continued to meet at Westminster, while the commons met in St. Stephen's Chapel. Ever since these early times, the Palace of Westminster has been home to the English Parliament. Harrod's One of the world's most famous department stores, established in 1849 as a humble grocery store employing two assistants. Today, it offers everything from food to fashion, furniture to sportswear plus 20 instore restaurants serving every kind of cuisine imaginable from pizza to sushi. Services range from piano tuning to fitting saddles. Mustsee sights include the Food Halls, the Egyptian Hall and the Pet Department. At night the store is illuminated by 11,500 light bulbs. Tower Bridge over the River Thames. The bridge was officially opened on 30 June 1894 The bridge is 244 m in length with two towers each 65 m high, built on piers the architect was Horace Jones Nelson's Column built between 18401843 in central London
recommendable remains remain remained remainedly (un)easiness ease Easy easily eased function function functional functionally Rule rule ruling - ruler creation create Created creatively creative economy economise economical economically imagination imagine Imaginable Imaginably imaginatively courage encourage courageous courageously shape shape Shapeless shapelessly shaped expactation expect (un)expected (un)expectedly harm harm harmful harmfully Seriousness - serious seriously seriousity repetition repeat repeated reapeatedly
It had to be a building that would become synonymous with the name of the country. The world's tallest hotel is also popularly described as the world's only 7-Star hotel - although its formal rating is 5 Star Deluxe, the highest the international rating system offers. They say, this building was the dream of a sultan, (Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan al Nahyan) which turned out to be a reality years later in Dubai. The hotel has the most luxurious interior imaginable. The most expensive materials were used throughout the building. It is said that the hotel cost $650 million to build. As you can imagine, it is one of the most expensive hotels in the world. The cost of staying in a suite begins at $1,000 per night; the Royal Suite is the most expensive, at $28,000 per night. Rooms There are 202 suites in the hotel, every suite has sumptuous living and dining area, and office facilities. Rooms are a riot of velvet and satin and gilded edges
On the other hand, there are those that support file sharing and claim that their actions are easily justified and ethical. File sharing simply is the process of making available and distributing files via the internet. Many freely developed applications have been made available that simplify this process, providing the ability to easily search for and upload any piece of digital content imaginable. These applications are commonly referred to as peer-to-peer (P2P) applications as they allow individuals to directly connect with other peers to share files. P2P networks are probably the most common and accessible to the average internet user, there are a host of other applications or methods that provide the same services and in many cases faster access to more content. With its rise in popularity and acceptance by many, file sharing has sparked debate that
What are the consequences for the victims of identity theft? Although none of the victim's personal possessions may have been taken, there can actually be a number of large and serious consequences for victims. Most identity thefts are performed for monetary purposes, but there can also be danger for the victim's freedom or even life. The internet if full of stories about stolen credit card details, that have been used to order things online, buy gift cards and pretty much everything else imaginable. The more serious cases talk about criminal identity theft, identity cloning and medical identity theft where people have been framed for crimes they did not commit(from speeding tickets and drug posession to funding terrorism), where people have lost their jobs due to not being able to prove their innocence or even cases where people were not able to get the medicine nessecary due to someone else posing as them and collecting the perscription first. Example: Anndorie Sachs Has a Baby
In our everyday life: Reduce, Reuse, Recycle. Using the Internet, find definitions to these notions and draw 5 examples how to implement these practices. Reduce Reuse Recycle Let’s Do It! In 2007, a group of people noticed that many of Estonia’s beautiful, native forests were being used as dumping grounds for every kind of garbage imaginable. Soon after, we came up with an ambitious plan to change not just the physical landscape, but the very idea that it is okay to dump garbage at all. To make our point, we came up with the idea to clean up our entire country… in just one day! We realized right away that we were going to need help, and a very detailed plan. We gathered passionate people, quickly growing to 620 volunteers and partnering with 500 Estonian organizations. Then, we set about
used under certain conditions) All weapons can be divided into two big groups: Weapons of mass destruction (used only once in time of war, if used again the human kind will die): nuclear weapons (atomic bombs) not prohibited, certain limitations, Advisory opinion of International Court of Justice, 1996 said that not prohibited weapons, but principles and rules of IHL apply to the use of nuclear weapons. Only one legal use imaginable destroying of the flied somewhere in the middle of the ocean biological/bacteriological weapons and chemical weapons - with these two, the situation is different, after the I WW, the protocol 1925 which prohibited only the USE of gases and bacteriological weapons was adopted, silent regarding production etc, that's why all had a lot of stock piles of them. That's why two more conventions were adopted, which
" "They are generally long; but whether always charming it is not for me to determine." "It is a rule with me, that a person who can write a long letter with ease, cannot write ill." "That will not do for a compliment to Darcy, Caroline," cried her brother, "because he does not write with ease. He studies too much for words of four syllables. Do not you, Darcy?" "My style of writing is very different from yours." "Oh!" cried Miss Bingley, "Charles writes in the most careless way imaginable. He leaves out half his words, and blots the rest." "My ideas flow so rapidly that I have not time to express them--by which means my letters sometimes convey no ideas at all to my correspondents." "Your humility, Mr. Bingley," said Elizabeth, "must disarm reproof." "Nothing is more deceitful," said Darcy, "than the appearance of humility. It is often only carelessness of opinion, and sometimes an indirect boast." "And which of the two do you call my little recent piece of modesty?"
various machinery our eyes grow big, as i f we are drinking in the sight of death. W e study the sea of frozen faces for signs of how they died and how it will be for us. Titanic plays on fears that have a high degree of identification for the audience — the universal fear of heights, fear of being trapped and imprisoned, fear of drown ing in a bottomless sea, fear of fire and explosion, fear of loneliness and isolation. T h e movie offers an imaginable horror. It could happen to anyone. Since it provides a complete spectrum of the society o f its time, any viewer can find an identity there, as a well-off member of the ruling class, as a worker, as an immigrant, as a dreamer, as a lover. And we can appreciate the truth that certain inexorable forces — nature, death, physics, fate, accident — affect all of us, across the spectrum without exception. For a while the human story is reduced to one archetype — the Victim.