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"filth" - 8 õppematerjali

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Eating bugs

Why it´s good? Protein, but also vitamins, minerals, and fats. Crickets are high in calcium, and termites are rich in iron. Hamburger-18% protein and 18% fat. Cooked grasshopper- 60% protein and 6% fat. 45 kgs of feed produces 4.5 kgs of beef but 20 kgs of cricket. Products which can contain insects Canned citrus frukt juices- Insects and insect eggs 5 or more and other fly eggs per 250 ml or 1 or more maggots per 250 ml Chocolate and chocolate liquor- Insect filth, 60 or more insect fragments per 100 grams Peanut butter Insect filth, 30 or more insect fragments per 100 grams Thank you for listening! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3f7I_HAm4d8&feature=

Keeled → Inglise keel
4 allalaadimist
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Master of the Moor

v Stephen at police station for questioning v Stephens wife Lyn is meeting another man The Plot v Stephen doesn't want any kids v Stephen goes in the mine v Someone is living in the mine v Lyn leaves Stephen v Third murder v Stephen meets old friend Peter v Stephen stays a night in the mine to meet killer Addition v Movie : Master of the Moor 1994 Klõpsake juhtslaidi teksti laadide redige Colin Filth as Teine tase Kolmas tase Stephen Neljas tase Viies tase Whalby. My opinion v Very interesting to read v Hard words v Lots of details The End " I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills from whence cometh my help..."

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8 allalaadimist
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TEST - the history of London

history due to a fourfold growth in London’s population and timber building. 15) The leader of the Civil War was Charles I, who was executed during the war. The leader of the Puritan Republic was Oliver Cromwell. 16) London’s greatest disaster is considered the Great Fire, which happened in 1666 and destroyed some 13 000 houses over an area of almost 400 acres. 17) The positive effect of the Great Fire was to rid the city of its accumulated filth. 18) London became the premier city of the Western world during the Georgian era. 19) The Victorian era is marked with development of industry and public transport. 20) Yes, it did. The Second World War had a devastating effect, destroying large areas of the city.

Keeled → Inglise keel
3 allalaadimist
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London History

1945) remains a centre for fashion, culture and artistic achievement. 1. In ex. 2 at page 19 you have to read and translate the words from the text and divide them into 4 groups according to their word-stress. I ­ swamp, Celtic, devastate, province, fort, hostile, reign, flourish, mighty, grant, charter, citizen, secular, turbulent, costly, claim, breach, fourfold, filth, era. II ­ inhabitant, basilica, defence, withdraw, invade, decisive, accession, succeed, disaster, erect, achievement. III ­ occupation, influential, execution, restoration. IV ­ ecclesiastical. 2. In ex. 3 at page 20 you had to find some information about those famous people. Alfred the Great (reigned 871-899) ­ Saxon king, a learned man, chose London to be the capital of the country.

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5 allalaadimist
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Leksikoloogia konspekt (uus)

 -dom – kingdom, serfdom, freedom  -hood – likelihood, manhood, childhood, womanhood  -ness – likeness, everydayness, bitterness, kindness, blindness, darkness  -ship – friendship, kinship, scholarship, citizenship, relationship, membership  -th – growth, stealth, brith, death, oath, strength, filth, health, truth, depth o Romance  -age – suffrage, passage, baggage, carriage, vicarage, village, homage, marriage  -ment – detainment, banishment, embodiment, excitement, ligament, treatment, ornament  -mony – matrimony, testimony, ceremony, sanctimony, alimony  -tude – longitude, latitude, fortitude, solitude o Greek

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14 allalaadimist
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Oliver twist - kokkuvõte

went through. He sat with bleeding feet on a doorstep one morning when a curious looking young gentleman around his age began talking to him. His name was Jack Dawkins He befriended Oliver and asked if he was going to London. Oliver told him he was and explained that he did not know where he would be staying. Mr. Dawkins told Oliver he could come with him and with his patronage stay with a gentleman he knew. So Oliver went with Jack and saw the filth of London for the first time in the middle of the night. Jack took Oliver into the house of the gentleman and he met the old Jew, Fagin. Fagin fed him and introduced him to the other boys sitting him in the room who, like Mr. Dawkins, were dressed like little adults. They were drinking spirits and smoking pipes and Oliver joined them. Fagin gave him a bed to sleep in and he went to sleep. Chapter 9: Oliver awoke the next morning to see Fagin examining several watches and rings in a wooden box

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312 allalaadimist
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TARTUFFE (inglise keelne)

TARTUFFE A COMEDY 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 hou...

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3 allalaadimist
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Keelefilosoofia raamat

Searle (1979b: 102­3) offers the example, "Richard is a gorilla," which the Naive Simile Theory would parse as "Richard is like a gorilla." Let us suppose that what is meant is that Richard is like a gorilla in being fierce, nasty, prone to violence, and perhaps not very bright. But primatologists tell us that, in fact, gorillas are not nasty or prone to violence; they are shy, rather sensitive, and very intelligent animals. Likewise pigs, which figure in many metaphors imputing messiness, filth, greed, obesity, crassness, or some combination of those: I myself know of no evidence that pigs are particularly greedy, or that they are fatter relative to their skeletal size than other animals are.8 One might think that Fogelin has easily avoided this new objection, for when a simile is figurative it does not require the actual correctness of the relevant stereotype. "Sam acts like a gorilla" and "Merle eats like a pig" are

Filosoofia → Filosoofia
46 allalaadimist


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