marriage (Frank had taken his uncle's name upon going to live with him) but a son who has never been seen in Highbury. John Knightley in particular thinks it oddly improper that Frank has not yet called on his newly remarried father, even though Frank lives some distance away in Yorkshire with the Churchills. There have been letters from him, of course, and a pleasant surprise of the dinner party is an announcement that a recent letter says that Frank will be coming for a visit within a fortnight, an announcement that reminds Emma that, if she were ever to marry, Frank would suit her in age, character, and condition. The snow increases to the point that the visitors feel that they must go if they are to reach home safely. To her consternation Emma finds herself alone with Mr. Elton in the second carriage. But she is disconcerted even more when he begins insistently to declare his love for her and when he is amazed to learn that she thought him in love with Harriet. Emma's refusal of Mr
ma pean oma arve sulgema I have to close my account see libises mul meelest It slipped my mind ma saadan su ära I'll see you off ma sõitsin hääletamisega I drove by hitch-hiking daamide tualett ladies' lavatory tsekke rahaks vahetama to chash the cheques mulle poleks pähegi tulnud It wouldn't have occured to me mul on vaevalt aega I have barely time sa jääd lennust maha you are going to miss your flight meil kulus kaks nädalat It took us a fortnight nalju jutustama to tell jokes kuldne käevõru a golden bracelet 62 nad ootasid lenu teatamist they were waiting for their flight to be announced kuidas on asjad korraldatud välismaal how things are arranged abroad te jooksete jalad rakku you run off you feet lahti pakkima lõppjaamas to unpack at the destination ei mingit muret no trouble whatsoever (enne lendu) registeerima to check in väljapääs lennukite juurde the separture gate
But it not seems so easy for everybody, Piggott Bros, the Society's tent contractors, were clearly horrified by the timetable. It would be impossible to put up the tents in 14 days; they needed 28. Considering that Chelsea Flower Show now takes at least 18 months to organize, the RHS was running a tight schedule if it was to be ready in time. At the end of April, a Press luncheon was arranged for Monday, 19 May (a tradition that continues to this day). With only a fortnight to go until the Show opened, the committee agreed that bath chairs should be allowed in, from 9am to 12 noon on the second day, for five shilling extra. Finally Chelsea successfully opened on Tuesday 20 May 1913, for three days. Curiously there is no Council report on how this Show actually went. The Gardner's Chronicle, which provided the best written records of the early Shows, was more forthcoming. The first Chelsea "had exceeded all expectations".
serving you." Mrs. Bennet deigned not to make any reply, but, unable to contain herself, began scolding one of her daughters. "Don't keep coughing so, Kitty, for Heaven's sake! Have a little compassion on my nerves. You tear them to pieces." "Kitty has no discretion in her coughs," said her father; "she times them ill." "I do not cough for my own amusement," replied Kitty fretfully. "When is your next ball to be, Lizzy?" "To-morrow fortnight." "Aye, so it is," cried her mother, "and Mrs. Long does not come back till the day before; so it will be impossible for her to introduce him, for she will not know him herself." "Then, my dear, you may have the advantage of your friend, and introduce Mr. Bingley to her." "Impossible, Mr. Bennet, impossible, when I am not acquainted with him myself; how can you be so teasing?" "I honour your circumspection. A fortnight's acquaintance is certainly very little. One
via the IEEE 1451 interface. The IEEE 1451 standard permits sensors to support the following units: length (in meters) mass (in kilograms) time (in seconds) current (in amps) temperature (degrees kelvin) amount of substance (mole) luminous intensity (candela) plane angle (radians) solid angle (meters2) Whatever unit the sensor measures in, it must be converted to these standard units. A sensor may be measuring speed in miles per hour or furlongs per fortnight, but it must be converted by the STIM microprocessor to meters per second before transmission over the IEEE 1451 interface. When the controlling processor reads sensor data from an IEEE 1451 sensor, what gets transmitted is a string of exponents, one for each of these values. The velocity-measuring example just given would output a positive exponent for meters and a negative exponent for seconds, making a meters/second result. All the other exponents would be 0 (anything to the 0
Allies. And in fact, on February 3 Wilson announced to Congress that he was breaking diplomatic relations with Germany, as he had said he would the previous April if Germany continued its course of submarine warfare. Though he added that "only actual overt acts" on Germany's part would make him believe that she really would sink neutral vessels on the high seas, it must have seemed to the war-weary Allies that now, at last, within a few days or a fortnight at most, the United States would enter the war. Day by day, they awaited the final inevitable step. While waiting, Room 40 continued its work on Code 0075. De Grey had taken to Hall Bernstorff's message giving details of his interview with Wilson severing relations. Recovered codegroups were substituted into the Zimmermann telegram, and on February 5 Hall was able to show a more fully solved version of it to Lord Hardinge at the Foreign Office.