It was a time of domestic peace and prosperity. Queen Anne (1702 1714). Her successors were in fact German they didn't even speak English ans were the beginning of the Hannove dynasty. George I (1714 1727), George II ( 1727 1760), george III (1760 1820) in 1783 he lost the American colonies, except Canada. Reason and common sense pervaded the land. Isaac newton lived during that time. It was also the beginning of the industrial revolution, which was precipitated by the invention of the steam engine by James Watt in 1775. Trading developed quickly, especially importing. The number of readers increased due to the spread of education the Enlightenment was led by the bourgeoisie who insisted on education for all children, spread of literacy and the publishing newspapers and magazines. The novel become the most popular genre and the Enlightenment era novel differed from the previous representations of the genre
others. C= the exchange of meaning, involves the sending and receiving of info between a sender and a receiver. C happens through the use of words+ non-verbal factors (eg facial expressions and gestures). Stereotype is a fixed idea or image that many people have of a prticular type of person or thing, but which is not true in reality. The word comes from printing (describes the printing plate used to produce the same image over and over again). Culture shock: is precipitated (caused) by the anxiety that results from losing all our familiar signs and symbols of our social intercourse. Symptoms: Excessive washing of the hands. Excessive concern over drinking water, food, dishes and bedding. Fear of physical contact with attendants and servants. The absent, far-away stare (the tropical stare). A feeling of helplessness. Delay or refusal to learn the lg of the host country. Excessive fear of being cheated. Excessive concern over minor pains
comparison with them. Style colouring words lend their colouring to the whole utterance. It is sometimes sufficient to have 2-3 words in a paragraph to make the latter either poetic or solemn etc depending on the nature of those 2-3 words. Common literary vocabulary Are not confined to any sphere of usage. Here mainly belong borrowed words. E.g. Yearly-annual, hint-allusion, to see-to behold, talk-converse, true-authentic. The man fell-the individual was precipitated, hard study made him sleepy-indefatigable pursuit of knowledge endowed somnolence in him. Sometimes lit words are used for the sake of humour. Especially when they describe very trivial actions. Special literary vocabulary Terms belong to scientific discourse. They are indispensible for the development of science. E.g. malaria (med), blood vessel, spinal cord; linguistics semantics, syntax, chiasmus. Outside this direct application the function of the terms changes
secret means with others not even thinking of prying. But in the real world, the cryptanalyst —or more accurately the potential cryptanalyst— comes first. What need for cryptography if no one would eavesdrop? Why build forts if no one would attack? Thus the assumption that someone will attempt a cryptanalysis, no matter how tentatively or incompetently, engenders cryptography. Experience of the interreaction between cryptography and cryptanalysis has precipitated out certain practical principles. They all refer to time, because all practical matters involving mortal men connect eventually with that one inexorable, irreversible, irretrievable factor. Time, for the cryptographer, controls a variable relationship. The most general of the cryptographer's principles deals with the sliding ratio between speed and security; as the need for speed in communications increases, the need for security decreases. Early in the planning of a
1973. Meat Processing. In Handbook of Meat mild thermal treatments at the end of the drying Industry (in Hungarian), edited by F. Lörincz and process. Meat Science 80: 231. J. Lencsepeti. Budapest: Mezögazdasagi Kiadó Mossel, D. A. A. 1971. Physiological and metabolic (Publisher of Agriculture). attitudes of microbial groups. Journal of Applied Zukál, E. 1959. Crystals precipitated in salami (in Bacteriology 34:95. Hungarian). Húsipar (Meat Industry) 8(2):108. Offer, G. J. Tirinck. 1983. On the mechanism of water holding in meat. Meat Science 8:245. Chapter 12 Smoking Zdzisław E. Sikorski and Edward Kołakowski Introduction forced by mechanical equipment and shaped according to a computer program adjusted to