Orro Aarne Üksküla Short video http ://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VUZzn5W_kc Reviews,famous quotes Reviews : There is some very good jokes in this movie and the actings are pretty good too.
**Answering the phone professionally The rules for answering a telephone are simple but they need to be continually reviewed and practised. Following are the most basic ones, which should always be employed. 1. Use the four answering courtesies: · Greet the caller · State your organisation (or department) · Introduce yourself · Offer your help "Good afternoon, Accounts, Andrew Batt speaking. How may I help?" 2. Show enthusiasm when you answer. Help make the caller feel welcome A tired voice lacking in enthusiasm is very unappealing and reflects on the professionalism of your organisation. 3. Use friendly phrases as part of your greeting. · "Thanks for calling." · "May I help you?" 4. Remember to smile as you pick up the receiver. It may help if you have a mirror on your desk, this way you will be able to see how you sound on the telephone. Also, as a reminder, tape the word `Smile' on your phone.
Noun Adjective Noun Adjective Noun Adjective Noun Adjective enthusiasm enthusiastic danger dangerous beauty beautiful soap soapy ice icy storm stormy emotion emotional
In Norway, Christmas is celebrated with great enthusiasm and fervor. `Gledelig Jul' or `God Jul' is the Norwegian way of wishing `Merry Christmas'. A unique tradition in Norway relates to the Christmas tree that Norway gifts to England every Christmas. The tree is basically an annual present to the United Kingdom, to honor the help rendered by the British people to the natives, during the Second World War. The tree is made to stand in Trafalgar Square, in the middle of London. Hundreds of people, from around the city, come to watch the gifted Christmas tree, when the lights are turned on. Read on to know more about Christmas traditions and celebrations in Norway. Christmas Celebrations In Norway While there are many customs and traditions linked to Christmas in Norway, there is one long- standing and very popular tradition that includes a little gnome Nisse, who guards the farm animals. It is believed that he plays tricks on children, ...
Cognitive Principles Cognitive Principles 2. Meaningful Learning 3. Anticipation of Reward “Rote learning has little chance of Reward = Better performance creating long-term retention.” (TBP pg. Application – Use verbal praise, 65) encouragement, compliments, Application – Appeal to students’ enthusiasm, and remind students of language needs and goals, link new long-term rewards. knowledge to previous knowledge, avoid pitfalls (TBP pg. 66) 1 Cognitive Principles Cognitive Principles 4. Intrinsic Motivation 6. Autonomy 5. Strategic Investment Successful learners take control of
manual's instructions. 4 Make the reader understand the purpose of each action and each step in the process, motivating her to complete each one by explaining the reason for it and the benefits of following the directions presented in the manual. Don't make the reader guess why an action might be necessary or wonder how it would be helpful. Doing so might cause her to skip a necessary step or avoid an entire process that could greatly simplify her life--and greatly increase her enthusiasm for your product. 5 Break the process down into small, easy-to-remember steps. Then present the steps in sequential order, from first to last, being sure that each step leads logically to the next. Be sure not to omit any important background information that will clarify the next step and place it into the proper context. 6 Write in plain, clear, simple language, and be sure the wording you use to write your manual is not ambiguous
JOB ADVERTISEMENTS - vocabulary 1. as required – vastavalt nõudmistele 2. at least 2 years of administrating experience – vähemalt 2 aastane kogemus administratiivtöös 3. advanced / fluent English language skills (both verbal and written) – hea inglise keele oskus (nii suuline kui kirjalik) 4. willingness to work – valmisolek töötada 5. learn & grow in knowledge and career – täiendada teadmisi ja karjäärivõimalusi 6. is a huge bonus – on suureks eeliseks 7. will be considered as advantage – on eeliseks 8. Develop and implement a business plan and sales strategy – arendada ja rakendada äriplaani ja müügistrateegiat 9. Be responsible for the budget – vastutada eelarve eest 10. initiate and implement promotion and advertising activities – algatada ja viia ellu uusi reklaamimisviise 11. in order to increase competitiveness – et suurendada konkurentsivõimet 12. Competitive remunera...
It's a famous heritage atmospheric theatre in downtown Auckland. It was renovated in 2000 to its original condition. Auckland War Memorial Museum It's a large multi-exhibition museum in the Auckland Domain, known for its impressive neo-classicist style. Eden Park It's the city's primary stadium and a frequent home for All Blacks rugby union and Black Caps cricket matches. It will be the location of the 2011 Rugby World Cup final. 8. What is its nickname? City of Sails, for its enthusiasm for the sport of sailing. 9. Describe the climate of Auckland. Auckland has a warm-temperate climate, with warm, humid summers and mild, damp winters. The average daily maximum temperature is 23.7 °C in February, and 14.5 °C in July. It is one of the sunniest spots in the country. It also has a high rainfall, which ensures the lushness of its rainforests. Summer is from December to February, Autumn or Fall is from March to May, Winter
In 1814, when the French empire fell, he decided to settle in Italy. But the more authentic Stendhal is to be found elsewhere, and above all in a cluster of favourite ideas: the hostility to the concept of "ideal beauty," the notion of modernity, and the exaltation of energy, passion, and spontaneity. His personal philosophy, to which he himself gave the name of "Beylisme" (after his real family name, Beyle) stressed the importance of the "pursuit of happiness" by combining enthusiasm with rational skepticism, lucidity with willful surrender to lyric emotions. "Beylisme," as he understood it, meant cultivating a private sensibility while developing the art of hiding and protecting it. Charterhouse of Parma is Stendhal's other masterpiece. It fuses elements of Renaissance chronicles, fictional and historical sources, recent historical events (the Napoleonic regime in Italy, the Battle of
"But the moment I hit the stage, it's a different feeling. I get nerve from somewhere; maybe it's because it's something I love to do." More than anything, it is this love of performing that won her the hearts of millions throughout the world. By the 1970s, she was performing with a trio headed by pianist Tommy Flanagan, and regularly with dozens of different symphony orchestras. Though her voice was not what it had been, Fitzgerald's enthusiasm and charisma continued to excite crowds well into the 1980s. After a successful appearance in the United Kingdom in 1990, she retired due to ailing health. Two years later President Ronald Reagan awarded her the National Medal of Honor. Suffering continued health problems, Fitzgerald spent the last few years of her life in her Beverly Hills home. On June 15, 1996 she died at the age of seventyeight. Of Fitzgerald, Johnny Mathis said, "She was the best there ever was. Amongst
· OBLIGE-oblication · ARRIVE-arrival · SENSE-sensitive, sensation · ASSIST-assistance · LATE-lately · COMPLETE-completion · 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
Isaac Newton: coupling of empirical observation with mathematical method. Principle of gravitation (Proof of the old concept of unity). The calculus method. Theory of light (prism). Lot of fear and superstition removed, more confidence in intellect, better understanding of Nature, science gave freedom and new hope. Belief that life in all aspects could be improved bu the use of intelligence. 16. The emergence of the polite society 18th C tired of 17th C instability. Polite man was social, enthusiasm was despised (fanatics), didn’t match woth politeness. Needed money to educate. Places for meeting, behaviour to recognise each other. Pubblic walks, theatres, clubs, coffee houses. Language of arts and culture. To break down social barriers. Distrust to imagination (close to enthusiasm). Believed in fact and reason. Climate not good for religion and poetry. Good for prose. Writing in English, not Latin. No flourish permitted. All amplifications of style abandoned.
two sports are similar enough that Irish and Australian teams sometimes play each other with a set of compromise rules. The All-Ireland semifinals and finals, sponsored by the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA), are highlights of the hurling and Gaelic football seasons. Soccer, rugby, sailing, cycling, golf, and horse and greyhound racing are also favorite activities. Soccer has become a particularly popular spectator sport in the 1990s, reflecting the enthusiasm surrounding the national team's successes during the first half of the decade. Fishing, or angling, is also a common recreational activity, featuring mainly trout and salmon fishing. Rugby internationals played at Dublin's Lansdowne Road stadium are considered high points of the sporting year. Enthusiasts of horse racing flock to the Galway Races in the summer and early fall. Holidays and Celebrations The Irish celebrate New Year's Day on 1 January. Saint Patrick's Day on 17 March is a
j) Most students have quite a good sense of their own ……. A) grasp B) ability C) idea D) information Task 7. Use the word given in capitals at the end of each line to form a word that fits in the space in the same line. School report Margaret started English Literature this term, and I am afraid that her (1) introduction to INTRODUCE the subject has not been entirely (2) She has not shown much enthusiasm, and does not SUCCESS always pay (3) in class. Her assignments are often (4), because she is so untidy, and ATTEND; READ FAIL; REVISE because of her (5) to check her work thoroughly. She failed to do any (6) before the end of MISTAKE term test, and had poor results
3) Native and foreign elements Native vocabulary: INDO-EUROPEAN- mother, foot, heart, father, sea, night etc GERMANIC- friend, bidge, ship, life, heaven OLD-ENGLISH- bad, bird, woman, lady and gospel LATIN- cheap, pepper, street, mile, butter, cheese, wine, inch, ounce, pound, kitchen, plum, cup, dish, mint, leitchester, clorcester, colonia, lincoln, fossbrok, mass, monk, nunn, bishop, abbot, minster, apostle, pope, altar, hymn, democratic, juvenile, sophisticated, aboration, enthusiasm, permissions, imaginary, allusion, anacroism, dexterity, nucleous, formula, vertegra, corpuscle, atomic, carnivorous, incubate, molacule, i.e- that is, viz- videlicet, etc- et cetera, e.f- confer Latin adjectives for english nouns- nose-nasal, mouth-oral, sun-solar, moon-lunas, son-filial, daughter- filial, mother- maternal, father- paternal. GREEK- abbot, angel, apostle, bishop, school, cilinder, cycle, dialoge, cardiac, phonetic,
an unstressed syllable in the same word, underwent voicing and became respectively the fricatives[1] *b, *d, *z, *g, *g. Significance: Karl Verner published his discovery in the article "Eine Ausnahme der ersten Lautverschiebung" (an exception to the first sound shift) in Kuhn's Journal of Comparative Linguistic Research in 1876, but he had presented his theory already on 1 May, 1875 in a comprehensive personal letter to his friend and mentor, Vilhelm Thomsen. It was received with great enthusiasm by the young generation of comparative philologists, the so- called Junggrammatiker, because it was an important argument in favour of theNeogrammarian dogma that the sound laws were without exceptions ("die Ausnahmslosigkeit der Lautgesetze"). BREAKING IN OLD ENGLISH Vowel breaking is a sound change whereby a single vowel changes to become a diphthong in specific environments. The resulting sound preserves the original vowel, which is either preceded or followed by a glide
borrowed, chair infuenced stool and it is now a taburet). Borrowings have influenced the English language a lot but native elements should not be disregarded or overlooked. Latin borrowings cheap, pepper, street, mile, butter, cheese, wine, inch, ounce, pound, kitchen, plum, cup, dish, mint, Leicester, Clocester, colonia, lincoln, fossbrok, mass, monk, nun, bishop, abbot, minster, apostle, pope, altar, hymn, democratic, juvenile, sophisticated, abortion, enthusiasm, permissions, imaginary, allusion, anachronism, dexterity, nucleus, formula, vertebra, corpuscle, atomic, carnivorous, incubate, molecule, i.e- that is, viz- videlicet, etc- et cetera, c.f- confer Latin adjectives for english nouns- nose-nasal, mouth-oral, sun-solar, Greek borrowings abbot, angel, apostle, bishop, school, cilinder, cycle, dialogue, cardiac, phonetic, gymnasium, biathlon, pentathlon, decathlon, olympic, diagnosis, prognosis,
..............................................................................174 Awakened Doing........................................................................................175 The Three Modalities of Awakened Doing................................................176 Acceptance.................................................................................................177 Enjoyment..................................................................................................177 Enthusiasm.................................................................................................180 The Frequency-holders..............................................................................183 The New Earth Is No Utopia.....................................................................184 Notes...........................................................................................................186 About the Author...............................................................
monumental staircases that had no parallel in previous architecture. The other Baroque innovation in worldly interiors was the state apartment, a processional sequence of increasingly rich interiors that culminated in a presence chamber or throne room or a state bedroom. The sequence of monumental stairs followed by a state apartment was copied in smaller scale everywhere in aristocratic dwellings of any pretensions. Baroque architecture was taken up with enthusiasm in central Germany (see, e.g., Ludwigsburg Palace and Zwinger Dresden), Austria and Russia (see, e.g., Peterhof). In England the culmination of Baroque architecture was embodied in work by Sir Christopher Wren, Sir John Vanbrugh and Nicholas Hawksmoor, from ca. 1660 to ca.
for a comic actress who had a huge, rowdy, popular following. Chekhov ran out of the theatre after the second act and roamed the streets, swearing never to write for the stage again. Exactly two years later, the fledgling Moscow Arts Theatre, under the guidance of Stanislavsky and Nemerovich-Danchenko, began the first of twenty-six rehearsals of The Seagull. The director, Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko, had recognised the potential of Chekhov's innovative dramatic technique and it was his enthusiasm that ensured the first highly successful production of the play. Th e plot of Chekhov's sixteen-page masterpiece is not complicated. A man meets a woman while both are vacationing -- without their spouses -- in the southern resort villa of Yalta. Th ey have an aff air and return to their respective spouses -- he to his wife in Moscow, she to her husband in Saratov. While at fi rst the man, Dmitrij Gurov, regards the aff air as just another pleasant fl ing, soon to be
time: *the twelfth cent borrowings: court, country, cabbage, prison; *the thirteenth cent borrowings: accuse, poison, pure; *17th cent borr: capital, commerce, investment, bank; *18th cent borr: democrate, royalist, to terrorize. 16. Sources of borrowing : Greek came mainly from Latin and France. There was great interest in Ancient literature and philosophy. English scolars borrowed words directly from Greek. They were bookish and scientific words. (nt, athlete, myth, enthusiasm). The Dutch lg- ship building terms were borrowed in the middle ages (nt, deck, rift(hari), skipper, yacht. Italian in the 16th cent Italic words penetrated into the Engl lg. Italy had a very developed culture (nt, violin, trio, piano, solo, libretto; studio, fresco, canto) Also casino, macaroni, spaghetti, fascism. Spanish borrowings were borrowed directly(nt, banana, cocoa, tomato, burrito,mosquito).Portugese: cobra, emu, port, tank, veranda. Russian: ruble, verst, steppe,
There are numerous bodies of freshwater including Loch Lomond and Loch Ness. Some parts of the coastline consist of machair, a low lying dune pasture land. Highlands and Islands lie to the north and west of the Highland Boundary Fault, which runs from Arran to Stonehaven. This part of Scotland largely Scotland within the UK A policy of devolution had been advocated by the three main UK parties with varying enthusiasm during recent history. Ex-Labour-leader John Smith described the revival of a Scottish parliament as the "settled will of the Scottish people". The constitutional status of Scotland is nonetheless subject to ongoing debate. In 2007, the Scottish Government established a "National Conversation" on constitutional issues, proposing a number of options such as increasing the powers of the Scottish Parliament, federalism, or a referendum on Scottish independence from the United Kingdom
15 The internet. The advent of the internet has provided facilities that enable customers to carry out certain monetary and non-monetary transactions and that give customers the ability to avoid the use of both branches and call centers. Arguably there has been two phases of development of the internet banking. First became the wave of enthusiasm with the ideas of internet-only banks that ran up to 2001. The second wave has recognized the internet bank as the complement to the branches that are still needed to develop the customer relationship. 5.5. References and readings Cavell, David J. (2008). Retail financial services The main delivery channels reviewed. London: VRL Publishing. Gylfason, T., Holmström, B., Korkman, S., Söderström, H. T., and Vihriälä, V. (2010)
[13] In 1935, the Museum of Modern Art in New York City presented an exhibition of his work. During World War II Léger lived in the United States, where he found inspiration in the novel sight of industrial refuse in the landscape. The shock of juxtaposed natural forms and mechanical elements, the "tons of abandoned machines with flowers cropping up from within, and birds perching on top of them" exemplified what he called the "law of contrast".[14] His enthusiasm for such contrasts resulted in such works as The Tree in the Ladder of 1943-44, and Romantic Landscape of 1946. A major work of 1944, Three Musicians (Museum of Modern Art, New York), reprises a composition of 1930. A folk-like composition reminiscent of Rousseau, it exploits the law of contrasts in its realistic juxtaposition of the three men and their instruments. Stained-glass window at the Central University of Venezuela, c.1950s
I enclose my CV and I would be glad to attend an interview at any time convenient to you. I look forward to hearing from you in due course, etc. A JOB APPLICATION TASK 28 Read the advertisement and the job application. What is the function of each of the three main paragraphs in Carina's letter? YOUNG COOK required to join a small team in a highly commended Brighton hotel specializing in modern European cooking to the highest standard. Would suit someone with enthusiasm, wishing to develop skills and responsibility. 5day week, salary in accordance with qualifications and experience. Accommodation available. Apply with CV to Mrs B H Albion, Restaurant Angelique, The Royal Parade, Brighton BN1 5JS. Mrs B H Albion Restaurant Angelique The Royal Parade Brighton BN1 SJS 79 Rue Daguerre Paris 75014 France Tel (00.33) 47.07.83.5 January 15th 2000 Dear Madam, I would like to apply for the position of cook advertised in this month's issue of The Lady.
himself with dignity and confidence at all times. Moreover, his passion for bullfighting gives his life meaning and purpose. In a world of amorality and corrupted masculinity, Romero remains a figure of honesty, purity, and strength. Montoya - The owner of a Pamplona inn and a bullfighting expert. Montoya sees bullfighting as something sacred, and he respects and admires Jake for his genuine enthusiasm about it. Montoya takes a paternal interest in the gifted young bullfighter Pedro Romero and seeks to protect him from the corrupting influences of tourists and fame. Frances Clyne - Cohn's girlfriend at the beginning of the novel. A manipulative status-seeker, Frances was highly domineering early in their relationship and persuaded Cohn to move to Paris. As her looks begin to fade, she becomes increasingly possessive and jealous.
colonia - Lincoln vicus ‘village’ - Greenwich, Harwich fossa ‘ditch’ - Fossbrook religious (6-7th centuries) mass, monk, nun, bishop, abbot, minster, apostle, pope, altar, hymn, angel, devil literary (renaissance) democratic, juvenile, sophisticated, aberration, enthusiasm, pernicious, imaginary, allusion, anachronism, dexterity scientific (17th-18th nucleus, formula, vertebra, corpuscle, atomic,carnivorous, incubate, aqueous, centuries) molecule The plurals of nucleus, verterbra, corpus, etc. Latin abbreviations in English i.e. = id est that is to say viz = namely etc = et cetera Latin adjectives for English nouns
Castrum – fortress : Manchester, Gloucester, Chester, Doncaster Colonia – colony : Lincoln Vicus – village : Greenwich, Harwich Fossa – ditch : Fossbrook Religious (6.-7.century) o Mass, monk, nun, bishop, abbot, minster, apostle, pope, altar, hymn, angel, devil Literary (renaissance) o Democratic, juvenile, sophisticated, aberration, enthusiasm, pernicious, imaginary, allusion, anachronism, dexterity Scientific (17.-18. century) o Nucleus, formula, vertebra, corpuscle, atomic, carnivorous, incubate, aqueous, molecule Latin abbreviations o i.e – id est – that is to say Latin adjectives for english nouns o Nasal, oral, solar, paternal, maternal, lithic, lunar, filial Actual inflected Latin verbs used as nouns
After the Indian Mutiny in 1857, the government of India was transferred from the East India Company to the Crown. In 1877, Victoria became empress of India. Her empire also included Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and large parts of Africa. During this period, Britain was largely uninvolved in European affairs, apart from the Crimean War from 1853 - 1856. Victoria's Golden Jubilee in 1887 and her Diamond Jubilee in 1897 were celebrated with great enthusiasm. Having witnessed a revolution in British government, huge industrial expansion and the growth of a worldwide empire, Victoria died on 22 January 1901 at Osborne House on the Isle of Wight. 23. National emblems, patron saints, holidays. England: flower - the Rose; animal lion; saint - St George; national day - 23 April St George's Day. Scotland flower - the Thistle and Scottish Bluebell; animal unicorn; saint - St Andrew, national day - 30 November St Andrew's Day
you in life. Your self-esteem is best defined as how much you like yourself. The more you like yourself, the better you perform at anything you attempt. And by the law of reversibility, the better you perform, the more you like yourself. Your self-esteem is the “reactor core” of your personality. It is the energy source that determines your levels of confidence and enthusiasm. The more you like yourself, the higher will be the standards you will set for yourself. The more you like yourself, the bigger the goals you will set for yourself and the longer you will ccc_tracy_1_1-17.qxd 6/23/03 2:46 PM Page 10 10 ➤ CHANGE YOUR THINKING, CHANGE YOUR LIFE persist in achieving them. People with high self-esteem are virtu- ally unstoppable.
approach usually works best for most children at various ages. Education for adults is so much different. Almost all of my teaching has been directed to adults. I've dealt with preschoolers, elementary and junior high school kids exclusively in my role as a plant expert showing them the joy and wonder of wild plants. Until I do more teaching children, I can't say I've developed any insights or made any guidelines, except I know all students respond to enthusiasm and like to become fascinated. Educational systems of European and American types Being exposed to educational systems of both European and American types, I would point out the following positive trends in higher education of the USA in comparison to European style: 1. Link between the needs of real life and higher education which manifests itself in existence of Career Service, Job Fairs, study plus work possibilities ( Co-op system). Good students get well-paid jobs after graduating; 2
Washington, she meets an exquisitely handsome boy at school for whom she feels an overwhelming attraction and who she comes to realize is not wholly human. ISBN 0-316-16017-2 [1. Vampires -- Fiction. 2. High schools -- Fiction. 3. Schools -- Fiction. 4. Washington (State) -- Fiction.] I. Title. PZ7.M57188Tw2005 [Fic] --dc22 2004024730 Printed in the United States of America For my big sister, Emily, without whose enthusiasm this story might still be unfinished. But of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it: for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die. Genesis 2:17 PREFACE I'd never given much thought to how I would die -- though I'd had reason enough in the last few 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.
task that would be a huge accomplishment, you'll likely grab a leader's interest. Be careful telling a leader it "can't be done", unless you want to see some motivation accelerate. Results When a leader gets to celebrate a win, he or she will soon want another. Leaders thrive on accomplishments. Enthusiasm Leaders are motivated by those who have a passion and drive to achieve. Show a little excitement towards the vision and you've likely got a leaders attention. Risk Tell a leader something is "dangerous" and he or she is likely motivated to attempt it. Leaders love a challenge. Change When things get stale, throw a little change in the mix, and a leader has a new motivation. Chaos - I know it sounds strange, but leaders love to fix things...improve them...make things better. It could
time The Little Mermaid and Beauty and the Beast were being conceived. Campbell's ideas were of tremendous value as I researched and developed stories based on fairy tales, mythology, science fiction, comic books, and historical adventure. Joseph C a m p b e l l d i e d in 1 9 8 7 . I met h i m briefly a couple o f t i m e s at seminars. H e was still a striking man in his eighties, tall, vigorous, eloquent, funny, full of energy and enthusiasm, and utterly charming. Just before his passing, he told me, "Stick with this stuff. It'll take you a long way." I recently discovered that for some time the "Practical G u i d e " has been required reading for Disney development executives. D a i l y requests for it, as well as countless letters and calls from novelists, screenwriters, producers, writers, and actors, indicate that the Hero's Journey ideas are being used and developed more than ever.
(C) Postpone (D) Intensify 5. Martin Luther King gained recognition for his use of nonviolent methods. (A) Earned (B) Rejected (C) Enhanced (D) Promoted LESSON 16 conscientious convey encompass expansion heighten highlight inadvertently inevitable infancy miraculously retrieve systematically unlikely unwarranted zenith conscientious adj. showing serious purpose; one who adv. conscientiously works carefully and with enthusiasm Syn. meticulous She is a conscientious representative of the student body. They approached the task conscientiously. convey v. to make something known to others; to communicate Syn. communicate The manager of the store conveyed his displeasure directly to the workers. He was able to convey his message to the audience with ease. encompass v
rapidity. When the Under Secretary protested that the system was too complicated, Wheatstone volunteered to show that three out of four boys from the nearest elementary school could be taught it in 15 minutes. The Under Secretary put him off. "That is very possible," he said, "but you could never teach it to attaches." Playfair, reasoning that this reflected more on the diplomats than on the cipher, remained enthusiastic about it. There were good grounds for enthusiasm. In the first place, the cipher's being digraphic obliterates the single-letter characteristics—e, for example, is no longer identifiable as an entity. This undercuts the usual monographic methods of frequency analysis. Secondly, encipherment by digraphs halves the number of elements available for frequency analysis. A 100-letter text will have only 50 cipher digraphs. In the third place, and most important, the number of digraphs is far greater than the number of single letters, and
and jump into the deepest part of the pool. Panicked, I began pulling off my shoes to jump in to his rescue when I saw him bob to the surface and paddle safely to the side of the pool-where I dashed, shoes in hand, to meet him. "Chris, you can swim!" I said excitedly. "You can swim!" "Yes," he responded casually, "I learned how today." "This is terrific! This is just terrific," I burbled, gesturing expansively to convey my enthusiasm. "But, how come you didn't need your plastic ring today?" "Well, I'm 3 years old, and Tommy is 3 years old. And Tommy can swim with- out a ring, so that means I can, too." I could have kicked myself. Of course it would be to little Tommy, not to a 6'2" graduate student, that Chris would look for the most relevant information about what he could or should do. Had I been more thoughtful about solving Chris'
rough black silk in greedy hands. Watching the flexing of his muscles as he moved, I didn't even pretend not to stare at the magnificent package between his legs. Despite the heat of the water, my nipples beaded tight and goose bumps raced across my skin. His knowing smile as he joined me told me he knew exactly what kind of effect he had on me. I retaliated by running soapy hands all over his godlike body; then sitting on the bench and sucking him off with such enthusiasm he had to support himself with both palms pressed flat against the tile. His raw, raspy instructions echoed in my mind the entire time I dressed for work, which I did quickly-before he had a chance to finish his shower and fuck the hell out of me as he'd threatened to just before spurting fiercely down my throat. He'd had no nightmares during the night. Sex as a sedative seemed to be working, and I was extremely grateful for that.
In our context: 80 seconds as a target is all you need to understand. That is the button. If, instead of 80 seconds, you mimic a glossy magazine routine--say, an arbitrary 5 sets of 10 repetitions--it is the muscular equivalent of sitting in the sun for an hour with a 15-minute MED. Not only is this wasteful, it is a predictable path for preventing and reversing gains. The organs and glands that help repair damaged tissue have more limitations than your enthusiasm. The kidneys, as one example, can clear the blood of a nite maximum waste concentration each day (approximately 450 mmol, or millimoles per liter). If you do a marathon three-hour workout and make your bloodstream look like an LA tra c jam, you stand the real chance of hitting a biochemical bottleneck. Again: the good news is that you don't need to know anything about your kidneys to use this Again: the good news is that you don't need to know anything about your kidneys to use this