There remained some lords and members of the council who were not loyal to Elizabeth. Many of them wanted to see her dead, but she managed to be alive. The throne was still in endangered by Mary Stuart but the queen moved fast and let Mary killed. Elizabeth was living a hard life because she had to stand for the people of England and make many important decisions. She had good mind for being a queen and she was able to improve the position of England in the world despite the fact that she sacrificed her life for it. She had to do the things she did because it was for her own safety and England could have been gone under the rulement of other countries which was the worst thing to be happened. (195 words)
rules and bans. People are allowed to do anything they want, but they still have to somehow obey to the ruler of the Hell s. However in Heaven the ruler has been and will be God. There you must obey and honor the God anyway. If you have lived your life like God would have wanted you to live and you already are in heaven then it is better to serve in heaven. You have lived for God. You have sacrificed and done everything for being accepted there. If you really believe that Heaven is the place where you want to be then you must follow the right lifestyle, because you do not want to be in a place where you are not wanted. However there are people who go to hell for spiteful sins. Some people don't even care what effect their action has on somebody else. Those people can't even rule in Hell, they must serve there
In some countries polygamy is much needed, without it people would not be able to keep up their farms. It helps them to get food more easily and share the property they inherited from their parents. I think that in about hundred years or so there will be no more polygamous families.I believe people are too jealous to share their loved ones. Although people in the all countries are getting more and more accepting towards different lifestyles and customs. People have fought and sacrificed their lives so this type of lifestyle would be accepted. If people have gave their lives for this then it must have meant something important to them. In conclusion I support people in polygamous marriages who are not forced to be in it in any way and who are educated enough to explain their opinion.
Popular belief tends to emphasise the absolute importance of smell for sheep in line with many other mammals, however as we shall see this another misconception with all three major senses playing essential roles. Vision Sheep depend heavily on their vision. They have excellent peripheral vision and can see behind themselves without turning their heads. However, they have poor depth perception. They cannot see immediately in front of their noses. Some vertical vision may also have been sacrificed in order to have a wider field of vision. For example, it is doubtful that a sheep would be able to see something in a tree. There was a research about sheep recognising faces and genders. Pictures of sheep and humans were shown. Sheep was supposed to choose between face images in order to gain access to the real individuaal whose face-picture had been seen. The sheep chose sheep faces over human ones and familiar sheep faces over unfamiliar ones. For the studies was used only female sheep
weather vane on top of the spire of the Tallinn's Town Hall, so the people started to call the vane Old Thomas. How did Wheel's Well get the name Cat's Well The legend says that citizens of Tallinn believed that an evil spirit, who threatened to make all the towns wells run dry, lived in the Wheel's Well. To keep the spirit happy, people sacrificed animals. They started to throw dead cats to the well and thanks to this common citizen started to call the well Cat's Well. Although the wells of Tallinn never ran dry, the water was soon undrinkable due to the sacrifices. How did Kiek in de Kök get its name It is said that at the medieval times the cannon tower was so high that the warriors on
First of them tells about a Kassikaevu. Formerly, there was a well on the Ratsakaevu street. There was a wheel attatched to the well, what helped to get the water out of the well. It is said that because of that wheel, was that street named as Ratsakaevu street. Townspeople, however, called the pit instead Kassikaev. It is said that one nixie lived in that well and it was believed that the nixie will float Tallinn. Because of that the habitants sacrificed every year many cattles, especially many dead cats. Because of that the well got its name Kassikaevu. After many years the well was closed. The other story about the Ratsakaevu street is about the wedding of the devil. There is a story about one precise house on that street. The house owner, to whom the house belonged to the past, dropped his fortune so recklessly, that he no longer knew what to do. One evening, he was so desperation that he decided to end his life.
For the face of Christ he created a composite of the faces of friends. The first variant was sold to Thomas Combe of Oxford, whose wife later presented it to Keble College. Much later Hunt painted a second much larger version. It now hangs in St Paul`s Cathedral. "The Scapegoat"(1854-5)- (patuoinas) He wanted to use something from Christs life while visiting the Holy land. As part of the Jewish ritual of Atonement(lunastus), two goats are selected, one to be sacrificed and the other to be released into the wilderness to atone for the sins of the community. The goat depicted Jesus. During the process of creating this painting Hunt found a goat near the Dead Sea and studied and painted it for a long time. "The Lady of Shalott" ( 1886 1905)- poem by Tennyson "The Lady of Shalott". (the Lady's "isolation in the tower and her decision to participate in the living world) The painting depicts
goods. · QX = f( inputs [land, labor, capital], technology, . . . ) · Legal and social/cultural institutions influence the production function. Costs Costs are incurred as a result of production. The important concept of cost is opportunity cost (marginal cost). These are the costs associated with an activity. · When inputs or resources are used to produce one good, the other goods they could have been used to produce are sacrificed. Economic Cost: the monetary value of all inputs used in a particular activity or enterprise over a given period. Economic costs reflect the opportunity cost of resources. Costs may be in real or monetary terms; - implicit costs - explicit costs Explicit Costs: paid directly in money - money costs. - A firm incurs explicit costs when it pays for a factor of production at the same time it uses it.
that consumers want most Two elements that are critical: 1. The money price of any product is society's measure of the relative worth of an additional unit of that product. 2. The idea of opportunity cost, we could see that the marginal cost of an additional unit of a product measures the value, or relative worth, of the other goods sacrificed to obtain it. Consumer and Producer Surplus A level of output at which P = MC = lowest ATC, marginal revenue = marginal cost, maximum willingness to pay = minimum acceptable price, and combined consumer and producer surplus are maximized. · Consumer surplus is the difference between the max prices that consumers are willing to pay for a product and the market price of that product.
The Britons grew wheat and corn, caught fish, and tamed and bred animals. They made coarse cloth for their clothes, learned the art of pottery, made things of wool, metal and copper, and were good warriors. They traded with the Gauls and built many temples and altars. The Celts brought with them a knowledge of smelting iron, which produced stronger weapons than the bronze ones. They had a strange and cruel religion, sometimes human beings were sacrificed. In 43 AD the Roman Invasion in Britain started. The millions of people who lived under the Romans, were bound together under a common system of law and government. Ancient Rome had an enormous influence on the development of Western civilization. Julius Caesar reached the shores of Gaul in 55 BC. The Romans, having better arms, armour, organization, and training, defeated the Celtic tribes. The next invasion took place under the Emperor Claudius, this time
experience). Plasticity can change the functional qualities of various brain structures depending on the regularity and type of the task. Rosenzweig and Bennett carried out a series of studies on brain plasticity. The researchers placed rats into either an enriched or a deprived environment to measure the effect of the environment on the development of neurons in the cerebral cortex. The rats spent 30 or 60 days in their environment and were then sacrificed. The results showed that the rats that lived in a stimulating environment had a thicker cortex. The frontal lobe, associated with thinking, planning and decision-making was heavier in these rats as well. Similar studies show that if the rats were put in together with other rats, the thickness increases even more. These findings can be generalized to humans only to some extent because of the difference in genetic make-up. However, if
sign it. The electrician was reluctant to estimate the cost of the repair work. renown n. fame adj. renowned Syn. prominence This school is of great renown. The renowned conductor made a guest appearance at the concert. sacrifice v. to give up something of value for the adj. sacrificial common good n. sacrifice Syn. concession He sacrificed his day off to help clean up the neighborhood. She made sacrifices in order to be able to attend the university. triumph n. a victory; a success adv. triumphantly Syn. achievement adj. triumphant adj. triumphal v. triumph His career was characterized by one triumph after another. He triumphed over all of his difficulties. MATCHING Choose the synonym. 1. intrusive 6. around (A) inactive (A) obviously
(Janet Leigh), even though she is an embezzler on the run. T h r o u g h the first half of Act Two, there is no one else to identify with except the drippy innkeeper, N o r m a n Bates (Anthony Perkins), and no audience wants to identify with h i m — he's weird. In a conventional film, the hero always survives the Ordeal and lives to see the villain defeated in the climax. It's unimaginable that a star like Janet Leigh, an immortal heroine of the screen, will be sacrificed at the midpoint. But Hitchcock does the unthinkable and kills our hero halfway through the story. T h i s is one Ordeal that is final for the hero. N o reprieve, no resurrection, no curtain call for M a r i o n . T h e effect is shattering. You get that odd feeling o f being a disembodied ghost, floating around the frame as you watch Marion's blood pour down the drain. W h o to identify with? W h o to be? Soon it's clear: Hitchcock is giving you no one to identify with but Norman
The ego's need to manipulate others into filling the sense of lack it continuously feels is then directed toward them. If the mostly unconscious assumptions and motivations behind the parent's compulsion to manipulate their children were made conscious and voiced, they would probably include some or all of the following: “I want you to achieve what I never achieved; I want you to be somebody in the eyes of the world, so that I too can be somebody through you. Don't disappoint me. I sacrificed so much for you. My disapproval of you is intended to make you feel so guilty and uncomfortable that you finally conform to my wishes. And it goes without saying that I know what's best for you. I love you and I will continue to love you if you do what I now is right for you.” When you make such unconscious motivations conscious, you immediately see how absurd they are. the ego that lies behind them becomes visible, as does its dysfunction. Some parents that I spoke to suddenly
reflect on what she had heard. It was a long time before she became at all reconciled to the idea of so unsuitable a match. The strangeness of Mr. Collins's making two offers of marriage within three days was nothing in comparison of his being now accepted. She had always felt that Charlotte's opinion of matrimony was not exactly like her own, but she had not supposed it to be possible that, when called into action, she would have sacrificed every better feeling to worldly advantage. Charlotte the wife of Mr. Collins was a most humiliating picture! And to the pang of a friend disgracing herself and sunk in her esteem, was added the distressing conviction that it was impossible for that friend to be tolerably happy in the lot she had chosen. Chapter 23 Elizabeth was sitting with her mother and sisters, reflecting on what she had heard, and
long list of rules nor involving mental strain. These requirements still comprise the ideal which military ciphers aim at. They have been rephrased, and qualities that lie implicit have -been made explicit. But any modern cryptographer would be very happy if any cipher fulfilled all six. Of course, it has never been possible to do that. There appears to be a certain incompatibility among them that makes it impossible to institute all of them at once. The requirement that is usually sacrificed is the first. Kerckhoffs argued strongly against the notion of a field cipher that would simply resist solution long enough for the orders it transmitted to be carried out. This was not enough, he said, declaring that "the secret matter in communications sent over a distance very often retains its importance beyond the day on which it was transmitted." He was on the side of the angels, but a practical field cipher that is unbreakable was