expectations demands intense work. Marc and Catherine kindly ask me to join them in their cozy little house near the farm. We sit down by the fireplace and Catherine serves her special and at least locally very famous tea the exact recipe is a well-kept secret, of course. Was working in a farm something you planned already long ago? Marc: No, not really. In high school I actually planned to become a chemical engineer. It's funny how haphazard things in life change and affect so many other things. Practical chemistry lead me first to household chemicals, then I started studying fertilizers and discovered the charms of agriculture. As I've grown up in a big city, cows and other farm animals have always symbolised a better world, something more perfect but less accessible to me. Yes, especially cows, I've always loved them. So a few years after university it was clear to me that I want to work with cows.
In Estonia there are many theatres. Tallinn has 8 theatres. Most of them are located in the Old Town or near the Old Town. These 8 theatres are: Estonian National Opera, Tallinn City Theatre, Estonian Drama Theatre, Estonian State Puppet & Youth Theatre, Russian Drama Theatre, VAT Theatre, Theatre NO99 and Von Krahl Theatre. Estonian National Opera The song and drama society `'Estonia'' was founded in 1865. Play-acting started in 1871. The following theatre activites were relatively haphazard, theatre as a tradition really came into being since 1895, when the society began to direct song plays, folk plays and comedies, usually with singing and dancing; in the start of the XX century already saw more serious drama on the stage. In year 1906 Paul Pinna and Theodor Altermann founded a professional theatre called `'Estonia''. Since 1998, it is called The Estonian National Opera and operates as a body governed by public
adv. disapprovingly Syn. objection Their disapproval of the plan caused the experiment to be abandoned. The students disapproved of the plan of study. disruptive adj. causing confusion and interruption v. disrupt Syn. disturbing n. disruption adv. disruptively Frequent questions during lectures can be disruptive. The storm caused a disruption in bus service. haphazardly adv. having no order or pattern, by chance adj. haphazard Syn. arbitrarily, carelessly n. haphazardness It was obvious that the house was built haphazardly. Susan completed the assignment in a haphazard way. MATCHING Choose the synonym. 1. widely 6. haphazardly (A) broadly (A) suddenly (B) abroad (B) secretly (C) secretly (C) carelessly (D) truly (D) constantly 2. autonomous 7. constant
habits and subconscious sabotage: "It was really tempting to come home from work and say, `Oh, I'm tired,' and go to bed without doing it. I really had to view it as practice, just like yoga. Practice is something you do even when you don't want to." Rediscovering her sensual self went far beyond the bedroom. Giselle started taking salsa lessons and was nally comfortable as a sensual being. Comfortable in her own skin, she nally felt free to express herself. Not in a haphazard manner, but free from unwarranted guilt or shame. The mind can rationalize terrible voids, and there is no need for it. Life is short, and sex should be a wonderful part of it. It's a fundamental part of our natural hardwiring. Isn't it time you let your hair down and had some real fun with it? All it takes is 15 minutes. It's no secret that I'm fascinated by pharmaceuticals. I was buzzing on one of my favorites, ca eine, as I listened to my friend Violet Blue wax
kissed me the last time... I couldn't stand to see them. So I fought against my weariness and the sun rose higher. I was still awake when we came through a shallow mountain pass and the sun, behind us now, reflected off the tiled rooftops of the Valley of the Sun. I didn't have enough emotion left to be surprised that we'd made a three-day journey in one. I stared blankly at the wide, flat expanse laid out in front of me. Phoenix -- the palm trees, the scrubby creosote, the haphazard lines of the intersecting freeways, the green swaths of golf courses and turquoise splotches of swimming pools, all submerged in a thin smog and embraced by the short, rocky ridges that weren't really big enough to be called mountains. The shadows of the palm trees slanted across the freeway -- defined, sharper than I remembered, paler than they should be. Nothing could hide in these shadows. The bright, open freeway seemed benign enough. But I felt no relief, no sense of homecoming.
to the recommended service schedules should not have to use this investigations. Sometimes this is obvious, but on other occasions a section of the manual very often. Modern component reliability is such little detective work will be necessary. The owner who makes half a that, provided those items subject to wear or deterioration are dozen haphazard adjustments or replacements may be successful in inspected or renewed at the specified intervals, sudden failure is curing a fault (or its symptoms), but will be none the wiser if the fault comparatively rare. Faults do not usually just happen as a result of recurs and ultimately may have spent more time and money than was sudden failure, but develop over a period of time. Major mechanical necessary. A calm and logical approach will be found to be more
Cryptography does not. Consequently, the telegraph, which affected only cryptography, had had a wholly internal influence upon cryptology. That a hierarchy of special systems had arisen to displace the nomenclator interested only cryptologists; it did not matter to generals or statesmen. And although the telegraph greatly increased the volume of communications, wiretapping could produce intercepts only at rare and irregular intervals. Cryptanalysis could exercise only transient and haphazard effects. Its potential remained largely unfulfilled. Kerckhoffs accurately regarded it as an auxiliary to cryptography, a means to the end of perfecting military codes and ciphers. Cryptanalysis during the telegraph years was interesting but inconsequential, intriguing but academic—an I' ideal topic to pass a Victorian tea-time, perhaps, but not I much more. ; - The radio, however, turned over to the commander a i copy of every enemy cryptogram it conveyed