provement prove proved provenly location locate Local/ located - Breaker break broken brokenly breakage use use useful usefully miracle - miraculous miraculously supposition suppose supposed supposedly sanety - sane (in)sanely ridicule ridicule ridiculous ridiculously sale sell sold - recommendation recommend Recommended Recommendedly recommendable remains remain remained remainedly (un)easiness ease Easy easily eased function function functional functionally Rule rule ruling - ruler
Physical education (PE) is much more than success on the sports field. It develops competent, confident young people who understand the importance of a healthy, active lifestyle. It also calls for teamwork, leadership and creative thinking. These skills enrich learning and life. bring people together through physical activity; break down barriers between groups; PE class is a place to learn that their bodies are inadequate; bodies that are already subject to bullying and merciless ridicule in and out of school. But this is more than about simply anecdotes and haunting childhood memories. There is evidence deserving of attention of why PE class is a miserable experience for many children. Äääääääääääääääääääääääääää Current high school students are becoming fatter, slower, and less motivated than past students. Many of these young people would prefer to be sitting passively in front of the television rather than to do something physically active
named Jim Kearns, and changed her name.[18] As a child, Aguilera aspired to be a singer. She was known locally as "the little girl with the big voice", singing in local talent shows and competitions.[19][20] According to VH1's Driven, whenever competitors learned they would be up against her in any given week, they would immediately withdraw, prompting insiders to claim it was "like sending a lamb to the slaughter." Her peers soon became jealous of her and would frequently subject her to ridicule, ostracism, and, in one gym class, attempted assault. Acts of vandalism around her house included the slashing of the tires on the family car. Eventually, the family relocated to another suburb in the Pittsburgh area (this time, Wexford) and took to secrecy about Aguilera's talent lest another backlash occur.[21] She attended Marshall Middle School near Wexford and North Allegheny Senior High School until she was later home-schooled.
piiravad nende endi eneseteostust. ,,Ce qui me rend folle, c'est que je ne sais à quoi tu penses quand tu es comme ça. Mind teeb hulluks, et ma ei tea, millele Sa mõtled, kui Sa niiviisi vaikid," laususid kord mulle, andes teada, et püüad minu vabadust kergelt piirata. Sa ei mõistnud, et ka vaikides tunnen end Sinuga kui paradiisiranna viimses ehakumas. Jah, see võib tunduda Sulle du dernier ridicule, ülimalt naeruväärne, kuid ma armastan Sind. Je t'aime." Täiskuukiirgus valgustas eredalt selle toa veripunaste linadega kaetud baldahhiinvoodit. Ta avas silmad ning nägi, et oli üksi ses kildudega kaetud põrandaga avaras toas. Lootus sureb viimasena. L'espoir meurt pour la dernière fois. Dan Glosin
rehearse (v) reject (v) relative (n) release (v) reliable (adj) relocate (v) reluctant (adj) remind (v) remote (adj) remove (v) renowned (adj) 23 rent (v) replace (v) represent (v) reproduced (adj) reputation (n) rescue (v) researcher (n) resent (v) reserved (adj) residence (n) resolve (v) resort (n) resort to (phr v) respect (n unc) respectable (adj) respond (v) restore (v) resulting (adj) resurface (v) retain (v) reunite (v) reveal (v) revise (v) rich (adj) ridicule (n) right angle (n) rights (n pl) risk-taking (adj) rival (n) rock chick (n) rock face (n) role (n) roll back (v) rook (n) rope (n) router (n) row (n) rubber (n) ruins (n pl) rumbling (adj) run up against (phr v) runway (n) rural (adj) ruthless (adj) sabotage (v) saddle (n) sane (adj) savoury (adj) 24 saying (n) sb’s days are numbered (idm) scandal (n) scar (n) scenery (n unc) sceptical (adj) scoop (v) scooter (n) scores of (phr) scorpion (n) screenplay (n)
1891. The problem farce (a light, humorous play in which the plot depends upon a skilfully exploited situation rather than upon the development of character), i.e. drawing-‐room drama. The Importance of Being Earnest. The objects of ridicule are often the Victorian philistines. Set in London drawing rooms, dining rooms, etc. Elaborate language and elegant paradoxes. Wilde’s imprisonment. Gay – sent to prison for sodomy; remained for two years. Health
potatoes, etc; drunk--blued, boiled, all wet, fried, pie-eye) American slang is much more colourful. Jargon is a special slang used in certain spheres, like army, university etc. Student's slang: to fail-ship, hit the ceiling, pip; crib in cheating--a horde, cabbage, mule, pony; exam--river; difficult exam--screw Slang in fiction has the stylistic function in the author's narrative to give emotional characterization of something, often off-hand ridicule. Slang words appear more often in dialogue. The function of slang is to individualize the character by the vocabulary he uses. Cant is the language of the underworld (criminals, homeless, prostitutes). Words of neutral style are often used in specific meaning. This is a secret language, in fiction it serves to convey the atmosphere of the social group. (mill-prison; plant--theft; money--jack; to arrest--to land, shop, run in; to betray--to grass, to stool.
Cockney rhyming slang e.g. "trouble & strife" wife). Slang has a great number of synonyms, especially for topics or things that are popular (e.g. "excellent" elegant, fruity, hot-stuff). Slang is divided into general (used in all fields of life) and special slang (used in special spheres of life e.g. army slang, students' slang, stock exchange slang), which is called jargon. In fiction slang is used: a) to give an emotional description by off hand ( ) ridicule (). Such words appear in quotation marks to stress their highly colloquial nature. b) in a dialogue it individualizes the characters by the vocabulary they use; + some additional information may be gained about characters' nature. 2. Cant the lng. of the underworld (lng. of criminals, prostitutes). It is secret language, where the most important words are disguised. Often neutral words are used in a special meaning
Their love will keep him faithful. Nicholas dies in Chapter 20, the only chapter in the novel to bear a title: "Death." Just afterwards, though, Kitty learns she is pregnant, uniting the themes of birth and death. Chapters 21-30 Karenin's life has become a misdirected mess. He is confused as to how he can still have affectionate feelings for Anna and also for the daughter she had with Vronsky. He is trying to raise his son, but he endures constant ridicule from society. Nonetheless, a society lady named Lydia Ivanovna, comes to his house and tells him she will take care of him and his home. The first thing she does, though, is tell the boy Seriozha that his mother is dead. She does everything she can to hurt Anna and make Karenin fall in love with herself. It seems everyone is trying to crush Anna. Betsy tells Vronsky that he shouldn't be seen with her while in Petersburg
They did not hold rallies; they did not hold demonstrations; they did not beg Idi Amin to release the hostages. They demanded that he release the hostages. Amin ignored the demand. Israel sent their men into the Entebbe airport in Uganda, and Amin found himself the laughing stock of the whole world. Now, tell me, who was humiliated? The Israeli (Jews) or Idi Amin (Blacks)? Who got the respect of the world? And who got the contempt and ridicule of the world? After the Holocaust when more than 6 million Jews died at the hands of the demented and psychotic Hitler, the Jews said never again. But after more than 36 million Africans were captured and taken into slavery, 18 million of whom died in the cross-Atlantic voyage, the Black race has never said “Never Again!” the Jews deserve the respect of the world because nothing has been given to them. They had to get what they want. Nobody was willing to give them slack! They earned it
Slang is divided into general (used in all fields of life) and special slang (used in special spheres of life e.g. army slang, students' slang, stock exchange slang), which is called jargon. Students' slang: "a river" - an exam, "screw" a difficult exam, "to hit the ceiling" to fail). In fiction slang is used: a) to give an emotional description by off hand ridicule (the author is never serious). Such words appear in quotation marks to stress their highly colloquial nature. b) in a dialogue it individualizes the characters by the vocabulary they use; + some additional information may be gained about characters' nature. 2. Cant the language of the underworld (language of criminals, beggars, prostitutes). It is secret language, where the most important words are disguised
Hold your tongue. Don't poke your nose in other people's business. DORINE (She keeps interrupting him, just as he turns and starts to speak to his daughter). If I make bold, sir, 'tis for your own good. ORGON You're too officious; pray you, hold your tongue. DORINE 'Tis love of you . . . ORGON I want none of your love. DORINE Then I will love you in your own despite. ORGON You will, eh? DORINE Yes, your honour's dear to me; I can't endure to see you made the butt Of all men's ridicule. ORGON Won't you be still? DORINE 'Twould be a sin to let you make this match. ORGON Won't you be still, I say, you impudent viper! DORINE What! you are pious, and you lose your temper? ORGON I'm all wrought up, with your confounded nonsense; Now, once for all, I tell you hold your tongue. DORINE Then mum's the word; I'll take it out in thinking. ORGON Think all you please; but not a syllable To me about it, or . . . you understand! (Turning to his daughter.)
europe and their background is not hebrew but Yiddish-indoeuropean language based on German. Bellows novels are filled with metaphysical reflection on what man is, on the future of civilization and Bellow is trying to analyze fundamental truths, veritys of life. In a way he is agains post modernism, he is antipostmodern. He belieevs that constatnt meditation about life is important. Typical bellow hero is an intellectual but very often hes an object of ridicule rather than symphaty. ,,Herzog". One character novel, practically the whole novel is about Moses Herzog. He feels alienated and stranged and sees life through the eyes of an alienated person, he is a professor of literature, well educated, but now he is retired. He has had two wives, a son. But there is little close communication between them and very little action in the novel, little outward action. Real action is inside herzogs head. Whole novel is hertzogs contemplation of the
"That is an uncommon advantage, and uncommon I hope it will continue, for it would be a great loss to me to have many such acquaintances. I dearly love a laugh." "Miss Bingley," said he, "has given me more credit than can be. The wisest and the best of men--nay, the wisest and best of their actions--may be rendered ridiculous by a person whose first object in life is a joke." "Certainly," replied Elizabeth--"there are such people, but I hope I am not one of them. I hope I never ridicule what is wise and good. Follies and nonsense, whims and inconsistencies, do divert me, I own, and I laugh at them whenever I can. But these, I suppose, are precisely what you are without." "Perhaps that is not possible for anyone. But it has been the study of my life to avoid those weaknesses which often expose a strong understanding to ridicule." "Such as vanity and pride." "Yes, vanity is a weakness indeed. But pride--where there is a real superiority of mind,
It irritated him, and thinking that he would cause trouble for the French at no cost to himself, told the pope that Henry could have read his ciphers only by black magic. But the tactic boomeranged. The pope, cognizant of the ability of his own cryptologist, Giovanni Batista Argenti, and perhaps even aware that papal cryptanalysts had themselves solved one of Philip's ciphers 30 years before, did nothing about the Spaniard's complaint; all Philip got for his effort was the ridicule and derision of everyone who heard about it. At about the same time, England's first great cryptanalyst helped to execute a sentence of death on that most romantic and tragic of royal ladies, Mary, Queen of Scots. He was Thomas Phelippes. Son of London's collector of customs, he traveled widely in France in his mid-twenties. As early as 1538, while in Paris, he had begun cryptanalyzing messages for Sir Francis Walsingham, Queen Elizabeth's Satanic-looking minister in charge of espionage
Step One: Assemble the group. The ideal number of people in a brainstorming session is four to seven. Below four, you don’t have enough minds to generate a large enough variety of different solutions to the problem. With more than seven people, the group becomes too large for participants to get sufficient opportunity to contribute. Step Two: Do not permit criticism or ridicule. The essential part of brainstorming is that no evaluation of the ideas takes place during the brainstorming session. The entire focus of the brainstorming session is on generating the greatest quantity of ideas possible within a short period of time. Nothing kills a brainstorming session faster than the tendency of people to criticize the ideas as they are generated. As soon as one
been predicted that the beginning of a time of salvation would be marked by an important and undeniable event, usually the cataclysmic end of the world. Of course, these predictions have invariably proved false, to the acute dismay of the members of such groups. However, immediately following the obvious failure of the prophecy, history records an enigmatic pattern. Rather than disbanding in disillusion, the cultists often become strengthened in their convictions. Risking the ridicule of the popu- lace, they take to the streets, publicly asserting their dogma and seeking converts with a fervor that is intensified, not diminished, by the clear disconfirmation of a central belief. So it was with the Montanists of second-century Turkey, with the Anabaptists of sixteenth-century Holland, with the Sabbataists of seventeenth- century Izmir, and with the Millerites of nineteenth-century America. And, thought
Rose and the forces of Restriction. Jack and Rose connect and become A L L I E S when she tries to kill herself by jumping off the ship. H e R E S C U E S her and wins an invitation to dine with Rose and Cal in First Class. H e enters that S P E C I A L W O R L D with the help of M E N T O R M o l l y Brown, and is T E S T E D severely at the dinner by the taunting of his E N E M I E S , Cal and Rose s mother. H e passes these tests and stands up to their ridicule, delivering his credo, an expression of the movie s theme: Life's a gift, learn to take it as it comes, make each day count. H e wins Rose's greater respect and guarantees further clashes with Cal. Rose's T E S T comes a little later when Jack, promising to show her a "real party," guides her into the S P E C I A L W O R L D of T h i r d Class. In a sequence of wild music, dancing, and drinking, Rose is initiated into the world of Dionysus,