Vajad kellegagi rääkida?
Küsi julgelt abi LasteAbi
Logi sisse
Ega pea pole prügikast! Tõsta enda õppeedukust ja õpi targalt. Telli VIP ja lae alla päris inimeste tehtu õppematerjale LOE EDASI Sulge

The Inchcape Rock - sarnased materjalid

here, ralph, ship, rover, stanza, sound, hear, there, stand, abbot, sail, southey, boat, could, dark, thing, poem, warning, stands, sign, near, round, tone, scream, ocean, nature, evil, sink, other, ships, calm, shock, says, able, birds, understand, shore, even, vice, himself, land, doing, first, feel, relax, below, surface, move, peril, them, happen
thumbnail
406
pdf

William Shakespeare - Hamlet

Shakespeare was born and raised in Stratford-upon-Avon. At the age of 18 he married Anne Hathaway, who bore him three children: Susanna, and twins Hamnet and Judith. Between 1585 and 1592 he began a successful career in London as an actor, writer, and part owner of the playing company the Lord Chamberlain's Men, later known as the King's Men. He ap- pears to have retired to Stratford around 1613, where he died three years later. Few records of Shakespeare's private life survive, and there has been considerable speculation about such matters as his sexuality, religious beliefs, and whether the works attributed to him were written by others. Shakespeare produced most of his known work between 1590 and 1613. His early plays were mainly comedies and histories, genres he raised to the peak of sophistication and artistry by the end of the sixteenth century. Next he wrote mainly tragedies until about 1608, including Hamlet, King Lear, and Macbeth, con-

Inglise keel
6 allalaadimist
thumbnail
14
doc

Topics, step 8, kokkuvõtted mõnedest peatükkidest

James was a delicate boy and often suffered from headaches. That is why he could not go to school at the age when other children did. His mother taught him to read and his father taught him writing and arithmetic. He had very good memory and a natural love of work. He liked mathematics and was also fond of designing and making things. James was an observant and thoughtful boy. When James was able to go to school, he was sent to a private school. He learnt many subjects there. In his spare time James began to make experiments. He built a small electrical apparatus with which he gave his friends shocks that made them jump. When James was 18 he decided to become a professional instrument- maker. He could not find anyone to teach him, so he went to London. After a year James returned to Scotland where he became mathematical instrument maker to Glasgow University. He also made musical instruments ­ organs, violins, flutes and guitars

Inglise keel
20 allalaadimist
thumbnail
274
docx

Videvik(kogu raamat Inglise keeles)

Forks. I loved Phoenix. I loved the sun and the blistering heat. I loved the vigorous, sprawling city. "Bella," my mom said to me -- the last of a thousand times -- before I got on the plane. "You don't have to do this." My mom looks like me, except with short hair and laugh lines. I felt a spasm of panic as I stared at her wide, childlike eyes. How could I leave my loving, erratic, harebrained mother to fend for herself? Of course she had Phil now, so the bills would probably get paid, there would be food in the refrigerator, gas in her car, and someone to call when she got lost, but still... "I want to go," I lied. I'd always been a bad liar, but I'd been saying this lie so frequently lately that it sounded almost convincing now. "Tell Charlie I said hi." "I will." "I'll see you soon," she insisted. "You can come home whenever you want -- I'll come right back as soon as you need me." But I could see the sacrifice in her eyes behind the promise. "Don't worry about me," I urged

Kirjandus
19 allalaadimist
thumbnail
29
docx

Ameerika kirjandus alates I maailmasõjast kuni tänapäevani.

It is a truly modernist level in any sense, tries to imitate devices used by cinema. Late 1920's the cinema was already very popular and two great directiors-Griffith and Eisenstein. The greatest innovators of the cinema and they used the devices of montage and collage. He also uses a lot of fragmentation and rapid cutting. The novel is dominated by the high rise city, by the crowds, by the masses of people, passing by the skyscrapers, mechanisation and destructiveness. There is a multitude of characters. Two characters, ellen Thatcher-beatiful and talented Broadway actress and Jimmy Horf-newspaper reporter with and ambition to become a writer. Ellen is a success as an actress, while Jimmys main success in life is his marriage to Helen-their marriage is doomed, he fails as a writer. Ellen becomes the writer in the family, because he is succesful writer of womens magazine. Anti human values of the city. Sacco and Vanzetti-two Americans of

Ameerika kirjandus
18 allalaadimist
thumbnail
2
doc

Philip Larkin poetry analysis

poet whose works I read. I think that his poems are interesting. They reveal much about Larkin's life and about the social issues in the 20th century. Larkin is also considered to be one of the greatest English poets in the 20th century. I think that Larkin was quite interested in politics. For example his poem ´´Talking in Bed´´ begins with the lines /Talking in bed ought to be easiest, Lying together there goes back so far/. At first it gives the reader an idea that he is talking about two lovers, but actually he is talking about England and USA. He describes the darkness that is creeping up. In my opinion he is talking about USA, which is beginning to creep up on England or on Europe. And because of that England is becoming a less dominant and more isolated place. He is saying that intimacy is dying and that may represent the globalization. Another political poem I

Inglise kirjandus
5 allalaadimist
thumbnail
31
doc

Stilistika loeng

Euphony Ellipsis Amphibrach Phonetic SD Aposiopesis Spondee Onomatopoeia Nominative sent. Pyrrhic Alliteration Asyndeton Rhythmic invers. Assonance Apokoinu Run-on line Rhyme: Gap-sentence link Stanza: Full Framing Heroic couplet Incomplete Anadiplosis Ballad stanza Vowel Tautology Spenserian stanza Consonant Polysyndeton Ottava rima Compound Inversion Sonnet:

Stilistika (inglise)
37 allalaadimist
thumbnail
234
pdf

Jane Austen

must be in want of a wife. However little known the feelings or views of such a man may be on his first entering a neighbourhood, this truth is so well fixed in the minds of the surrounding families, that he is considered the rightful property of some one or other of their daughters. "My dear Mr. Bennet," said his lady to him one day, "have you heard that Netherfield Park is let at last?" Mr. Bennet replied that he had not. "But it is," returned she; "for Mrs. Long has just been here, and she told me all about it." Mr. Bennet made no answer. "Do you not want to know who has taken it?" cried his wife impatiently. "You want to tell me, and I have no objection to hearing it." This was invitation enough. "Why, my dear, you must know, Mrs. Long says that Netherfield is taken by a young man of large fortune from the north of England; that he came down on Monday in a chaise and four to see the place, and was so much delighted with it, that he agreed with Mr. Morris

Kirjandus
13 allalaadimist
thumbnail
64
docx

TARTUFFE (inglise keelne)

The lady's brother, I esteem you highly, Love and respect you. But, sir, all the same, If I were in my son's, her husband's, place, I'd urgently entreat you not to come Within our doors. You preach a way of living That decent people cannot tolerate. I'm rather frank with you; but that's my way-- I don't mince matters, when I mean a thing. DAMIS Mr. Tartuffe, your friend, is mighty lucky . . . MADAME PERNELLE He is a holy man, and must be heeded; I can't endure, with any show of patience, To hear a scatterbrains like you attack him. DAMIS What! Shall I let a bigot criticaster Come and usurp a tyrant's power here? And shall we never dare amuse ourselves Till this fine gentleman deigns to consent? DORINE If we must hark to him, and heed his maxims, There's not a thing we do but what's a crime; He censures everything, this zealous carper. MADAME PERNELLE And all he censures is well censured, too. He wants to guide you on the way to heaven; My son should train you all to love him well.

Inglise keel
3 allalaadimist
thumbnail
11
docx

Kordamine inglise keele eksamiks

................... ...................................................................................................... ...................................................................................................... ...................................................................................................... ............................................................................................... i) Can Sir Thom be interested only in Anne or is there a slight possibility that he will fall for Mary-Alice instead?* ...................................................................................................... ...................................................................................................... ...................................................................................................... .................................................................................................

Inglise keel
260 allalaadimist
thumbnail
19
doc

Stilistika materjalid

expressive purposes: to convey the idea of utmost generalization (wife, child, house, dog--isn't it too much?) Nouns: In case of nouns, the expressive features are based on the nontypical use of the forms of number, case and pronoun substitutionin transposition of nouns from one lexicosematic group to another. · Personification: inanimate objects are endowed with human feelings, thoughts, parts of the body, etc. Here, the noun changes its usual connections with pronouns and its lexical combinability. (The Wind laughed his evil laugh and ran away) · Zoonymic metaphor: names of animals or birds and fantastic creatures are used for people and show their characteristic features (donkey, snake, wolf, worm, angel, devil, and witch) · Connotations vary when names of animals have synonyms (pig-swine; monkey- ape)

Stilistika (inglise)
27 allalaadimist
thumbnail
13
doc

Exami kysimused-vastused

Linguistic Stylistics studies linguistic facts from the point of view of their ability to convey extra shades of meaning (connotations ­ we call them). Stylistics has no fixed single unit of study. Stylistics studies everything that makes the utterance of the text expressive. STYLISTIC STUDIES Stylistics is regarded as a relatively new branch of philology, yet its roots go back as far as ancient Greece and Rome. In the 18th century there emerged an individualistic psychological view of style and stylistics. According to this view style bears the stamp of individual usage. The late 19th century and early 20th century saw the appearance of the pragmatic approach to stylistics: the tendency to regard stylistics as an applied science. It was believed that the chief aim of the stylistics is to improve the style of the reader, to teach him to express his thoughts better.

Stilistika (inglise)
44 allalaadimist
thumbnail
8
odt

Somerset Maugham "French Joe" kokkuvõte!!

• Hospital Nurse PLACES: • Thursday Island in Torres Straits – where he went + Joe's final destination • Sydney – where he came from • Shika Maru – last stop before Thursday Island • New Caledonia – prison, where Joe was. • Melbourne – where he fleed the boat • New Guinea – where he went to live after Melbourne STORY: Thursday Island is the last place God ever made. People in Sydney told me not to go, because there was nothing to see and I should get my throat cut. He had come up from Sydney in a Japanese tramp. He arrived in he middle of the night and one of the sailors told him that if he turned left he should presently come to a two-storey building, which was a hotel. The boat pushed off. He didn't like the idea of sleeping on hard stones on a jetty. So he started walking towards the hotel. He seemed to walk much more than a few hundred yards which it should be, but a little bit later he saw a building

British literature
9 allalaadimist
thumbnail
946
pdf

TheCodeBreakers

8. Room 40 9. A War of Intercepts 10. Two Americans 11. Secrecy for Sale 12. Duel in the Ether: I 13. Duel in the Ether: II 14. Censors, Scramblers, and Spies 15. The Scrutable Orientals 16. PYCCKAJI Kranrojioras 17. N.S.A. 18. Heterogeneous Impulses 19. Ciphers in the Past Tense 20. The Anatomy of Cryptology Suggestions for Further Reading Index A Note on the Abridged Version MANY PEOPLE have urged me to put out a paperback edition of The Codebreakers. Here it is. It comprises about a third of the original. This was as big as the publishers and I could make it and still keep the price within reason. In cutting the book, I retained mainly stories about how codebreaking has affected history, particularly in World War II, and major names and stages in the history of cryptology. I eliminated all source notes and most of the technical matter, as well as material peripheral to strict codebreaking such as biographies, the

krüptograafia
14 allalaadimist
thumbnail
10
docx

American Literature

relates to American Revolution on the one hand and the European Enlightenment on the other. Influenced by the scientific revolution of the 17th century and the humanist period during the Renaissance, the Enlightenment took scientific reasoning and applied it to human nature, society, and religion. American Enlightenment a gradual but powerful awakening that established the ideals of democracy, liberty, and religious tolerance in the people of America. If there were just one development that directly caused the American Revolution and uplifted the intellectual culture of the continent while it was only a British colony, it would be the American Enlightenment. Broadly, the Enlightenment was an intellectual movement that changed the fundamental perspective of the masses, urging them to foster skepticism and apply scientific principles in matters of religion and morality. Its chief values were: Liberty, Democracy, Republicanism, Religious Tolerance

Inglise keel
23 allalaadimist
thumbnail
17
doc

Inglise keele stilistika

elegant use of language by developing and polishing stylistic devices. In the 18th century, an individualistic-psychological view on style and stylistics emerges. The late 19th and and early 20th centuries witnessed a utilitarian approach to stylistics. The tendency to regard stylistics as an applied science has been particularly marked in english- 1 speaking countries. It was believed here that the main aim of stylistics is to improve the style of the writer and of a textbook, that is to show how better to express one's thoughts. Of foreign linguists, it is the french Ch.Balley, G.Marduzeon who in the 20th century made a definite contribution. This happened because of the centuries-old tradition in France of interest in style. The classical works on english stylistics are those by the german scholars: Ph.Aronstein, M.Deutschbein, I.Galperin

Stilistika (inglise)
22 allalaadimist
thumbnail
9
docx

Inglise lauljad ja ansamblid

and 1997. In 2000, the three surviving original members discussed recording an album of new material, but their plans temporarily stalled upon Entwistle's death at the age of 57 in 2002. Townshend and Daltrey continue to perform as The Who, and in 2006 they released the studio album Endless Wire, which reached the top ten in the UK and US. The Who were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1990, their first year of eligibility. Their display there describes them as "Prime contenders, in the minds of many, for the title of World's Greatest Rock Band." Time magazine wrote in 1979 that "No other group has ever pushed rock so far, or asked so much from it." Rolling Stone magazine wrote: "Along with The Beatles and The Rolling Stones, The Who complete the holy trinity of British rock." They received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the British Phonographic Industry in 1988, and from the Grammy Foundation in 2001

Inglise keel
6 allalaadimist
thumbnail
3
doc

The Way Home

there. North Sea Eyes: At the first sight when Harry saw Ria, who was a tram driver with beautiful eyes, which the exact color of the North Sea. Harry followed her and saw her from a distance from time to time. Until one day, he found that Ria was a different girl, very different. Actually, she was a man...... Don't choose a book by its cover; don't judge a person by his face. Do not trust the stranger until you really know that person's background, End Point: There strangers, having different backgrounds, stayed in the same motel. But a crazy murderer, Joe, came in and shot all the people in there for no reason...... Joe was put in jail before, after freeing from jail, he married Rita and he was arranged by his father-in-law to work in a hotel restaurant which was founded by their relative. One day, Joe was scored by his boss and he was out of sort. However, he had a high temper so he hurt his fellows. In addition, he took a train to Austin, where the

Inglise keel
1 allalaadimist
thumbnail
18
docx

The Medium Is the Message

of any medium is always .another medium. The content of writing is speech, just as the written word is the content of print, and print is the content of the telegraph. If it is asked, "What is the content of speech?," it is necessary to say, "It is an actual process of thought, which is in itself nonverbal." An abstract painting represents direct manifestation of creative thought processes as they might appear in computer designs. What we are considering here, however, are the psychic and social consequences of the designs or patterns as they amplify or accelerate existing processes. For the "message" of any medium or technology is the change of scale or pace or pattern that it introduces into human affairs. The railway did not introduce movement or transportation or wheel or road into human society, but it accelerated and enlarged the scale of previous human functions, creating totally new kinds of cities and new kinds of work and leisure

Inglise keel
1 allalaadimist
thumbnail
41
doc

Superstar 1 tests

I don't know what the word means. Look it up in a dictionary. 10 ____________________________________________________________________________________________ No, I don't like the Spice Girls. Marks: /10 Words, words, words 4 Complete these sentences using the correct form of the words below. There is one extra word which you do not need to use. aggressive nervous dull funny easy-going ambitious expensive usual experienced successful practical 1 She told a very ________________________ joke and everyone laughed. 2 She's a very ________________________ person. She will do anything to become famous. 3 They didn't give him the job because he was ________________________. He had never done anything like that before.

Inglise keel
60 allalaadimist
thumbnail
4
doc

English literature

involved long ago in events which passed its own comprehension. This narrative of the Crucifixition is even more forceful and the death is also a victory. Using the old language of heroic poetry, The Cross represents itself as the loyal follower of a lord who inexplicably wills his own death. In a normal battle to obey your leader's command is to help defend his life, but for this follower it is to serve his lord's absolute will for death by remaining rigidly upright (to stand fast). The Cross speaks for the bewildered humanity of the dreamer, but also for the suffering humanity of Christ. The Cross himself participates in Christ's sufferings and it can also participate in his glory. After the Crucifixion he is first buried and then raised up and honored (like Christ). The vision has come full circle and now the dreamer can also hope to participate, as one ordinary tree has done, in that victory. The poem ends in a mood of confidence

Inglise keel
65 allalaadimist
thumbnail
9
doc

Oliver twist - kokkuvõte

Oliver went to have a meeting and talk to Mr. Brownlow about his future. They talked about books and how someday Oliver could read and write them if he wanted to. Oliver is afraid that he is going to be sent away and begs to stay. Mr. Brownlow says that he can, and Mr. Grimwig comes for a visit. Mr. Brownlow invites Oliver to stay and talk with them. Mr. Grimwig is a cynic and expounds on the bad qualities of Oliver that he expects are there. Oliver decides that he wants to help and offers to return the books that Mr. Brownlow borrowed. Mr. Brownlow agrees and Mr. Grimwig, keeping with his personality, made a prediction that the boy would never come back once set free. Mr. Brownlow and Mr. Grimwig sat for a long time waiting for Oliver by the tick of the watch that sat on the table. Chapter 15: Nancy reports that where Oliver had been taken and tells them of his illness. They go out

Inglise keel
312 allalaadimist
thumbnail
163
rtf

Dey Bared to You RuLit Net

one day. No matter his expression, he was a knockout. "How about tomorrow after work?" I offered as a substitute. "If I make it through the day, that'll be worth celebrating." "Deal. I'm breaking in the new kitchen for dinner." "Uh..." Cooking was one of Cary's joys, but it wasn't one of his talents. "Great." Blowing a wayward strand of hair off his face, he grinned at me. "We've got a kitchen most restaurants would kill for. There's no way to screw up a meal in there." Dubious, I headed out with a wave, choosing to avoid a conversation about cooking. Taking the elevator down to the first floor, I smiled at the doorman when he let me out to the street with a flourish. The moment I stepped outside, the smells and sounds of Manhattan embraced me and invited me to explore. I was not merely across the country from my former home in San Diego, but seemingly worlds away. Two major metropolises-one endlessly temperate and sensually lazy, the

Inglise teaduskeel
13 allalaadimist
thumbnail
4
docx

The Cataclysmic Death of Stars

Lately they've had two big breaks. One is a revelation about potent blasts of high-energy gamma rays that come from distant points in the heavens. For decades astronomers have puzzled over their origins, but space probes recently clinched the answer, which Woosley proposed more than a decade ago: Many gamma-ray bursts are the early warning signals from supernovas, emitted minutes before the explosion. The link offers a glimpse of events leading up to the actual explosion--another mystery. There, too, researchers have made headway. Looking not at the heavens but at computer models of supernovas, some think they have figured out what may trigger the final cataclysm. The missing element may be unimaginably powerful reverberations--the sound of a star singing its own swan song. For astronomers, there's usually no rush to study something before it vanishes. "The universe usually evolves as slowly as watching paint dry," says one. But these days, hundreds of

Inglise keel
15 allalaadimist
thumbnail
6
doc

Linking Words and Phrases - õppematerjal

Words that ADD information · also · and · another · besides first, second, third, ... · furthermore · in addition · moreover The little girl put on her yellow shirt and brown overalls. Chris is on the basketball team this semester at Indiana School for the Deaf. In addition, he is on the soccer team. We will be here for one more week so we can finish up our work. Another reason we are staying longer is because we do not want to miss the Deaf Way conference. First of all, pour a half-cup of milk in the bowl; second, add two eggs; and third, stir the mixture. I admire I. King Jordan because he is the first deaf president of Gallaudet. Besides that, I admire him because he is a great long distance runner. Furthermore, he is a dedicated family man. All in

Akadeemiline inglise keel
122 allalaadimist
thumbnail
13
docx

E.M.Remarque "Läänerindel Muutuseta"

unable to feel at home among his family, unable to express his feelings about the war or even talk about his experiences, unable to remember the past fully, and unable to conceive of a future without war. He also becomes a "human animal," capable of relying on animal instinct to kill and survive in battle. But because Paul is extremely sensitive, he is somewhat less able than many of the other soldiers to detach himself completely from his feelings, and there are several moments in the book (Kemmerich's death, Kat's death, the time that he spends with his ill mother) when he feels himself pulled down by emotion. These surging feelings indicate the extent to which war has programmed Paul to cut himself off from feeling, as when he says, with devastating understatement, "Parting from my friend Albert Kropp was very hard. But a man gets used to that sort of thing in the army."

Inglise kirjandus
194 allalaadimist
thumbnail
9
doc

A lamb to the slaughter

The room was warm and clean, the curtains drawn, the two table lamps alight - hers and the one by the empty chair opposite. On the sideboard behind her, two tall glasses, soda water, whiskey. Fresh ice cubes in the Thermos bucket. Mary Maloney was waiting for her husband to come him (correction: home) from work. Now and again she would glance up at the clock, but without anxiety, merely to please herself with the thought that each minute gone by made it nearer the time when he would come. There was a slow smiling air about her, and about everything she did. The drop of a head as she bent over her sewing was curiously tranquil. Her skin - for this was her sixth month with child - had acquired a wonderful translucent quality, the mouth was soft, and the eyes, with their new placid look, seemed larger darker than before. When the clock said ten minutes to five, she began to listen, and a few moments later, punctually as always, she heard the tires on the gravel outside, and the car door

Inglise keel
4 allalaadimist
thumbnail
2
odt

„The Chocolate War“

twice that were for sale last year. Leon knows that Archie has influence in the secret group that rules the school. Archie pushes back, but Leon levels his gaze at him and Archie remembers that Leon could ruin his grade in algebra. Archie finaly says that The Vigils will help. A pale, sniveling sort of man, Brother Leon nevertheless is a bully. He takes great pleasure in making students fear him. The black box is a mechanism to keep the leader of The Vigils in check. Inside the black box there are six marbles--five white and one black. If Archie draws the black marble, he must do the assignment himself. Ten minutes before the end of class, Leon calls on Bailey. Leon accuses Bailey of cheating. Leon wonders how else Bailey could always get such great grades. Bailey protests, saying that he does not cheat and never has, but Leon is relentless, accusing him then of lying as well as cheating. finally someone says to leave him alone. The bell rings

Inglise keel
2 allalaadimist
thumbnail
3
doc

Nali: The World According to Student Bloopers

Actually, Homer was not written by Homer but by another man of that name. Socrates was a famous Greek teacher who went around giving people advice. They killed him. Socrates died from an overdose of wedlock. In the Olympic Games, Greeks ran races, jumped, hurled the biscuits, and threw the java. The reward to the victor was a coral wreath. The government of Athen was democratic because the people took the law into their own hands. There were no wars in Greece, as the mountains were so high that they couldn't climb over to see what their neighbors were doing. When they fought the Parisians, the Greeks were outnumbered because the Persians had more men. Eventually, the Ramons conquered the Geeks. History call people Romans because they never stayed in one place for very long. At Roman banquets, the guests wore garlic in their hair. Julius Caesar extinguished himself on the battlefields of Gaul

Informaatika
5 allalaadimist
thumbnail
3
doc

To a Skylark

In the spring the Skylark's song awakens the world which shows how much power the little bird has. As the poem progresses Shelly starts to wonder where the Skylark gets it's inspiration from. He is jealous, in a good way, and wishes he could create something as powerful. Shelly admires the most, how the skylark sounds very joyous. People may get their inspiration from happiness but it is often connected to sadness as people dwell upon memories and hopes. Shelly asks the lark to teach him to sound as joyous because he says that none of the existent books could ever teach him such art. Shelly ends the poem by asking the bird to teach him at least half of his skills so that the world would listen to his poetry in the way he admires the Skylark's singing. Wordsworth Wordsworth's poem is more about the speaker rather than the bird. It also praises the lark and its ability to sound joyous but it concentrates more on the wish to reach the same heights as the bird.

Inglise kirjandus
7 allalaadimist
thumbnail
234
pdf

Keelefilosoofia raamat

(Readers who wish to press on into metaphysics or philosophy of mind should consult, respectively, Michael J. Loux's Metaphysics and John Heil's Philosophy of Mind, both in the Routledge Contemporary Introductions series.) Many of my chapters and sections will take the form of presenting data pertinent to a linguistic phenomenon, expounding someone's theory of that phenomenon, and then listing and assessing objections to that theory. I emphasize here, because I will not always have the space to do so in the text, that in each case what I will summarize for the reader will be only the opening moves made by the various theorists and their opponents and objectors. In particular, I doubt that any of the objections to any of the theories is fatal; champions of theories are remarkably good at avoiding or refuting objec- tions. The real theorizing begins where this book leaves off. x Preface

Filosoofia
46 allalaadimist
thumbnail
548
pdf

Cialdini raamat

Study Questions 50 CHAPTER 3 Commitment and Consistency: Hobgoblins of the Mind 51 Whirring Along 53 The Quick Fix 54 The Foolish Fortress 54 Seek and Hide 56 _CONTENTS Commitment Is the Key 59 Hearts and Minds 66 The Magic Act 67 The Public Eye 71" The Effort Extra 73 The Inner Choice 79 Growing Legs to Stand On 83 Standing Up for the Public Good 86 Defense 89 Stomach Signs 89 Heart-of-Hearts Signs 91 Special Vulnerabilities 93 Summary 95 Study Questions 96 CHAPTER 4 Social Proof: Truths Are Us 97 The Principle of Social Proof 99 People Power 99 After the Deluge 102 Cause of Death: Uncertain(ty) 109

Psühholoogia
24 allalaadimist
thumbnail
278
doc

ESTONIAN SYMPHONIC MUSIC. THE FIRST CENTURY 1896-1996.

SYMPHONISM. XXVIII. THE PERFORMANCES OF SYMPHONIC MUSIC: THE ORCHESTRAS OF TARTU AND TALLINN. XXIX. ESTONIAN SYMPHONISTS ABOUT CREATIVITY. CONCLUSION APPENDIXES APPENDIX A. SELECTED PUBLICATIONS ON ESTONIAN HISTORY AND CULTURE IN GENERAL. APPENDIX B. BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ESTONIAN SYMPHONIC MUSIC APPENDIX C. RECORDINGS OF SYMPHONIC MUSIC. APPENDIX D. SCORES OF SYMPHONIC MUSIC PUBLISHED. APPENDIX E. CHRONOLOGY OF ESTONIAN SYMPHONIES. APPENDIX F. SOUND TAPES OF ESTONIAN SYMPHONIES IN THE ESTONIAN MUSIC INFORMATION CENTRE AT THE COMPOSERS UNION. APPENDIX G. SOME PROGRAMMES WITH ESTONIAN MUSIC AND CONDUCTORS. APPENDIX H. INDEX OF PERSONAL NAMES. APPENDIX I. SELECTION OF PHOTOGRAPHS. APPENDIX J. MUSICAL EXAMPLES. PIANO ARRANGEMENTS AND SCORE SAMPLES. APPENDIX K. USEFUL ADDRESSES. ABOUT THE AUTHOR ESTONIA AND THE ESTONIANS Estonia is situated on the southern shore of the Gulf of Finland, between the Baltic Sea and Lake Peipsi

Inglise keel
9 allalaadimist
thumbnail
24
pdf

Solutions Advanced Workbook key

Maturita Solutions Advanced Workbook Key stand bananas and coffee! It's a bit 3 1 to 8 of Unit 1 uncanny really. Is it something she's 2 about 9 century passed on to me genetically, or is it 3 like 10 assumed / 1A Memories page 3 learned behaviour? Who knows? 4 of thought /

Inglise keel
105 allalaadimist


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