Friends have more Influence than Family on Teenagers Human interaction plays a vital role in our existence. It isn't abnormal for people to learn from each other or act according to the social norm set by others. In their teens, people begin to form strong connections with other individuals their own age this may inherently play a role in how we act. The connection made between friends is usually much stronger than between family members. With teens, there is always a `rebellious' factor in play, which may make them adapt certain behaviors or ideas from our friends, in order to appease the inner rebel inside of us. Teenagers act according to the norm that is prominent in the group they are apart of. For example, the punk movement will possibly penetrate different groups and to feel apart of the group,
Sample Letter to the Editor Letter to the Editor [ Date ] [ Newspaper Name ] [ Newspaper Address ] [ RE: Headline and author if you're writing in reference to a story OR "Performing Animals in the City of _______" ] Dear Editor: While circuses and traveling shows featuring wild animal acts may seem innocent enough, it has become apparent over the past decade that wild animal acts are inherently cruel and unsafe. Most circuses and traveling shows that use wild animals keep them for months on end in cramped transport cages, sometimes hardly larger than they are, with only brief periods outside to perform. The animals have no opportuni- ty to move or behave in a natural way. That's why veterinarians, animal behaviourists, biologists and animal welfare organizations around the world have condemned wild animal acts.
movie acters from Canada Deadmau5 is a famous DJ from Canada Nature Canada has a very various landscape Canada has around 31,700 large lakes Canada is geologically active, having many earthquakes and potentially active volcanoes The national animals in Canada are beaver and canadian horse Culutre and traditions Historically, Canada has been influenced by British, French, and aboriginal cultures and traditions Many Canadians value multiculturalism and see Canada as being inherently multicultural Popular food is French fries with maple syrup National sport is ice hokey Famous sights are Lake Louise, Banff and Montreal Interesting facts Canada is the second largest country in the world Canada is a developed country and one of the wealthiest in the world Youtube video: https:// www.youtube.com/watch?v=HfTkZmKK1b 0 Used literature http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canada http:// www.famousbirthdays.com/birthplace/canada.htm l http:// en.wikipedia
113. Preliminaries - Eelläbirääkimised 114. Hallmark- Kvaliteedimärk 115. Omission - Tegemata jätmine 116. Assert - Tõendama 117. Pace - Tempo 118. Deliberate - Kaaluma 119. Adversity - Vastasseis 120. Impasse - Ummik 121. Embedded - Manuses olev 122. Incumbent - Ametisolev, ametikoha täitja 123. Deviation - Kõrvalekalle 124. Coercion - Sundus, sundimine 125. Jeopardize - Ohtu seadma 126. Revenue - Tulu 127. Posture - Seisukohta võtma 128. Juncture - Pöördepunkt 129. Inherently - Loomupäraselt 130. Inherent weakness - Puudus 131. Proffer - Pakkumine, Ettepanek 132. Mollifying - Rahustav, lepitav 133. Extortion - Väljapressimine 134. Retrospect - Tagasivaade 135. Compliance - Järgimine 136. Garner - Varuma, koguma 137. Merchandise - Kaup 138. Emanate - Lähtuma 139. Dispute - Vaidlus, vaidlema 140. Apparel - Rõivad 141. Mitigate - Leevendama 142. Omnifarious - Mitmesugune 143. Traction - Veojõud 144. Obstacle - Tõke 145. Hinder - Takistama 146
121. Embedded Manus-, sees olev 122. Incumbent Ametisolev, ametikoha täitja 123. Deviation Kõrvalekalle 124. Coercion Sundus, sundimine 125. Jeopardize Ohtu seadma 126. Revenue Tulu 127. Posture Seisukohta võtma Otsustav hetk, 128. Juncture pöördepunkt 129. Inherently Loomupäraselt Antud tootele omane 130. Inherent weakness puudus 131. Proffer Pakkumine, Ettepanek 132. Mollifying Rahustav, lepitav 133. Extortion Väljapressimine 134. Retrospect Tagasivaade 135. Compliance Järgimine 136. Garner Varuma, koguma 137. Merchandise Kaup 138
62. Incisor- lõikehammas 63. Secretion- eritis, sekreet 64. To hold true- samuti kehtima 65. Molar- purihammas 66. Maxillary- ülalõug 67. Mandible- alalõug 68. Cascade- kaskaad 69. Retain- säilitama 70. Autologous- (Kude,rakk)võetud samalt inimeselt, kellele siirdatakse. 71. Define- määratlema 72. Adequate- adekvaatne 73. Infancy- lapsepõlv 74. Innate- kaasasündinud 75. Assimilate- millelegi sarnaseks muutuma 76. Common sense- terve mõistus 77. Inherently- loomupäraselt 78. Reduce- vähendama, kahandama 79. Faculty- võime 80. Utilization- kasutamine 81. Flaw- viga, puudus 82. Maternal- emapoolne 83. Cognitive- tunnetuslik 84. Noninvasive- kehaväline protseduur (nt. Ultraheli) 85. Coupling- liitekoht, ühendamine 86. Periodicals- ajakirjad, perioodika 87. Spatial- ruumiline 88. Transmitter- saatja, ülekandja 89. Subsequently- järgnevalt 90. Right-hemisphere- parem poolkera 91. Auditory- kuulmis 92. Discordance- ebakõla 93
Forests Ireland has only about 8 % of his whole land covered with forests. Centuries ago people cut the forests and didn't think about the future so nowadays there is mostly peat ( turvas) which Ireland uses to produce energy. Economy Ireland had a big economic boom in the late 20'th century, but now the Republic of Ireland is ranked the second wealthiest per capita country in the European Union. Education in Ireland is free at all levels, including college. The construction sector, which is inherently cyclical in nature, now accounts for a significant component of Ireland's GDP. ( ehitus/tõõstus sektor, mis on loomupäraselt tsükliline , mängib nüüd iirimaa GDP's märkimisväärset rolli - GDP =SKT ) In 2005, Ireland was ranked the best place to live in the world, according to a quality of life assessment ( hindamine ) by Economist magazine. The weather Irish think there are 4 kinds of weather , rainy spring , rainy summer , rainy autumn and rainy winter
politics? Can international conditions overcome this logic and under what conditions? What in anarchy is given and immutable and what is amenable to change? The general neorealist and neoliberal answer to these questions is that "anarchies are necessarily `self-help' systems" in which states have to struggle for their security and survival due to the absence of a security-providing central order as well as a lack of collective security guarantees; a condition which gives rise to the "inherently competitive dynamic of security dilemma and collective action problem." In answering so, therefore, Wendt contends, neorealist and neoliberal scholars of international relations ignore "questions of identity- and interest-formation."Wedndt's argument: [S]elf-help and power politics do not follow either logically or causally from anarchy and that if today we find ourselves in a self-help world, this is due to process, not structure. There is no
TALLINN UNIVERSITY The Law School Law The European Union Law The EU institutions Lecturer: Matti Kauppi Student: Viktoria Gratšjova Tallinn, 2014 The institutions of the European Union form a complex and unique polity and, in determining whether or not this structure and the law making powers granted to each respective institution are inherently undemocratic, it is vital to define what is meant by the term ‘democratic’. In his Gettysburg address Abraham Lincoln referred to a government which was ‘of the people, by the people, for the people’and it is by this criterion that democracy is often judged. These principles are reflected in having equal access to power and in being equal before the law. It must be considered not only whether law making powers are granted to elected persons, but
nonprofit's database has swelled from 614 communities in 2005 to more than 1,300 this year. Traffic to the site is up 25 percent in the last year, Mr. Schaub continued, to an average of 2,000 visits a day. As to why that should be so, Mr. Schaub pointed to what he called "an ever-increasing level of dissatisfaction with traditional lifestyle choices, because there's too much alienation and lack of connectedness. Humans are inherently social animals, yet we don't particularly know how to get along with one another." The urge to create a group house or join an intentional community, he said, "is an attempt to address that." Ms. Berger met Ms. Hazard, who had been living in the East Village in her mother's town house and looking for work in "social justice," she said, at a permaculture conference in Vermont last summer. Permaculture is big with the collective-living crowd;
(a) Event past (b) Habitual past (c) State past Meanings of the past tense with reference to present and future time: (a) Indirect speech (b) The attitudinal past (c) The hypothetical past Constructions for expressing future time: - will/shall + infinitive - be going to + infinitive - the present progressive - the simple present - will/shall + the progressive infinitive - be about to - be + to infinitive Vendler's classification of verbs and semifactives: States - static situations, inherently temporally unbounded (atelic): desire, want, love, hate, know, believe Activities (unbounded processes) - dynamic state of affairs, inherently temproally unbounded (atelic): run, walk, swim, push a cart, drive a car Accomplishments (bound processes) - expresses changes of state, inherently temporally bounded (telic), not instantaneous: run a mile, draw a circle, walk to school, paint a picture, grow up, deliver a sermon, recover from illness
devices collect too much information, and in some cases forward the collected personal data specifically to the company, who created the device. Besides issues of privacy, there are concerns about general security. In worst cases, the poor security measures and a planned hacker attack, can lead to death or other severe health risks. Security risks are to blame partly on the small processing power of the IoT devices, but also on companies not making the devices inherently secure from the start of the production. Since the IoT industry is quickly developing, so are the ideas for protecting those devices. For instance encrypting the data in a novel way, creating stronger default passwords and so on. And if the producers should fail to implement proper security measures by themselves the legislative organs have to step in and enact laws, which set a standard for security. References [1]"Internet of Things", Wikipedia, 2016. [Online]. Available: https://en
Effects of sowing on plant diversity along the natural landscape gradient were paralleled by significant effects of sowing on measures of local plant production and community resilience to disturbance. 4 These results support the shifting limitations hypothesis (SLH) that landscape gradients in local plant diversity should reflect shifts in the major regulating factor, from species pools to local ecological processes, as one moves from sites of inherently low to inherently high productivity. 5 Our findings also indicate that diversity at the level of the available propagule pool acts to constrain ecosystem productivity and stability by mediating local community assembly, by determining the availability of key species, and by governing opportunities for functional compensation within the community. 35. Avatud süsteemid ja koosluste bioloogiline mitmekesisus: liigifondi hüpotees I
exactly once message reliability. ·Enterprise client applications may still encounter trapped,duplicated, out-of-order and broken transactional messages. ·All four messaging failure classes can impact the operational system. NCR TOP END Fault Tolerant Example · TOP END's Automatic Throughput Optimization(ATO) feature automatically starts up additionalapplication processes based on workload · TOP END's inherently distributed nature andlack of `Master' server allow additional servers tobe added online to accommodate growth · TOP END's DTP Recovery guarantees that thistransaction is fully committed when the failedserver resumes operations 30. Message Brokering ·Message brokering technology is a response to the challenge to build new integration applications without reprogramming existing applications.
are in conformity with the principle of proportionality (Case C-270/02 Commission v Italy [2004] ECR I-1559, Case C-319/05 Commission v Germany [2007] ECR I-9811). Current restriction is based on statistics that ignores genetics and the influence of the dog's keeper has failed to prevent many dog biting incidents. Sadly, it has also resulted in the unnecessary euthanasia of dogs simply because of their breed or type. No breed of dog is inherently dangerous. Scientific research has proven that the pit bull terrier and related breeds are physiologically no different from any other breed of dog. Dr Lehr Brisbin at the University of Georgia has proved the skeletal structure of the pit bull terrier jaw is no different from that of any other dog with respect to 'jaw locking' - they simply have strongly muscled jaws in common with many other breeds. The
and say “see what Americans did,” and they will try to use it to justify evil actions or to incite more violence“ (Feinstein, 2014). Wasting valuable time It is important to note that utilitarians only categorized things as either good or bad. If a consequence of an act brings maximum happiness to the greatest number of people, it is good, which however doesn't mean the act automatically should be considered as inherently good. The criterion for justification of an act according to utilitarianism said that an act is only good if there is no possible alternative that would have led to a bigger sum of wellbeing in the world (Driver, 2014). What the presumption does not consider is that in case the person who is being tortured does not provide information that helps to save lives (due to innocence, inaccuracy, outside of the timeframe that existed for a
regional newspaper publisher with its 23% share. • Daily Mail and General Trust has a 19.3% share of national newspaper circulation and has held a 20% stake in ITN, which makes news for ITV and Channel 4, since 1996. • Guardian Media Group (owned by the Scott Trust) has a 3.4% share of UK national newspaper circulation and also owns GMG Radio, which has a 4.5% share of all radio listening. 2 44. Nation- “it is an imagined political community - and imagined as both inherently limited and sovereign. It is imagined because the members of even the smallest nation will never know most of their fellow-members, meet them, or even hear of them, yet in the mind of each lives the image of their communion” (Anderson, 1991: 6) • “Individuals think they are part of a greater collective, that they share a ‘deep horizontal comradeship’” (Anderson, 1991: 7) • Narration of
Synthetic netting primarily nylon, is used almost exclusively, due to its strength, resistance to deterioration and relatively low cost. After assembly, nets are tarred to reduce wear due to abrasion and as a stiffening agent. This is repeated periodically while in use, usually every six to twelve weeks. The use of each design is not restricted to specific geographic areas or species as might be expected, but instead all are used on all grounds. It is a common belief that a flat trawl has inherently a wide spread and a low opening height and that the balloon trawl opens high. This is not necessarily so. Although all types could be rigged by the individual fisherman to fish either with a relatively high opening or with a maximum horizontal spread, the latter is normally emphasised. All types are rigged at various times to fish either light or hard on the ground. Measurements by the U.S. Bureau of Commercial Fisheries of 40 ft (12 m) trawls in operation revealed that the
certainly suggests the importance of boundaries. been. In America, the role of government is seen as enabling/not getting in the way of: "Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness". In Canada, the role is often described as: "Peace, Order and Good Government". This doesn't always happen, in either nation, but that is the mentality. The difference says a lot about how differently citizens view the government and what they expect it to do. Canada is somewhat inherently focused on the collective, both as a nation, and as part of the world. America sees itself, from the outside, at least, as a singular nation that is responsible for controlling and shaping the world. "If you give both a Canadian and an American one million dollars, the American will use that million to try to make 10 million. The Canadian will buy a cottage and retire." 28. Which was the most famous grouping of Canadian artists in the early 20 th century? To which Estonian
where internal quality characteristics are those that do not. Another definition by Dr. Tom DeMarco says "a product's quality is a function of how much it changes the world for the better." This can be interpreted as meaning that user satisfaction is more important than anything in determining software quality. Another definition, coined by Gerald Weinberg in Quality Software Management: Systems Thinking, is "Quality is value to some person." This definition stresses that quality is inherently subjective - different people will experience the quality of the same software very differently. One strength of this definition is the questions it invites software teams to consider, such as "Who are the people we want to value our software?" and "What will be valuable to them?". Source code quality To a computer, there is no real concept of "well-written" source code. However, to a human, the way a program is written can have some important consequences for the human maintainers
eelarvamuslikumad. Kompensatsioonimehhanism. Eelarvamused: kuuluvusgrupi eelistamine: Ingroup favoritism effect: IG > OG WHY - resource competition, historical memory, rewards for self Favoritism: "Because people typically want to maintain positive self-regard, they are motivated to have favorable evaluations of the groups to which they belong. But there is no objective yardstick for gauging the desirability of any particular social group: such comparisons are inherently subjective. Therefore, people enhance their own group's favorability by psychologically establishing its relative superiority in comparison with some out-group. Thus, people are motivated to accentuate the evaluative difference between the ingroup and outgroup.“ (Hamilton and Sherman, 1994) Eelarvamuste väljendus käitumises – diskrimineerimine. Kas olete kohanud? Kas on põhjendatud? Stereotüübid ja eelarvamused – sotsiaalsed filtrid Sarnasused- erinevused
Chapter 2: Citizenship Education in Wales………………………………………………14 Active Citizenship in Cadle Primary School: A Case Study 20 Conclusion 29 Bibliography 32 Appendices Appendix 1: The United Convention of the Rights of the Child Appendix 2: Interview with Jamie Richards, the Head Teacher of Cadle Primary School 2 Abstract: Children inherently have had a rather tenuous relationship with citizenship. Similarly to how women were once viewed, children have not been considered as subjects of rights due to their perceived incompetence and irrationality. Currently, children are not considered as being rational and capable of exercising responsibility until the age of majority, the age of 18. However, the adoption of the U.N Convention of the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) in 1989
Architects, the angular structure incorporates no true vertical surfaces. Without the support of vertical walls or columns – or even a flat roof – to work with, the structural 26 engineers, from the Los Angeles office of Arup, were challenged to design a support system that would hold together the outward-leaning walls and fashion the inherently unstable forms into a stable structure (Figure 5). Figure 5. Denver Art Museum (McClellan, 2008). A tightly controlled environmental system to protect the works of art was required, and that system would have special ductwork for various zones that would run from centralized mechanical rooms to the galleries. Like the structural system, the ductwork could not follow typical vertical and horizontal paths. All lateral loads are resisted by
Leaving my bedroom, I took the hallway to the living room. I paused on the threshold, my gaze riveted to Gideon's back as he stood in front of the windows and looked out at the city. My heart rate kicked up. His reflection revealed a contemplative mood. His gaze was unfocused and his mouth grim. His crossed arms betrayed an inherent unease, as if he was out of his element. He looked remote and removed, a man who was inherently alone. He sensed my presence or maybe he felt my yearning. He pivoted; then went very still. I took the opportunity to drink him in, my gaze sliding all over him. He looked every inch the powerful magnate. So sensually handsome my eyes burned just from looking at him. The rakish fall of black hair around his face made my fingers flex with the urge to touch it. And the way he looked at me... my pulse leaped. "Eva." He came toward me, his stride graceful and strong
or unpredictability. Like any effective work of art they need both universality and originality. Nobody wants to see a movie or read a story about abstract qualities in human form. W e want stories about real people. A real character, like a real person, is not just a single trait but a unique combination of many qualities and drives, some of them conflicting. And the more conflicting, the better. A character torn by warring allegiances to love and duty is inherently interesting to an audience. A character who has a unique combination of contradictory impulses, such as trust and suspicion or hope and despair, seems more realistic and human than one who displays only one character trait. A well-rounded Hero can be determined, uncertain, charming, forgetful, impatient, and strong in body but weak at heart, all at the same time. It's the particular combination of qualities that gives an audience the sense that the Hero is
deficiency by constructing a radically more complex world. The consequence of our new deficiency is the same as that of the animals' long-standing one: when mak- ing a decision, we will less frequently engage in a fully considered analysis of the total situation. In response to this "paralysis of analysis," we will revert increasingly to a focus on a single, usually reliable feature of the situation. 2 When those single features are truly reliable, there is nothing inherently wrong with the shortcut approach of narrowed attention and automatic respond- ing to a particular piece of information. The problem comes when something causes the normally trustworthy cues to counsel us poorly, to lead us to erroneous actions and wrongheaded decisions. As we have seen, one such cause is the trick- ery of certain compliance practitioners, who seek to profit from the mindless and mechanical nature of shortcut responding
ing in an acidic solution called electrolyzed • Coating or absorbing antimicrobials onto polymer surfaces oxidizing water and an alkaline solution • Chemical bonds (ion or covalent linkages) (Fabrizio and Cutter 2004). Electrolyzed between antimicrobials and packaging material oxidizing water has a low pH (2.3 to 2.7), • Using polymers that are inherently antimicrobial • Edible packaging containing antimicrobials high oxidation-reduction potential (ORP, >1000 mV), and free chlorine (25 to 80 ppm) From Appendini and Hotchkiss (2002) (Huang et al. 2008). Thus, electrolyzed oxi- dizing water antimicrobial effect is due to the combined action of low pH, high ORP, and free chlorine. Fabrizio and Cutter (2005) could be protective for antimicrobials, allow-