ART 1. visuaalne(nägemise kaudu tajutav) kunst-visual arts 2. arhitektuur- architecture 3. esitus(ettekandev)kunst-performing arts 4. skulptuur-sculpture 5. skulptor-sculptor 6. tarbekunst(rakenduskunst)- applied arts 7. vitraaz-stained glass 8. pastell- pastel 9. maastikumaal-landscape 10. portree-portrait 11. portretist(portreekunstnik)- portrait 12. portreemaal-portrait painting 13. viirutamine, viirutamistehnika-streaking 14. emailimine, emailivärviga katmine-enameling ? 15. graveerimine-engraving 16. papp-cardboard 17. elevandiluu-ivory 18. papüürus-papyrus 19. miniatuurkunst, miniatuurmaal-miniature painting 20. lõuend-canvas 21. õlivärvid-oil paints, oil colours 22. meremaal-seascape, marine painting ? 23. värvigamma, koloriit-colour, coulouring ? 24. (joonistamis)süsi-charcoal 25. käsitöö-handicraft 26. keraamika ja pottsepatöö-pottery 27. ...
hand over yield control of hang up suspend have on be dressed in have over entertain someone informally at one's home hold off delay; restrain hold up delay; rob; threaten with a weapon keep up continue; keep the same pace leave out omit let down disappoint let out release from confinement; make larger (in sewing) light up light; illuminate thoroughly live down live in such a way as to cause something to be forgotten make over remake move over move to the side pass out distribute pass up not take advantage of (as an opportunity) pass on transmit pay back repay pay off discharge a debt completely; give someone his final pay pick up come to meet an escort; lift with hands or fingers; learn casually;initiate an association publicly
Latin: there are 3 layers of Lain borrowings:1)these words stand for objects in everyday life (, nt pepper, plum, butter, wine, cup, dish, chalk, kitchen, street, mile, inch). 2)At the end of 6th cent christianity was introduced. Latin became the language of religion (nt, altar, angels, candle, devil, munk, nun, pope, preest) 3) During the Renaissance mainly abstract nouns and scientific words were borrowed (nt, conception, effect, idea, illusion, medium, necessity, decorate, illuminate, absolute, humaine,immidiate) Old Scandinavian(12-14 cent)England had been constantly invaded(sisse tooma) Norveigns, Danes, Sweeds. Especially strong was Danes influence(nt, anger, fellow, husband, sister; to die, to call, to raise; ill, low, odd, ugly). A typical feature of Scandinavian words is sk(sc) skill, scare, scanty(kasin). French found their way to Engl from the Norman dialect. In 1066 Engl was conqured by the Normans
In most cameras, a half-press activates and locks the auto-focus, and a full press initiates the image capturing process. Mode Dial - Contains several symbols (slightly different on various camera models), this dial allows you to select a shooting mode, automatic or manual or a choice between one of the pre-defined settings. xFlash - Built-in on the body of most compact and some DSLR cameras this can either be fixed or flip type, it provides an instantaneous burst of bright light to illuminate a poorly lit scene. xThe sensor Transforms the created optical image into electrical signals that form the digital image. The sensor is made up of cells called photosites. Each photodiode receives light that is transformed by the photositos and amplified by an amplifier (PGA more common) and then it is stored in the form of image RAW that is the negative of the photograph Image Sensor The image sensor converts the optical image to an electronic
consistently track data; sum various releases into a total impact; and form additional ratios other than those already reported. Need for Reporting Ratios Ratio indicators serve to: relate two aspects to each other; make relationships visible and interpretable; and enable comparison of different scales of operation relative to a specific activity. Ratios help illuminate linkages across the economic, environmental, and social dimensions of sustainable development. Ratios also can be particularly useful for comparing two organisations of different scales. Organisations should form ratios with their performance data that make sense for their business and support their decision-making. They should select 15 ratios for external reporting that allow better communication of their performance to their
When current passes through the busbars and projectile, a force is created which propels the projectile along the busbars into air. 4 The first theoretically viable railgun was proposed in 1944 by Joachim Hänsler of Germany's Ordnance Office. The gun was never built but a 1947 report concluded that while it was feasible in theory, the energy consumption for each gun would be enough to illuminate half of Chicago. While minor successes happened afterward, the most notable one was late into the first decade of 2000s, when the U.S. Navy tested a railgun that accelerates a 3.2 kg (7 pound) projectile to hypersonic velocities of approximately 2.4 kilometres per second (8,600 km/h), about Mach 7. They gave the project the motto "Velocitas Eradico", Latin for "I, speed, eradicate"-- or simply, "Speed Kills". 1.2 Theory behind it
jpg] In the Europe of the Latin alphabet—from which modern cryptology would spring—cryptography flickered weakly. With the collapse of the Roman empire, Europe had plunged into the obscurity of the Dark Ages. Literacy had all but disappeared. Arts and sciences were forgotten, and cryptography was not excepted. Only during the Middle Ages occasional manuscripts, with an infrequent signature or gloss or "deo gratias" that a bored monk put into cipher to amuse himself, fitfully illuminate the cryptologic darkness, and, like a single candle guttering in a great medieval hall, their feeble flarings only emphasize the gloom. The systems used were simple in the extreme. Phrases were written vertically or backwards; dots were substituted for vowels; foreign alphabets, as Greek, Hebrew, and Armenian, were used; each letter of the plaintext was replaced by the one that follows it; in the most advanced system, special signs substituted for letters. For almost a
144 APPROACH TO THE INMOST CAVE PREPARATION FOR THE ORDEAL Approach may be a time of further reconnaissance and information-gathering, or a time of dressing and arming for an ordeal. Gunfighters check their weapons, bull fighters dress carefully in their suits of lights. THE WIZARD OF OZ The Wizard of Oz has such a well-developed Approach section that we'll use it through out this chapter to illuminate some of the functions of this stage. OBSTACLES Having made some Allies in the Testing stage, Dorothy and friends leave the woods on the border of O z and immediately see the glittering Emerald City of their dreams. T h e y Approach in joy, but before they reach their goal, they face a series of obstacles and challenges that will bond them as a group, and prepare them for the life-and- death struggle yet to come. BEWARE OF ILLUSIONS
with the sentence's "illocutionary act-potential," the range of illocutionary acts the sentence could be used to perform. If you are able to use a sentence in every illocutionary way that it affords, you know its meaning, and that is all there is to sentence meaning. (This would certainly qualify as a "use" theory of meaning, though superficially far from what Wittgenstein had in mind.) But in fact Alston's view did nothing to illuminate locutionary meaning, since potential-speech-act descriptions such as "assert that gorillas are veg- etarians" already presuppose a notion of propositional content and exploit the meanings of their complement clauses. Also, as Maureen Coyle once observed to me, sentences that share their locutionary contents can differ violently in their illocutionary act-potentials: "Mother will eat the oyster"; "Will mother eat the oyster?"; "Mother, eat the oyster!" 154 Pragmatics and speech acts