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"somehow" - 81 õppematerjali

somehow

Kasutaja: somehow

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Uurimistöö "Kohustusliku kirjanduse populaarsus 11.klassides"

because the books are too substantial or there is too little time to read them. Also we found out how the teacher covers the subjects of matter given in the book. 6 students told, that teacher covers the subjects thoroughly, 15 students said that it was quite thoroughly, 2 answers said that, it could be better and only one pupil claimed that the teacher doesn't cover any of the subject matters. Very many students thought, that the reading material was somehow related to the boiling problems of nowadays. It means that we are reading books that give us a lot of thinking substance. In the end of the questionnaire we asked whether the students would read books, if there was no reading material required at school and it was good to find out, that only 24% of the inquired pupils answered negatively. We think that the reading level of the 11. graders in Valga Gymnasium is stable. Also, we hope be

Kirjandus → Kirjandus
22 allalaadimist
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Libraries

do at the same situation (as a murderer or suspect) and she was excellent at knowing people. Ruby Keene was the murdered girl. She was young and dim-witted. She worked as a Ballroom dancer at the Majestic Hotel and had to communicate with people. She was a likeable person, the customers of the hotel liked her although it was obvious that she was not very bright. Josie turner was also a dancer at the hotel. She was somehow related to the girl. Turner was not a very nice person. She was very calm when she heard about the murder and did not seem to be surprised nor sad, more like confused. The hotel staff wasn't very fond of her and neither were the detectives. She seemed to be clever and hiding something. Basil Blake was a murder suspect with an arrogant attitude towards the police. He was having parties at his house all the time with young women coming over. He was a rich man working in the film business

Keeled → Inglise keel
3 allalaadimist
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Feminism and youth cultures in England

1. Feminism­ movement, ideology to defend women’s rights  Suffrage – right to vote  2.  Feminism  isn’t a unitary movement  because  it  represents  different  women and  different experiences for  them in different parts of the world. Different  ideologies  3. Three waves of feminism  • 1st wave – early 19th century – early 20th century (Political rights, suffrage­right to vote)  • 2nd wave – 1960s­1980s (Social inequalities, gender norms, Women's Liberation Movement)  • 3rd wave – 1990s­2000s (ideas are the same, but they wanted to get rid of things the second  wave had failed to do); feminisms, expansion, multiplicity, postcolonialism.    4.  Anne  Bradstreet­  the  first  feminist  17th  century;  the  most  prominent of early English poets  of North America and first female writer in the British North American colonies to be published  Mary  Wollstonecraft­  education;  an  eighteenth­century  English   wr...

Keeled → Inglise keel
1 allalaadimist
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Reasons why human beings are unique

"I am become death, the destroyer of worlds." So said the physicist Robert Oppenheimer, who helped to invent the atomic bomb. The two bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945 killed around 200,000 Japanese people. No other species has ever wielded such power, and no species could. The technology behind the atomic bomb only exists because of a cooperative hive mind: hundreds of scientists and engineers working together. The same unique intelligence and cooperation also underlies more positive advances, such as modern medicine. But is that all that defines us? In recent years, many traits once believed to be uniquely human, from morality to culture, have been found in the animal kingdom (see part one in this two-part series). So, what exactly makes us special? The list might be smaller than it once was, but there are some traits of ours that no other creature on Earth can match. No animal can get close to the devastatio...

Keeled → Inglise keel
1 allalaadimist
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Jacques Louis David ja Prantsuse Revolutsioon

he started to imitate Antique sculptures. Moreover, David and Classicism in general were not limited to only mimicking the external form of the Antique, but also the plot was often borrowed from the Antique literature or mythology. Best suited were the subjects that glorified bravery, loyalty, love for the fatherland and other virtues. Paintings were supposed to be instructive and fight against vices. (Leesi, 2003, p.115) As a matter of fact, the whole life of Jacques-Louis David was somehow connected to political change and therefore David was left with no other choice than to be a part of the French Revolution. In 1780 David returned to Paris and a few years later he exhibited his masterpiece Oath of the Horatii in the Salon. The Salon was a place where all the great men in Paris, who later on were participants of the Revolution, would gather, discuss relevant topics and enjoy culture. The message behind the Horatii impressed many important figures

Kultuur-Kunst → Kunsti ajalugu
1 allalaadimist
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Ssubtiitrite lugemiskiirus

out times for each of the studied subtitles. This means the readers have all the in- formation which is needed available, in case they wish to make the calculations themselves. A simple and quick analysis of the data allows us to check that the exceptions are the very few instances where the values proposed by the three programs co- incide. It seems as though the simple process of counting characters and dividing the resulting number by the subtitle duration must be somehow implemented in a different way in these programs, given the results shown. As far as word counting, it is more than likely that "WinCaps" and "Swift" are programmed to make some sort of initial assumption (as the one mentioned before that every set of five char- acters makes up a word), although this presumed assumption must clearly not be the same in both applications, since differences in results of up to 15% (see subtitle

Varia → Sissejuhatus erialaõppesse
1 allalaadimist
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Tao Te Ching (Tim Chiu)

style of Kung Fu called Tai Chi Chuan y Hard, sturdy trees are the first to break in a storm, but the small, soft blade of grass is better equipped to endure the storm y Everybody in the world knows y But can not put into practice y We all understand this, yet few can put this into practice in real life y Counterintuitive tendency to meet force with even more force y We tend to yell back louder as if the other person would somehow hear us more clearly 78.3) Virtues of Water y Therefore, sages say: y The one who can accept the humiliation of the nation is called its master y To be the leader of a nation, one must have the strength in character to accept humiliation than to simply retaliate with hostility and aggression y Be yielding and flexible like water to overcome the difficulties y The one who can accept the misfortune of the nation is called the king of the world

Keeled → Inglise keel
1 allalaadimist
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Videvik(kogu raamat Inglise keeles)

I would be the new girl from the big city, a curiosity, a freak. Maybe, if I looked like a girl from Phoenix should, I could work this to my advantage. But physically, I'd never fit in anywhere. I should be tan, sporty, blond -- a volleyball player, or a cheerleader, perhaps -- all the things that go with living in the valley of the sun. Instead, I was ivory-skinned, without even the excuse of blue eyes or red hair, despite the constant sunshine. I had always been slender, but soft somehow, obviously not an athlete; I didn't have the necessary hand-eye coordination to play sports without humiliating myself -- and harming both myself and anyone else who stood too close. When I finished putting my clothes in the old pine dresser, I took my bag of bathroom necessities and went to the communal bathroom to clean myself up after the day of travel. I looked at my face in the mirror as I brushed through my tangled, damp hair. Maybe it was the light, but already I looked sallower,

Kirjandus → Kirjandus
19 allalaadimist
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The Origins of American Literature

The origins of American literature The first Americans were explorers and settlers, adventurers and idealists who crossed the ocean in search of new opportunities or to escape the poverty and intolerance. Their writings were matter-of-fact accounts of life in America, which explained colonisation to Englishmen back in the homeland. An example of this form of writing is John Smith's A True Relation of Virginia, which is widely recognized to be the first example of Am lit. The early years of colonisation produced a mass of utilitarian writings including biographies, accounts of voyages, diaries, sermons, pamphlets. Much of the material addressed the problems of Church and State. There were few examples of fiction, poetry or drama. Anne Bradstreet of Massachusetts published some lyrical poems of high literary quality (1650) and Edward Taylor, who was born in England but lived in Boston, wrote some poetry in the style of John ...

Kirjandus → Inglise kirjandus
17 allalaadimist
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Uurimistöö "Veganiks pöördumise põhjused"

In this research I presented two main questionswhich strongly support the research problem. First question was whether and under what conditions would students be prepared to return to the omnivorous community. The survey shows that students would turn back to eating meat if the quality of producing meat products would be better. Perhaps better machines, cleaner slaughterhouses, employees know about hygiene etc. Second thing what students bring out was if someone could prove that vegan food is somehow unhealthy and doesn't do good for your body. When they get a solid assurance from scientists and doctors who say "Yes, veganism and vegan diet are bad for your health", they will return to omnivorous lifestyle. Unfortunately this statement is not proved yet. There are doctors who talk about veganism as how bad it is for health but then again others find out eating plant based food is one of the most effective diets of them all.

Ühiskond → Ühiskonnaõpetus
16 allalaadimist
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Keelefilosoofia raamat

These are very robust phenomena; so the Name Claim is not just a des- perate lunge made in order to solve the proper-name versions of the four puzzles. Russell speaks aggressively of names' "abbreviating" descriptions, as if they were merely short for the descriptions as "the U.S.A." is short for "the United States of America." That is too strong. All Russell actually needs for his analytical purposes is the weaker contention that names are somehow equivalent in meaning to descriptions (let us call that weaker thesis the Description Theory of proper names). Yet even the less ambitious Description Theory has since come in for severe criticism. Opening objections Objection 1 Searle (1958) complained that, if proper names are equivalent to descrip- tions, then for each name there must be some particular description that it is equivalent to. For example, if I unreflectively muse, (5) Wilfrid Sellars was an honest man,

Filosoofia → Filosoofia
46 allalaadimist
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American Literature

Poe objected to narrow nationalism. The poverty of the arts in America was a direct result of the national preoccupation with money. He was rather harsh on minor authors. Longfellow hated him. The first modern literary theoretician used a lot of psychology (psychological system ­ logical), in direct contrast with romanticism. The work of art should be evaluated from the point of view of the author's intention, what the author intended. He stood somehow aloof ­ somehow on the side. He was ahead of his time. He mentally anguished landscapes, far from nature or society. He seemed to European ­ his contemporaries could not understand his ideas. The first group of writers who started to appreciate his writing was the French symbolists, especially Baudelaire. They proclaimed Poe their predecessor. Major influence on later writers ­ he can be called the first detective stories writer. Moreover Poe was interested in scientific discoveries (motifs, inventions)

Keeled → Inglise keel
23 allalaadimist
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Ameerika kirjandus alates I maailmasõjast kuni tänapäevani.

innovative in structure and style, he invents language, he manages to merge sense of regional history with awareness of historical time. We could say that typical form is that of single consciousness. His own term for the way he is writing is mental flow. He loves inner monologue. Like gertrude stein and most scolars say that he was influenced by her, he uses continuos present, in another words it means that everything seems to happen at the same time. Past, future, present are somehow mixed. Another interesting point is limited point of view, which means that story is told through one characters limited perspective and this character can't see what other characters can see. He has a very interesting technique presenting facts, he doesn't explain to the reader, the reader has to put it together. His style is similiar to the stream of consciusness technique,but not like joyce's style. Faulkner traces the actual thought perseption and memory processes

Kirjandus → Ameerika kirjandus
18 allalaadimist
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Mõtteterad/aforismid

" "So I let go, watching you, turn your back like you always do." "You're my everything, that i could ever dream of." Behind the most beautiful eyes of an angel, lies the smile of a devil. Love is like a wind. U can't see it but u can feel it You're the only person who can make my heart beat faster and slower at the same time Some things are worth waiting for When heart listen, angels sing The best way to love is lov like u've never been hurt Hold my hand and I'll take u there. somehow, someday, somewhere. . Anything is possible when it comes to love U can be only as happy as you want to be I love u until day after forever Love is like a baseball game 3 strikes and ur... OUT! Sorry but I have to move on and leave you behind I realize nothing's broken You're still a part of everything I do. You can live in your dreams, but one day you need wake up and step in to real world!! Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take, but by the

Kirjandus → Kirjandus
224 allalaadimist
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Structural Testing Of Homebuilt Aircraft

part will ever be stressed beyond its point - how do we know that this structural testing. It must be under- yield point - which means that it will composite wing still possesses that stood that the complete testing of an always operate within elasticity lim- safety factor of 1.5 beyond the tested aircraft to be Type Certified repre- its. Yet, what happens if somehow point? With an aluminum or wooden sents almost as much work as the pilot overloads his aircraft, either wing we would know because as building it. The joke goes that the by overdoing a pull-up or too steep a long as our tests indicate the entire paperwork for an aircraft to be turn or by entering an extreme gust

Mehaanika → Abimehanismid
4 allalaadimist
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Teaduslik revolutsioon

16421730 III We can't imagine that the Scientific Revolution of the 16th and 17th centuries took place in a vacuum [ tühjuses, iseenesest ]. That is, we can't assume that modern science simply came to be in a momentary flash of brilliance, nor that Copernicus or Kepler or Galileo just woke up one morning and pronounced their discoveries to a world which became somehow instantaneously different. Past historians have looked at the history of modern science from precisely this point of view. Like the Renaissance, the Scientific Revolution has been interpreted as explosive, a surge forward, a watershed [ sai alguse jõelahkmest ]. The scientists of the seventeenth century those mathematicians, astronomers, and philosophers had the enormous weight of centuries of thought resting on their shoulders. Even Isaac Newton was aware of the

Ajalugu → Ajalugu
13 allalaadimist
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Dey Bared to You RuLit Net

The doorman tipped his hat to me. "Good evening, Miss Tramell. Will you need a cab this evening?" "No thanks, Paul." I rocked onto the rounded heels of my fitness shoes. "I'll be walking." He smiled. "It's cooled down from this afternoon. Should be nice." "I've been told I should enjoy the June weather before it gets wicked hot." "Very good advice, Miss Tramell." Stepping out from under the modern glass entrance overhang that somehow meshed with the age of the building and its neighbors, I enjoyed the relative quiet of my tree-lined street before I reached the bustle and flow of traffic on Broadway. One day soon, I hoped to blend right in, but for now I still felt like a fraudulent New Yorker. I had the address and the job, but I was still wary of the subway and had trouble hailing cabs. I tried not to walk around wide-eyed and distracted, but it was hard. There was just so much to see and experience.

Keeled → inglise teaduskeel
13 allalaadimist
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Public International Law is a system of law

g. US recognized Finland as de facto at first, then de jure), or de jure recognition by implication could be treated as de facto. Recognizing by international treaty. After the II WW in 1955, Austria was established as an independent state. It was re-established in an international treaty signed by the allied powers, it was automatically de jure recognition. Usually recognition cannot be withdrawn, unless country somehow was divided or re- organized etc. One example when it happened, e.g. Japan against China in Two theories Constitutive theory ­ says that countries or government don't exist until they are officially recognized Declaratory theory ­ countries or governments exist objectively and recognition only confirms their existing situation. Many think that declaratory theory is more relevant, in reality, constitutive theory is more practical

Keeled → Inglise keel
6 allalaadimist
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"Anna Karenina" kokkuvõte

full partnership in the land. Later on, Nicholas comes to Levin at home, sicker than ever. His death is imminent. Levin grows depressed and takes comfort in the fact that maybe his work can save him from death. "Levin said what he had genuinely been thinking of late. He saw nothing but death or the advance toward death in everything. But his cherished scheme only engrossed him all the more. Life had to be got through somehow till death did come. Darkness had fallen, upon everything for him; but just because of this darkness he felt that the one guiding clue in the darkness was his work, and he clutched it and clung to it with all his strength." In this way, work is life itself for Levin. Part 4, Chapters 1-15 These are the chapters where Vronsky and Karenin finally come eye to eye, both knowing what they know. Oddly, Anna and Karenin are still living together, feigning a marriage. "The Karenins, husband and

Kirjandus → Kirjandus
333 allalaadimist
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Christopher Vogler The Writers Journey

I came to believe that the Hero's Journey is nothing less than a handbook for life, a complete instruction manual in the art of being human. T h e Hero's Journey is not an invention, but an observation. It is a recogni­ tion of a beautiful design, a set of principles that govern the conduct o f life and the world of storytelling the way physics and chemistry govern the physical world. It's difficult to avoid the sensation that the Hero's Journey exists somewhere, somehow, as an eternal reality, a Platonic ideal form, a divine model. From this model, infinite and highly varied copies can be produced, each resonating with the essential spirit of the form. xiii THE WRITER'S JOURNEY ~ THIRD EDITION Christopher Vogler T h e Hero's Journey is a pattern that seems to extend in many dimensions, describing more than one reality

Kirjandus → Ingliskeelne kirjandus
17 allalaadimist
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The 4-Hour Body - An Uncommon Guide to Rapid Fat-Loss, Incredible Sex, and Becoming Superhuman - Timothy Ferriss

outcome. If they would just do something most people would nd that they get some version of the outcome they're looking for. That's been my secret. Stop wishing and start doing. "Yet here I was, talking about arguably the most important part of my life--my health--as if it was something I had no control over. I had been going with the ow for years. Wishing for an outcome and waiting to see if it would come. I was the limp, powerless ego I detest in other people. "But somehow, as the school nerd who always got picked last for everything, I had allowed `not being good at sports' or `not being fit' to enter what I considered to be inherent attributes of myself. The net result is that I was left with an understanding of myself as an incomplete person. And though I had (perhaps) overcompensated for that incompleteness by kicking ass in every other way I could, I was still carrying this powerlessness around with me and it was very

Keeled → Inglise keel
15 allalaadimist
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A New Earth

parents’ vocal cords is his or her name, the child begins to equate a word, which in the mind becomes a thought, with who he or she is. At that stage, some children refer to themselves in the third person. “Johnny is hungry.” Soon after, they learn the magic word “I” and equate it with their name, which they have already equated with who they are. Then other thoughts come and merge with the original I-thought. The next step are thoughts of me and mine to designate things that are somehow part of “I.” This is identification with objects, which means investing things, but ultimately thoughts that represent things, with a sense of self, thereby deriving an identity from them. When “my” toy breaks or is taken away, intense suffering arises. Not because of any intrinsic value that the toy has – the child will soon lose interest in it, and it will be replaced by other toys, other objects – but because of the thought of “mine”. The toy became part of the

Psühholoogia → Psühholoogia
9 allalaadimist
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Kommunikatsioonimudel

" This being a networking text, we should remark that Alice and Bob may be two routers that want to securely exchange routing tables, etc. We can identify the following desirable properties of secure communication: • Secrecy. Only the sender and intended receiver should be able to understand the contents of the transmitted message. Because eavesdroppers may intercept the message, this necessarily requires that the message be somehow encrypted (disguise data) so that an intercepted message can not be decrypted (understood) by an interceptor. This aspect of secrecy is probably the most commonly perceived meaning of the term "secure communication." Note, however, that this is not only a restricted definition of secure communication, but a rather restricted definition of secrecy as well. For example, Alice might also want the mere fact that she is communicating with Bob (or the

Tehnoloogia → Tehnoloogia
16 allalaadimist
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Cialdini raamat

" More interesting to me, though, was the effect upon the rest of the audience. At the end of the question period, the two recruiters were faced with a crowd of au- dience members submitting their $75 down payments for admission to the TM program. Nudging, shrugging, and chuckling to one another as they took in the payments, the recruiters betrayed signs of giddy bewilderment. After what ap- peared to have been an embarrassingly clear collapse of their presentation, the meeting had somehow turned into a great success, generating mystifyingly high levels of compliance from the audience. Although more than a bit puzzled, I chalked up the audience response to a failure to understand the logic of my col- league's arguments. As it turned out, however, just the reverse was the case. Figure 3.1 Higher Consciousness Ads like this one will NEW HEIGHTS MEDITATION probably have to be Free NHM seminars discontinued now that a

Psühholoogia → Psühholoogia
24 allalaadimist
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Integration of Lean Con. and Building Information Modelling

guided me throughout my work and Roode Liias for his advice as a second supervisor. I am also indebted to Lauri Koskela, who gave me an opportunity to stay in England and study LC and BIM under him and his research team. I am very grateful to my family and friends for their support over the last years. I would also like to thank lecturers at the University of Applied Science, companies, and everyone who was somehow involved in this research process. 77 6.5 Summary in Estonian Autor: Ergo Pikas- Civil Engineering student, Faculty of Construction, Tallinn University of Applied Sciences Juhendaja: Rafael Sacks- Dotsent, Tsiviil- ja Keskkonnaehituse Teaduskond, Technion ­ Iisraeli Tehnikainstituut

Ehitus → Ehitusjuhtimine
70 allalaadimist
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TheCodeBreakers

But PA-K2 was a low-priority system, and the message had originated in a consular office. It was set aside to be worked on later. Besides, S.I.S. had more important things to worry about. Like OP-20- O, it was going frantic in a search for the 14th part. Captain Robert E. Schukraft, head of the intercept section, and Frank B. Rowlett, the civilian cryptanalyst in charge of the Japanese diplomatic solutions, checked and rechecked to see whether one of the stations had picked it up and had somehow neglected to forward it. The message preambles had said that it existed, but they could find no trace of it. Neither suspected that the Japanese Foreign Office had deliberately held up transmission of this final conclusive part for security's sake. Neither did the code clerks at the Japanese embassy. They had returned from Terasaki's party about 9:30, and by midnight had completed deciphering of the 13 parts. While they waited for the final

Informaatika → krüptograafia
14 allalaadimist
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Aforismid

2154. Õnn on see, kui tunned end vajalikuna. 2155. Õnn on teisi aidata, teisi õnnelikuks teha. 2156. I love the girls who hate to love because they're just like me 2157. It's so hard to pretend like I know everything, i dont know anything, i wanted you to see that I got nothin. 2158. Your time has come, kiss it all goodbye 2159. Pisar pisara järel, need on mu tunded. 2160. You're on my heart just like a tattoo 2161. Just like a tattoo, I'll always have you. 2162. Cause you were made for me somehow I'll make you see how happy you make me. 2163. I can't live this life without you by my side, I need you to survive. 2164. So stay with me . You look in my eyes and I'm screaming inside that I'm sorry. 2165. Does it hurt to know I'll never be there? 2166. Bet it sucks to see my face everywhere 2167. It was you who chose to end it like you did. 2168. It's like the world just disappears when you're around me. 2169. But she cries in the night, just to try to hold on 2170

Kirjandus → Kirjandus
115 allalaadimist
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CHANGE YOUR THINKING CHANGE YOUR LIFE

You must strive to be completely honest with yourself and your situation.You must refuse to engage in self-delusion and the hope that things will work out whether or not you do anything about them. Especially when it comes to building wealth, you must be totally honest with yourself. You cannot afford to play games with your own mind if you truly want to be wealthy.You cannot wish and hope and pray that somehow you are going to win the lottery or strike it rich as a result of luck or some remarkable external circumstance. ■ YOU CREATE YOUR OWN LUCK Often people ask me about the role of luck in success. They are con- vinced that luck is a critical factor in achieving anything worth- while. They feel that some people are just lucky and some are not. They talk about luck as if it were a matter of fate or destiny, largely inexplicable

Keeled → Inglise keel
19 allalaadimist
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Jane Austen

answering her; but she said he seemed quite angry at being spoke to." "Miss Bingley told me," said Jane, "that he never speaks much, unless among his intimate acquaintances. With them he is remarkably agreeable." "I do not believe a word of it, my dear. If he had been so very agreeable, he would have talked to Mrs. Long. But I can guess how it was; everybody says that he is eat up with pride, and I dare say he had heard somehow that Mrs. Long does not keep a carriage, and had come to the ball in a hack chaise." "I do not mind his not talking to Mrs. Long," said Miss Lucas, "but I wish he had danced with Eliza." "Another time, Lizzy," said her mother, "I would not dance with him, if I were you." "I believe, ma'am, I may safely promise you never to dance with him." "His pride," said Miss Lucas, "does not offend me so much as pride often does, because there is an excuse for it

Kirjandus → Kirjandus
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Book Analog Interfacing to Embedded Microprocessors

Preface There often seems to be a division between the analog and digital worlds. Digital designers usually do not like to delve into analog, and analog design- ers tend to avoid the digital realm. The two groups often do not even use the same buzzwords. Even though microprocessors have become increasingly faster and more capable, the real world remains analog in nature. The digital designers who attempt to control or measure the real world must somehow connect this analog environment to their digital machines. There are books about analog design and books about microprocessor design. This book attempts to get at the problems encountered in connecting the two together. This book came about because of a comment made by someone about my first book (Embedded Microprocessor Systems: Real World Design): “it needs more analog interfacing information.” I felt that adding this material to that book would cause the book to lose focus

Mehhatroonika → Mehhatroonika
10 allalaadimist
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ESTONIAN SYMPHONIC MUSIC. THE FIRST CENTURY 1896-1996.

UNO SOOMERE ESTONIAN SYMPHONIC MUSIC. THE FIRST CENTURY 1896-1996. AN OVERVIEW With a Historical and Cultural Summary IN MEMORY OF THE GREAT ESTONIAN COMPOSERS CONTENTS ESTONIA AND THE ESTONIANS FOREWORD IN THE FOLD OF TSARIST RUSSIA. EMERGENCE AND FIRST STEPS ON THE CLASSICAL-ROMANTIC PATH. HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION I. MUSICAL LIFE IN TARTU AT THE TURN OF THE CENTURY. TRAILBLAZERS: ALEKSANDER LÄTE, RUDOLF TOBIAS, ARTUR KAPP. II. THE FIRST DECADE OF THE 20TH CENTURY. ARTUR LEMBA: THE BEGINNING OF ESTONIAN SYMPHONY AND OPERA. III. NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN CULTURAL AND MUSICAL LIFE: THE END OF THE TSARIST PERIOD. THE INDEPENDENT REPUBLIC OF ESTONIA: THE INTRODUCTION OF INNOVATIONS FROM WESTERN ART AND THE EVOLUTION OF NATIONALLY ORIENTED MUSICAL TRENDS. IV. THE TWENTIES. ARTUR KAPP: ROMANTICIST AND DRAMATIST. V. THE INFLUENCE OF NEW WESTERN MUSIC...

Keeled → Inglise keel
9 allalaadimist


Sellel veebilehel kasutatakse küpsiseid. Kasutamist jätkates nõustute küpsiste ja veebilehe üldtingimustega Nõustun