PRONOUNS Object form Possessive Subject form Possessive Reflexive Pronouns Osastav asesõna Omastav Nimetav asesõna Omastav Enesekohased asesõnad Keda? Asesõna + nimisõna Kes? Nimisõna + verb+asesõna Mida? Kelle? Mis? Kelle? (ennast, ise) Kellele? Mille? Mille? I mina Me mind My minu Mine minu Myself I am a girl. You love me. My friend. This book is min...
Sherry Turkle: Connected, but alone? In this video about socialmedia usage the author states that people are using more and more their mobile or other devices rather than talking to people in real life. According to Sherry Turkle we have a new expression alone together. She shows a picture where three girls are hanging out in the same room but they all are in theirs mobile devices communicating to others or each other. The author claims that when people are on the internet they get to present themselves as they want to be by editing and deleteing while writing a text. I agree with the author´s view about people not wanting to communicate in real life. Alessandro Acquisti: Why privacy matters The main point of this video is that any personal information about you on the internet can be sensitive information
come go Direct Speech Indirect/Reported Speech I he, she you I, she, he, we, they we they me him, her you him, her, us, them us them my his, her your my, his, her, our, their our their mine his, hers yours mine, his, hers, ours, theirs ours theirs Differences between TELL and SAY TELL is always TELL SAY is SAY followed by a immediately personal direct followed by a object or noun clause. someone's name. She said (that) Harry told me she was (that) he was hungry. hungry. He said (that) Harry told Sarah he was feeling (that) he was tired. cold.
examinations. I read your report and it leaves me an explicit and clear message the standards are falling and noone tries itselfs best anymore. Years ago it was very difficult to pass an exam, it was hard for us and only few of us could do it so I have to agree with your sayings. None of them worked hard I guess, they just walk in school from door to door and they think that they can just achieve theirs purposes like that. They need some experiences and things which can give them something to learn. In the future, they can't just celebrate and walk on air every day. They have to face difficulties and learn that somethimes there are hard times in everyone's life. Having done the exams and they're celebrating and being proud of themselves. There must me some equality of treatment, equal oppurtunities and some respect for last years' students
2 that ees: He said that I was right. 3 if, as soon as, while jne. ees: I'll tell him about it if I see him. 4 aastaarvudes, telefoninumbrites: 2004 06 294 576 Ülakoma Apostrophe ['p strfi] 1 lühivormide ärajäetud täh(te)e asemel: I'm can't 2 omastava käände puhul: the boy's room the boys' room Ülakoma ei kasutata omastavates asesõnades: its, yours, his, ours, theirs NB! It's it is/ it has He's he is/ he has
A relative pronoun is a pronoun that introduces a relative clause. There are five relative pronouns: who, whom, whose, which, that* Examples: 1) The car which hit me was yellow. 2) Mrs Pratt, who is very kind, is my teacher. Possesive pronouns We use possessive pronouns to refer to a specific person/people or thing/things belonging to a person/people. We use possessive pronouns depending on: number person gender Singular mine, yours, his, hers Plural ours, yours, theirs Examples: 1) Look at these pictures. Mine is the big one. 2) Here is your car. Ours is over there, where we left it. Reciprocal pronouns We use reciprocal pronouns when each of two or more subjects is acting in the same way towards the other. There are only two reciprocal pronouns, and they are both two words: each other one another Examples: 1) John and Mary love each other. 2) The gangsters were fighting one another. Pronoun Case Pronouns (and nouns) in English display "case"
* Artificial intelligence is no match for natural stupidity. * Believing isn't Seeing, Seeing is Believing. * Borrow money from pessimists They won't expect it back. * Expect the worst, Hope for the best. * Fat people are more difficult to kidnap * Few women admit their age. Few men act theirs. * Good friends are like stars -- you don't always see them, but you know they are always there. * Government philosophy: If it ain't broke, fix it 'til it is. * If practice makes perfect, and nobody is perfect, then why practice? * I always mean what I say but I don't always say what I mean. * I was born intelligent. But, education ruined me. * If the left half of the brain controls the right hand, and the right half the left, then lefthanded people are the only ones in their right minds.
Nowadays young people have so much to study in school. They are always under the pressure, because tests are almost everyday and everybody wants to pass them. For example, I used to be under the pressure and study almost everyday, while my stress raised and raised. In my opinion, the solution to this problem is to reduce the amount of tasks. To sum up, there are many sources of stress in young people's lives, which affect theirs ability to be positive. But it is important to bear in mind that there are also solutions to avoid stress. REPORT 2009 To: Mrs. Cook From: Exchange student at Trent College Subject: Trent College students' eating preferences Date: 04/05/12 Purpose The aim of this report is to present Trent College students' eating preferences and make recommendations. A survey was carried out among the students in Trent College. Fast food Fast food is the most popular type of food among the boys
1 John put on his coat and ran out of the house. 2 This is your pencil. Mine is the one over there. 3 Lucy and her twin brother always do their homework together. 4 Do you need a hand with this bag? - No, thanks. I can carry it myself. 5 Don't take this towel! It's mine. Mum said yours is in the bathroom. 6 Where are the chilrden? - They are playing with their toys upstairs. 7 Be careful with the knife! Don't cut yourself! 8 What a strange car! It's not our neighbours'. Theirs is the dark blue Rover across the street. 5 You are going to listen to Samantha telling you about her life. Read the sentences below. You have 30 seconds to do so. Listen to Samantha and finish the sentences. Listen again and check your answers. 1 Samantha Greenhill is a student from Canada. 2 The students have a lunch break from 12:00 to 12:45. 3 There are tomato and cheese sandwiches in Samantha's lunch bag. 4 The teachers are strict. The students can't be late for their lessons.
London published a novel - The Light that Failed and on the 18 January 1892 Carrie Balestier (29) and Rudyard Kipling (26) were married in London United States didn't find a country that lived up to his expectations the Boer war increasing harshness of his views John Josephine Peak of his career Nobel Prize in 1907 In 1995 UK's favourite poem "If " (1895) If Rudyard Kipling If you can keep your head when all about you Are losing theirs and blaming it on you; If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you, But make allowance for their doubting too; If you can wait and not be tired by waiting, Or, being lied about, don't deal in lies, If you can make one heap of all your winnings Or, being hated, don't give way to hating, And risk it on one turn of pitch-and-toss, And yet don't look too good, nor talk too wise; And lose, and start again at your beginnings
Then, one week Jeanette didn't find her because Melanie had got a job in the library. She had to work there every Saturday morning. Melanie lived with her mother who often wasn't home. She had no father. Jeanette also learned that Melanie had such a funny name because when she was born she had looked like a melon. In my opinion, this indicates that Melanie was not that smart and had limited intellectual capacity. Melanie's church was not a very lively one and Jeanette invited her to theirs. The first time that Melanie went to Jeanette's church she acted shy and didn't sing along with others. When the pastor urged sinners to raise their hand Melanie pushed hers into the air. Churchgoers prayed for her and Jeanette started going to Melanie's each Monday to read the Bible together and pray. Girls became friends, but soon after felt differently towards each other. `Do you think this is Unnatural Passion?' asked Jeanette once. `Doesn't feel like it. According to Pastor
exhilarated and aching for more. For a sleepless weekend, Barcelona is the place to go. CATALANS The Catalans really know how to have a good time. They love life, love to party and see little point in sleeping when they could be out enjoying the night scene. At the hour when most people in Britain are heading home to bed, the action in Barcelona is just warming up. And when most Scottish clubs are closing their doors, the hippest clubs in this city are just opening theirs. GAUDI Most tourists will want to take in stunning sights such as Gaudi's wackily- designed flats, his unfinished Sagrada Famiglia church and the city's more traditional Santa Eulalia cathedral. Young locals, however, are more likely to be found worshipping the latest chart hits in a noisy club. RELAX It doesn't take long to get into the swing of things, as I found out. Café de L'Opera is the classiest venue on Las Ramblas, the city's most famous boulevard.
(She) HER HERS (It) ITS ITS 1st person (plural) (Our) OUR OURS 2nd person (plural) (You) YOUR YOURS 3rd person (plural) (They) THEIR THEIRS Reflexive pronouns: A reflexive pronoun is a pronoun that is preceded by the noun or pronoun to which it refers (its antecedent) within the same clause. In English, the reflexive pronouns are myself, yourself, thyself, himself (in some dialects, "his self"), herself, itself, oneself, ourselves, yourselves, and themselves (in some dialects, "their selves"). "I see myself" or "She sees herself" Relative pronouns:
As our lovely journey was coming to an end, I imposed on buying ourselves some ice cream. Getting down to the beach, eating my own cone and having some alone time with the filming guys, my attention was pointed to the cliff where we parked our motorhomes after I heard what sounded like a motorhome falling from a cliff noise. I soon came to a realization that Hammond and May had pushed my beautiful and extremely cool motorhome down the cliff simply because theirs were so far behind on the looks and well everything. And on that bombshell it is time to end. Thank you for reading and have a nice night now !
mother. Princess Victoria's uncle, King William IV, disapproved of the match, but his objections failed to dissuade the couple. Many scholars have suggested that Prince Albert was not in love with young Victoria, and that he entered into a relationship with her in order to gain social status (he was a minor German prince) and out of a sense of duty (his family desired the match). Whatever Albert's original reasons for marrying Victoria may have been, theirs proved to be an extremely happy marriage. [3] Early Reign In 1837 Queen Victoria took the throne after the death of her uncle William IV. Due to her secluded childhood, she displayed a personality marked by strong prejudices and a willful stubbornness. Barely eighteen, she refused any further influence from her domineering mother and ruled in her own stead. Popular respect for the Crown was at a low point at her
Another way historians might address this issue would be to say or write something like, 3 Siobhan Kattago, "Memory, Pluralism and the Agony of Politics," Journal of Baltic Studies, vol. 41, no. 3 (2010). "In 1940, the Soviet Union took control of Estonian territory. Many Estonians and others viewed and view this event as illegal occupation, while many Russians and others viewed and view this event as an act of protecting, liberating, and rightfully claiming what is theirs." Such treatment should strive for neutrality, impartiality, and objectivity. It should strive for the truth as accurately as possible, despite some arguments that truth is relative. While depicting history completely correctly may be impossible, as innumerable moments, thoughts, and events make up history, there is still such a thing as being closer to the truth. Some history may be more false than others. The historian should judge this based on other evidence,
Molotov Plan. d) The Berlin Airliftstarted when the Russians stopped givin West Germany things and stopped all connections with West Germany. The British, US and French governments did not give up and started giving aid to West Germany by air. At first there were only 100 planes which were filying day by day bringing food and fuel for two million people. It became easier when the French built a new airfield in Tegel and the British enlarged theirs at Gatow. Soon planes were landing in every five minutes. Airplanes were able to supply most of the people and even during the winter time and the Russians gave away in May 1949 but with that all hopes of a united Germany died.
She her hers she her he kisses her it its it it I don't like it we our ours we us can you help us? they their theirs you you see you tomorrow they them phone them this evening Prepositions of time IN ON AT - the morning -Monday(morning) - three o'clock - afternoon -the 12th of July -midday/midnight
the Clergy Daughters' School at Cowan Bridge in Lancashire (which she would describe as Lowood School in Jane Eyre). At home in Haworth Parsonage, Charlotte and the other surviving children -- Branwell, Emily and Anne -- began chronicling the lives and struggles of the inhabitants of their imaginary kingdoms. Charlotte and Branwell wrote stories about their country -- Angria -- and Emily and Anne wrote articles and poems about theirs -- Gondal. Charlotte continued her education at Roe Head, Mirfield, from 1831 to 1832, where she met her lifelong friends and correspondents, Ellen Nussey and Mary Taylor. During this period (1833), she wrote her novella The Green Dwarf under the name of Wellesley. In May 1846, Charlotte, Emily and Anne published a joint collection of poetry under the assumed names of Currer, Ellis and Acton Bell. In June 1854, Charlotte married Arthur Bell Nicholls, her father's curate, and became
declined to give a last name. ("My family has no idea where I am -- or if I'm even alive -- and I'd like to keep it that way," she said.) They were passing the phone around the afternoon before the G20 meeting in Pittsburgh, where a few of them were planning a trip, intending to protest, Ms. Markle said. Ms. Feigelson explained that they were being "super-selective," because an activist house, which is what she hopes theirs will be, she said, "can create tension." But were their hopes too high? Their criteria too stringent? Helen Fisher, a biological anthropologist at Rutgers University and a relationship expert (she is the scientific adviser to Chemistry.com, a spinoff of the dating site Match.com), took a gander at a few of the ads, including the ones written by Ms. Berger and Ms. Hazard and the gang in Philadelphia. The idealized, small-scale communities they described reminded her of the hunting and
A Few Small Nips ( passionately in love)-300 Flowers- I belong to my owner. 150 ( autoportree pühendusega leon trotskyle, pealkirjaga „between the Curtains“)-600 My Nurse and I- 300 Memory ( The heart)- 250 Fulang-Change and I-300 survivor 100 still life with pitahayas -300 the fruits of earth- 400 xochitl. 100 Self Portrait with Itzcuintil dog -300 they asked for planes and only got straw wings-150 remembrance of an open woond-200 the four inhabitants of mexico ( „the square is theirs) -300 girl with death mask ( she plays alone) – 100 what the water gave me -600 eye-100 tunas-150 the deceased dimas( dressed up for paradise)-250 my grandparents, my parents and i ( my family)- 300 autoportree The Frame. Unknown 1939 jaanuaris toimub pariisis Golle Gallerys näitus, kus on ka frida tööd väljas. Samuti oli seal fotograaf Manuel Akvarez bravo ja bretoni töid. Üks frida töödest, autoportree The Frame, osteti The Louvre poolt.
step three is where you calculate what sales you'll need to make in order to generate a profit. This is where many people come unstuck: either by being too optimistic about sales or by failing to charge enough. Objective market research will allow you to estimate what customers are prepared to pay. You can find much of that from adverts in the local press and from competitors' brochures. Measure yourself against these local competitors how can you make your products or services better than theirs? But don't be afraid of competition as it shows there is a market for what you propose to sell. Now is also the time to start learning about the formal side of running a business. And the easiest way to do that is to visit the Business Link website (www.businesslink.gov.uk) and download their "No-nonsense Guide to Government rules and regulations for setting up your business". This national organisation offers impartial advice and access to a wealth of business information and training courses
Prague, and the area was inhabited continuously by various Germanic and Celtic tribes before the arrival of the Slavs. The name Bohemia came from a Celtic tribe called Boii, and is still used today for the western part of the Czech Republic. Foundation of Prague In the 6th century, two Slav tribes settled on opposite sides of a particularly appealing stretch of the Vltava River. The Czechs built a wooden fortress where the residential area Hradcany stands today, and the Zlícani built theirs upstream at what is now Vysehrad. They had barely dug in when nomadic Avars thundered in, to rule until the Frankish trader Samo united the Slav tribes and drove the Avars out. Samo held on for 35 years before the Slavs reverted to squabbling. In the 9th century Prague was part of the short-lived Great Moravian Empire. Under its second ruler, Rastislav (r 846-70), emissaries were invited to come from Constantinople, and Christianity took root in the region
come), pronouns (we, they). possessive (pronoun) omastav asesõna, A word or part of a word that describes possession: possessiivpronoom possessive determiner (my, your, his, her, its, our, their), en possessive pronoun (mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs), genitive (men's jacket), the of construction (the regulations of the university) postmodification, järellaiend A term used to refer to the modification which occurs The children, who are playing in postmodifier after the head word in a phrase. the playground, live down the
acts on itself Singular: myself, yourself, himself, itself Plural: ourselves, yourselves, themselves Possessive pronouns – Indicate possession or ownership. Mine, yours, his, hers, ours, yours, theirs. Possessive adjectives – My, your, his, her, its, our, your, their Reciprocal pronouns – Refer to recionship Each other, one another Relative pronouns – Refer back to people or things that were previously mentioned.
she it its tema; selle its tema/selle (oma) Mitmus our meie ours meie (oma) we your teie yours teie (oma) you their nende theirs nende (oma) they Kasutamine Omadussõnaline vorm nimisõna ees My name is Chris. This is your bag. I can`t see thier faces. Nimisõnaline vorm iseseisvalt My name is Chris, mine is Tim. This is your bag. That is hers. I can`t see thier faces but they can see ours. 3. Enesekohased asesõnad (reflexive pronouns) Ainsus Mitmus myself
In the course of half a century, the class-based country people had turned into a socially differentiated nation. 17 | P a g e Our opinion We can learn from history how past generations thought and acted, how they responded to the demands of their time and how they solved their problems. We can learn by analogy, not by example, for our circumstances will always be different than theirs were. The main thing history can teach us is that human actions have consequences and that certain choices, once made and cannot be undone. They foreclose the possibility of making other choices and they determine future events. We think that periods from 1710-1850 and 1850-1918 have changed Estonian life and history in many ways. The enlightening time influenced the life of our country the most, especially the Estonian language
force which caused an apple to strike him in the head. Such an idea we of course know it today as universal gravitation would have been absolutely unintelligible even to an advanced medieval thinker. This is so for two reasons. First, medieval man did not see the movement of the heavenly bodies from the standpoint of the mechanics of motion. The heavenly bodies, after all, were composed entirely of aether. Theirs was an organic, living world view rather than our now more familiar mechanical conception. Second, and perhaps of even more importance, medieval man could not understand that the planets or the stars or comets were made of the same stuff as an apple matter. [ aine ] So monumental were his achievements in cosmology, the Scientific Revolution could almost have been called the Copernican Revolution
s 3rd sg masc he him his his himself fem she her her hers herself neut it it its -- itself pl they them their theirs th em sel ve s At least in certain dialects, the morphs I and me (and similarly we and us, he and him, etc.)
revealed as ultimately meaningless. In the last moments of their life, they then also realize that while they were looking throughout their lives for a more complete sense of self, what they were really looking for, their Being, had actually always already been there, but had been largely obscured by their identification with things, which ultimately means identification with their mind. “Blessed are the poor in spirit,” Jesus said, “for theirs will be the kingdom of heaven.”1 What does “poor in spirit” mean? No inner baggage, no identifications. Not with things, nor with any mental concepts that have a sense of self in them. And what is the “kingdom of heaven” The simple but profound joy of Being that is there when you let og of identifications and so become “poor in spirit.” This is why renouncing all possessions has been an ancient spiritual practice in both East and West
and shake his hand." Thus, as early as August 12, 1941, the state secretary of the Foreign Office could hand to von Ribbentrop fully solved copies of Murphy's telegrams of July 21 and August 2. The first reported that Murphy had transmitted Roose- velt's views on French North Africa to General Maxime Weygand, commanding there. The second transmitted a Weygand aide's request for an American promise of military assistance. The Nazis knew Weygand was no friend of theirs, but it was not until they had what a Vichy source called "documentary proof" of his dealings with the United States that they forced Vichy to dismiss him. Thus the solution of an American diplomatic code cost the United States much valuable time and work that it was forced to recommence with the new leaders of French North Africa, and it may ultimately have prolonged the war and cost the lives of American soldiers who fought in that theater.
It wasn't just physically that I'd never fit in. And if I couldn't find a niche in a school with three thousand people, what were my chances here? I didn't relate well to people my age. Maybe the truth was that I didn't relate well to people, period. Even my mother, who I was closer to than anyone else on the planet, was never in harmony with me, never on exactly the same page. Sometimes I wondered if I was seeing the same things through my eyes that the rest of the world was seeing through theirs. Maybe there was a glitch in my brain. But the cause didn't matter. All that mattered was the effect. And tomorrow would be just the beginning. I didn't sleep well that night, even after I was done crying. The constant whooshing of the rain and wind across the roof wouldn't fade into the background. I pulled the faded old quilt over my head, and later added the pillow, too. But I couldn't fall asleep until after midnight, when the rain finally settled into a quieter drizzle.
" cried Lydia. "I wonder my aunt did not tell us of that." "Dining out," said Mrs. Bennet, "that is very unlucky." "Can I have the carriage?" said Jane. "No, my dear, you had better go on horseback, because it seems likely to rain; and then you must stay all night." "That would be a good scheme," said Elizabeth, "if you were sure that they would not offer to send her home." "Oh! but the gentlemen will have Mr. Bingley's chaise to go to Meryton, and the Hursts have no horses to theirs." "I had much rather go in the coach." "But, my dear, your father cannot spare the horses, I am sure. They are wanted in the farm, Mr. Bennet, are they not?" "They are wanted in the farm much oftener than I can get them." "But if you have got them to-day," said Elizabeth, "my mother's purpose will be answered." She did at last extort from her father an acknowledgment that the horses were engaged.
T h e adventure takes a tragic and more noble turn at the death of Enkidu, which sends Gilgamesh on a spiritual quest for the elusive secret of immortality. A polarized relationship, be it a friendship, partnership, alliance, or romance, allows for a full exploration of character as the two people, representing opposite ends of a spectrum of behavior, find their standards and habits intensely challenged by energy that is just the opposite of theirs, perhaps outgoing where theirs is shy and private, or highly organized where their lives are chaotic. Here is a partial list o f possible polarities within a relationship. Entire stories could be built around each of these pairs of opposites. I'm sure you can think of many more. 323 T H E W R I T E R ' S JOURNEY ~ T H I R D EDITION Christopher Vôgler Sloppy vs
They should believe in personal development, and already read books, lis- ten to audio programs, and attend courses and seminars. ■ LOOSE OR STRUCTURED When you get together with members of your mastermind group, you can have an agenda, or no agenda.Your meetings can be struc- tured or unstructured. You can talk about general subjects or spe- cific topics.You may talk about your own business or about theirs. It doesn’t matter. The very activity of spending time around other positive people energizes you, makes you more creative, and makes you feel more enthusiastic toward whatever you are doing. An important element of your mastermind group is the amount of laughter that you experience together. This is the key measure of the quality of any of your relationships. People who laugh a lot to-
Communication researchers have learned that , in conversations, people unconsciously shift their voice and speech styles toward the styles of individuals in positions of power and author· ity. One study explored this phenomenon by analyzing interviews on the Larry King Live televi- sion show. When King interviewed guests having great social standing and prestige (for instance, Bill Clinton, George Bush, and Barbara Streisand), his voice style changed to match theirs. But when he interviewed guests of lower status (for instance, Dan Quayle, Spike Lee, and Julie Andrews), he remained unmoved, and their voice styles shifted to match his (Gregory & Webster, 1996). THE ALLURES AND DANGERS OF BLIND OBEDIENCE ~ READER'S REPORT 6.1 From a Texas-Based University Professor grew up in an Italian ghetto in Warren, Pennsylvania. I occasionally return Ihome to visit family and the like
Ss'answers statements(Keywords:1 gets- attention- parents; 2 . A s a n e x t e n s i o n5,s i a l k a b o u ta p a s te x p e r i e n coef parents- spoil;3 never- lonely;4 wishes - had- brother;5 theirs notwant- share -withanyone;6friends - asgood- sisters) Explain that 5swon't hearexactlythe samewords AnswerKey(5eeoverprinted answers) inthelistening b ,u t t h e m e a n i n w g i l lb e t h e s a m e Playthe cassette5s do the exerciseCheckSs,
Ss'answers statements(Keywords:1 gets- attention- parents; 2 . A s a n e x t e n s i o n5,s i a l k a b o u ta p a s te x p e r i e n coef parents- spoil;3 never- lonely;4 wishes - had- brother;5 theirs notwant- share -withanyone;6friends - asgood- sisters) Explain that 5swon't hearexactlythe samewords AnswerKey(5eeoverprinted answers) inthelistening b ,u t t h e m e a n i n w g i l lb e t h e s a m e Playthe cassette5s do the exerciseCheckSs,
Ss'answers statements(Keywords:1 gets- attention- parents; 2 . A s a n e x t e n s i o n5,s i a l k a b o u ta p a s te x p e r i e n coef parents- spoil;3 never- lonely;4 wishes - had- brother;5 theirs notwant- share -withanyone;6friends - asgood- sisters) Explain that 5swon't hearexactlythe samewords AnswerKey(5eeoverprinted answers) inthelistening b ,u t t h e m e a n i n w g i l lb e t h e s a m e Playthe cassette5s do the exerciseCheckSs,
Ss'answers statements(Keywords:1 gets- attention- parents; 2 . A s a n e x t e n s i o n5,s i a l k a b o u ta p a s te x p e r i e n coef parents- spoil;3 never- lonely;4 wishes - had- brother;5 theirs notwant- share -withanyone;6friends - asgood- sisters) Explain that 5swon't hearexactlythe samewords AnswerKey(5eeoverprinted answers) inthelistening b ,u t t h e m e a n i n w g i l lb e t h e s a m e Playthe cassette5s do the exerciseCheckSs,