2.3 The Supercompensation or one-factor theory ............................................... 23 2.4 Fitness-fatigue model ................................................................................... 25 2.5 Performance potential model ........................................................................ 31 3. THE PHYSICAL DEMANDS OF ELITE SOCCER MATCH PLAY .................................... 33 3.1 Introduction ................................................................................................. 33 3.2 Activity profile ............................................................................................... 33 3.3 Positional variation ...................................................................................
11.02.09 INGLISE KEEL Palju aega läheb. 10 nädalat aint. One of the ESP courses. What we are going to do, what is needed: · What we do - 1 test, on words. · 2 Essays, that means that we have to look into academic writing · Homereading we read a case from European Court of Justice thingy. · Oral thing. · 90% you have to attend · Have to prepare for class and take part of it etc What we learn: Terms Expressions / collocations (nt obey/abide by the law) Explaining AWOL absence without a leave Legal English can be divided into 3 levels. We learn the first one, which is needed for the other two! You have to know the vocabulary etc. Second level has to do with legal contracts... The third level both 1 and 2 and explaining... We learn the vocabulary + explaining. Process of law-making draft law/bill (seaduseelnõu) is developed draft is sent to the parliament readings(amendments made to the
descriptive law (kirjeldav õigus) - laws which simply describe how people or even natural phenomenas usually behave nation (riik) - country with its own goverment citizen (kodanik) - person native of a country; realationship between country and a person stranger (välismaalne) - person who is unfamiliar, from another country penalty (karistus) - punishment fixed by law, as for a crime or from any soical groups goverment (valitsus) - organization which controlls a stre or community System of Courts (kohtusüsteem) - organization applying law in the name of states to commit a crime (kuritegu läbi viima) - breaking a law, usually given out by the goverment fine (trahv) - certain sum of money person pays for breaking a law corruption (korruptsioon) - dishonest or unethincal conduct by a person entrusted with a position of authority suspension (kõrvaldamine) - form of punisment that people recieve for violating rules and regulations Civil Action (tsiviilhagi) - lawsuit between two privat
TOPICS For the PRELIM Year 1 Put down 10-12 relevant terms and retell about: 1. Prescriptive and descriptive law Prescriptive law – prescribe how people ought to behave Descriptive law – describes the way people or natural phenomena behave Break the law – do something illegal Penalty – punishment Government – system by which a state or community is controlled Law – the system of rules System of courts – all judicial institutions Enforce – to make people obey the law Authority – a group of people with official responsibility for a particular area of activity /the moral or legal right or ability to control Prescribe – to tell someone what they must have or do, or to make a rule of something Impose The word law can have several meanings, it can be divided into prescriptive and descriptive law. Descriptive law – describes the way people or natural phenomena behave, e. g. law of gravity Prescriptive law – prescribe how people ought to behave e.g. spee
personal identification number; j) The full name, address and the personal identification number of a procurist, if any; k) If the company has several persons entitled to represent the company, a statement as to whether these persons shall act jointly or separately. l) The person, if any, authorized to apply, on behalf of the company, to the Public Registry in fu- ture with the request for amendments to the record of incorporation. This person may be either a legal or physical person. In case of physical person, the application should include the full name, address, and the personal identification number of that person. For a legal person, the name, legal address, legal form, date of registration, identification number, and representatives should be indicated. If the activity of the company is related to the production of or trade in food or animal feed, a
The British sailors, soldiers, engineers and entrepreneurs transported the rules of football around the world. It is estimated that almost 300 million people around the world are playing football today. Football “isn’t a matter of life and death. It’s more important than that.” There is much that could be said about ice hockey. The first game was played by British soldiers in Canada in the 1850s. In 1875, James Creighton drew up the rules and hosted the first indoor ice hockey match. It is believed that the game was based on the English game of field hockey, the Irish game of hurling (brutal field hockey), the Scottish game of shinty and the Native American game of lacrosse. Boxing may be the oldest sport, but it has always been a brutal one. Kicking, biting and hitting a man while down were an unfortunate part of boxing until, in 1743, the Brits laid down the first set of rules that provided
consider as a treaty. Qatar submitted an application to the ICJ against Bahrain relating to sovereignty over certain areas and the delimitation of the maritime areas of the two states. Qatar relies on the exchanges of letters of December 1987 and Doha Minutes of 25 December. Both parties agree that the letters constitute an international agreement with binding force. Bahrain maintains that the Minutes are a slime record of negotiations; they're not an international agreement. Also, that Qatar is not able to seize the Court unilaterally; the text says seisin only by the two parties. Therefore the Court lacks jurisdiction to deal with the application of Qatar. Bahrain is wrong. The Minutes are an international agreement, because it is not simply a record of a meeting. It enumerates the commitments to which the Parties have consented
There is no exact answer to that problem. It all depends on the point of view. You can go into ancient times looking for the beginnings of sports like wrestling. One possible beginning of Estonian sports could be games called "killamängud". The first Estonian mentioned in the Guinness Book of Records was a sportsman. In the Olympic Games of 1912 in Stockholm, the Finn Alfred Asikainen and the Estonian Martin Klein wrestled for a record 11 hours and 40 minutes. Klein won, and "Russia" was given as his country of residence. The first chance to rectify this mistake came in 1918 when the Republic of Estonia came into being for the first time. Martin Klein was the first Estonian Olympic medal winner. Among other Estonians, the heavyweight wrestlers Georg Lurich, Aleksander Aberg and Georg Hackenschmidt were famous at the turn of the century. Before independence, Estonians were
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