made of twigs and leaves. VII slaid The platypus is found in eastern Australia. They live aside freshwater rivers or lakes, and create burrows for shelter and protection. When swimming the platypus has its eyes shut. They swim underwater for 2 minutes, before returning to the surface for oxygen. Platypuses can consume their own body weight in food in a 24 hour period! The male platypus has venom strong enough to can kill a small dog, or cause excruciating pain among humans. VIII slaid Thank you for listening!
doing basic moves. Clom i was really really surprised at how little i loved this film. the art and sound design is really John Maguire I got some big laughs brilliant but it's a surprisingly inert, dare from Scott Pilgrim, more than any other I say, heartless enterprise. the romance comedy so far this summer. It's witty, is excruciating (not to mind groan sweet and very geeky and, best of all; it inducingly chaste), the story takes a doesn't ask to be taken seriously. There while to get going and then slots into a is no real purpose to any of the clunky format in such a thrall to how uncountable homages rendered other AWESOME it is that it forgets that than that they are, or were once, you're supposed to root for characters
steps I'd learned in therapy: Talk it out. Explain what triggered the negative feelings to your partner. Face the trigger and work through it. Maybe if I'd been less shaken by the depth of my feelings for Gideon, I could have done all that. Maybe if we hadn't just had mind-blowing sex, I would have felt less raw and vulnerable. I'd never know. What I felt was slightly dirty, a little bit used, and a whole lot hurt. This particular revelation had hit me with excruciating force, and like a child, I wanted to hurt him back. I scooped up the condoms, lube, and toys, and tossed them on the bed. Then, just as he called out my name in an amused and teasing voice, I picked up my bag and left him. 10 I kept my head down as I made the walk of shame past the registration desk and exited the hotel through a side door. I was red-faced with embarrassment remembering the manager who'd
my window. The silver car was already there, waiting in Charlie's spot on the driveway. I bounded down the stairs and out the front door, wondering how long this bizarre routine would continue. I never wanted it to end. He waited in the car, not appearing to watch as I shut the door behind me without bothering to lock the dead-bolt. I walked to the car, pausing shyly before opening the door and stepping in. He was smiling, relaxed -- and, as usual, perfect and beautiful to an excruciating degree. "Good morning." His voice was silky. "How are you today?" His eyes roamed over my face, as if his question was something more than simple courtesy. "Good, thank you." I was always good -- much more than good -- when I was near him. His gaze lingered on the circles under my eyes. "You look tired." "I couldn't sleep," I confessed, automatically swinging my hair around my shoulder to provide some measure of cover. "Neither could I," he teased as he started the engine
The sending of the identical text in two different keys produces "isomorphic" cryptograms that yield exceedingly valuable information on the composition of the cipher. The cryptanalysts of S.I.S. and OP-20-G, then, matched these assumed plaintexts to their ciphertexts and looked for regularities from which they could derive a pattern of encipherment. This kind of work, particularly in the early stages of a difficult cryptanalysis, is perhaps the most excruciating, exasperating, agonizing mental process known to man. Hour after hour, day after day, sometimes month after month, the cryptanalyst tortures his brain to find some relationship between the letters that hangs together, does not dead-end in self-contradiction, and leads to additional valid results. The codebreakers attacking the new Japanese mechanism went just so far—and for months could not push on further. As William Friedman
week for both of his shoulders. He was understandably upset. For one thing, the surgery would cost him about $18,000. Additionally, he'd have to undergo an extensive rehab program, and this would keep him from competing and earning an income for a long time. I told him to get his ass over to my o ce right away and see [Dr. Mike Leahy] before letting a surgeon anywhere near his shoulders. "When Milos came to the o ce, he hadn't trained in over four months because of the excruciating pain. Even lowering an unloaded Olympic bar (45 pounds) caused him to recoil in pain. However, after working on him [on adhesions around his subscapularis muscle] for just 45 minutes, Dr. Leahy told Milos to go to the gym and give his shoulders a trial run. Somewhat reluctantly, Milos allowed me to take him to the local World Gym. In total disbelief, he bench- pressed 315 pounds for two reps. Five days later, he did 6 reps with 315 pounds without feeling any pain!"