Many kinds of cues are used: the visual sensations of color, shape, motion, or polarization of light, as well as other senses such as smell, sound, touch, kinesthesia, sense of gravity, and perhaps of electric or magnetic fields .To become completely lost is perhaps a rather rare experience for most people in the modern city. We are supported by the presence of others and by special way-finding devices: maps, street numbers, route signs, bus placards. But let the mishap of disorientation once occur, and the sense of anxiety and even terror that accompanies it reveals to us how closely it is linked to our sense of balance and well-being. The very word "lost" in our language means much more than simple geographical uncertainty; it carries overtones of utter disaster. A good environmental image gives its possessor an important sense of emotional security. He can establish an harmonious relationship between himself and the outside world
Make derivations from the following words, using prefixes and suffixes and translate each word: wealth, compete. 3. Thanks to what do we have the laboursaving household appliances? 4. How come the Americans were so wealthy compared to the rest of the world after the WWII? 5. Name 10 different household appliances. 6. Pick one of the household appliances and find out how it has evolved into the present day appliance. THE MICROWAVE MISHAP Read the text and think of the word which best fits each gap. Use only one word in each gap. Did you know that microwaves were first used ..........the British Army in the World War II to identify enemy warplanes? In fact, it was ..........accident that made people aware that microwaves could also cook food. In 1945, Percy LeBaron Spencer, .............. work involved the testing of radar waves, became the first person to ........... this connection. ...........
From such an introduction, as Devitt (1981a) and Donnellan (1974) point out, causal historical chains begin spreading into the future just as if the name had been bestowed on an actual individual. So reference or "reference" to nonexistents is by causalhistorical chain, but the chain's first link is the naming event itself rather than any putative doings of the nonexistent bearer.9 Objection 2 Evans (1973) points out that names can change their reference unbeknownst, through mishap or error, but the CausalHistorical Theory as presented so far cannot allow for that. According to Evans,10 the name "Madagascar" originally named, not the great African island, but a portion of the mainland; the change was ultimately due to a misunderstanding of Marco Polo's. Or: Two babies are born, and their mothers bestow names upon them. A nurse inadvertently switches them and the error is never discovered. It