someone is glad that you're their friend someone wants to be your friend someone stayed up all night thinking about you someone is alive because of you someone is remorseful after losing your friendship someone is wishing that you would notice them someone wants to get to know you better someone believes that you are their soul mate someone wants to be near you someone
about his sister, begs Karenin to give Anna the divorce, and Karenin grudgingly agrees. Betsy goes to tell Vronsky the news. Vronsky is overjoyed that Anna is finally his. The two decide to move to Italy together. Anna refuses Karenin's offer of divorce, because it would deny her custody of Seriozha. "'Oh, why didn't I die? It would have been better!' she said, and tears flowed silently down both her cheeks; but she tried to smile so as not to hurt him." The threat of death makes Anna remorseful, Karenin forgiving and Vronsky deeply ashamed. Once Anna improves, moods begin to shift again, as Kitty is now pregnant. "In spite of death, he felt the need for life and love. He felt that love saved him from despair, and that this love, under the threat of despair, had become still stronger and purer. The one mystery of death, still unsolved, had scarcely passed before his eyes, when another mystery had arisen, as insoluble, calling to love and to life
or floods. It can help farmers in 2 irritated developing countries produce more 3 as red as a beetroot food. 3 1 unwilling Rosie Er, no, starvation in developing 2 apprehensive countries isn't about the quantity of food produced it's just that it is not 3 perplexed distributed to the right places. So that 4 remorseful argument doesn't make sense try 5 uptight another one! 6 petrified Leo All right, that's a fair point I 45 Students' own answers suppose ... but what about using GM food to fight malnutrition? Surely you can't disapprove of that? Rosie All right, give me an example. Photocopiable © Oxford University Press 2
The Japanese have us wrapped around their fingers and can twist us any way they like. You can never get respect from a people who believe no matter whatever they call you and how much they hate you, you have no alternative but to come back for more insults. They know that you are inferior. You are not intelligent. So why even bother mincing their words in public. You cry foul, you shout that they insulted you; they offer lukewarm apologies, but the fact remains that they are not really remorseful. Yes, they offer apologies, but behind closed doors, they congratulate themselves – and after the initial uproar they sit back and laugh. “You see how those idiots have not leant a thing or two about us. Dumb asses,” that is the only way they can describe us. One thing is certain. Africans like to dance. They like to party. They like to sing. They have enriched the world with all kinds of music, all kinds of dance steps. Highlife, Jazz, Rock and Roll, Soul and now Hip- Hop
They wheeled me away then, to X-ray my head. I told them there was nothing wrong, and I was right. Not even a concussion. I asked if I could leave, but the nurse said I had to talk to a doctor first. So I was trapped in the ER, waiting, harassed by Tyler's constant apologies and promises to make it up to me. No matter how many times I tried to convince him I was fine, he continued to torment himself. Finally, I closed my eyes and ignored him. He kept up a remorseful mumbling. "Is she sleeping?" a musical voice asked. My eyes flew open. Edward was standing at the foot of my bed, smirking. I glared at him. It wasn't easy -- it would have been more natural to ogle. "Hey, Edward, I'm really sorry --" Tyler began. Edward lifted a hand to stop him. "No blood, no foul," he said, flashing his brilliant teeth. He moved to sit on the edge of Tyler's bed, facing me. He smirked again. "So, what's the verdict?" he asked me.
Christopher Vogler greatest fears, the failure of an enterprise, the end of a relationship, the death of an old personality. M o s t of the time, they magically survive this death and are literally or symbolically reborn to reap the consequences of having cheated death. T h e y have passed the main test of being a hero. Spielberg's E . T dies before our eyes but is reborn through alien magic and a boy's love. S i r Lancelot, remorseful over having k i l l e d a gallant knight, prays h i m back to life. C l i n t Eastwood's character in Unforgiven is beaten senseless by a sadistic sheriff and hovers at the edge of death, thinking he's seeing angels. Sherlock H o l m e s , apparently k i l l e d with Professor M o r i a r i t y in the plunge over Reichenbach Falls, defies death and returns transformed and ready for more ad ventures. Patrick Swayze's character, murdered in Ghost, learns how to cross back