SPENCER GORE Laura Helinurm III VÕ Viljandi gymnasium 2016 About ❖ 1878-1914 ❖ British painter of landscapes, music-hall scenes and interiors ❖ attended Harrow school ❖ founded the Fitzroy Street Group ❖ president of the Camden Town Group ❖ died at the age of 35 Style ❖ use of vivid and unnatural colours ❖ thick applications of paint ❖ real life subject matters ❖ emphazising geometric forms “Letchworth, The Road” 1912 “Harold Gilmans house at Letchworth” 1912 “The Icknield way” 1912 “The Beanfield, Letchworth” 1912 Links ❖ http://www.tate.org.uk/art/research-publications/camden-town-group/spencer-gore-r110 5355 ❖ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spencer_Gore_(artist) ❖ http://www.artbiogs.co.uk/2/movements/fitzroy-street-group
The body as art. There are so many ways that you can use your body, how you can make a art with that. They call dancing an art, because it describes how some of us are feeling- using body as an art. There is also a way to put actual art on your body, like tattoos. After I turned 13 I've always wanted a tattoo and few weeks ago I finally got it. Tattoo is something amazing, something totally different. You put something on your body something unnatural but what describes you 100 % , means something to you a lot. Of course before I even planned to get a tattoo I found out as much information as I could. While I was doing that I well even more in love with tattoos. Before I got my tattoo I went to see how is it actually done in real life and again it made me want it even more. Few weeks later I got it, at first I was kind of afraid of the pain but it wasn't as bad as I imaged. I am so happy with the result and totally planning to have another
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 Finch, that's awful.' answered Melanie. The more they spent time together, the stronger their feelings got though neither of them admitted it out loud. However, everything changed after Jeanette told her mother about Melanie. Next time in church the girls were ambushed. `These children of God,' began the pastor, `have fallen under Satan's spell.' When asked, Jeanette
Milking machine Merlin-Hans Hiiekivi Regards about inventing a milking machine • Development of a usable milking machine took several decades of trial and error. • Some editors of 19th century dairy and ag publications acknowledged a need for a good milking machine, but, were dissatisfied with all that were being offered. Others discouraged all attempts at machine milking, stating that it was unnatural or intrinsically injurious to the cow. . Early Cow Milking Machines • The earliest devices for mechanical milking were tubes inserted in the teats to force open the sphincter muscle, thus allowing the milk to flow. • Skillfully made tubes of pure silver, gutta percha, ivory, and bone were marketed in the mid-19th century, and, in fact, a few were still being sold well into the 20th century. • A novel milking tube illustrated in the Scientific
European films mainly show up during a few festivals, although it would make more sense if it was the other way around or at least in some natural balance. The same, apparently, goes for books – a lot of American literature is translated into Estonian or simply sold, and sometimes it seems that the only reason is because they sold in America and became known to us via internet. I do believe "Fifty Shades of Grey" being one of such phenomena, and at that rather an unnatural one. Furthermore, another aspect of strong influence from America on us is the internet. I personally can’t imagine my life withou it. One can search the web and get the answers in an instant. The internet has helped to create many Estonian companies. It guides the way we create documents, send e-mail and exchange information in a multitude of different ways. But what we should not forget while reaping benefits of this easy information is that no source is neutral and
Olbrei founded the permanent ballet troupe in the theatre, the ballet became more regular in the 1930s. In 1994--2009 the theater was managed by Paul Himma, since 1 September 2009 the general manager is Aivar Mäe. Tallinn City Theatre This theatre was founded in 1965 named Youth Theatre, but from the beginning it was a regular drama company, with only slightly more plays for the children than in the other theatres. The objective of its first leader Voldemar Panso was to change the unnatural situation, created in Stalinist times, of Tallinn having only one Estonian-language drama theatre. In the beginning the theatre used the big stage of a Soviet-style "palace of culture". In 1975 a 100-seat stage was opened in the 15th-century house in the old-town centre of Tallinn. After Panso the company was led by Mikk Mikiver, Kalju Komissarov, and Rudolf Allabert. Since 1992 the artistic director is Elmo Nüganen and the managing director is Raivo Põldmaa. In
The love medicine was stronger than Grandma and Lipsha had thought it would be. Lipsha was afraid and said that they shouldn't have tampered with it. to quill (260) to arrange (fabric) in flutes or cylindrical ridges, as along the edge of a garment, hem, etc. One night Marie found a skin bag, which had one end quilled with rawhide strips of pale, washed- to-sand colors, dyed with butternut, wild grapes, ocher, fading sere. to sprawl (261) to spread the limbs in a relaxed, awkward, or unnatural position. When Marie saw Gordie again, the circle of Gordie's motion grew rounder and wider until in one movement he uprooted himself and sprawled headlong. a quilt (261) a type of bed cover. Marie unfolded a quilt cut and repaired it with woollen clothing. fervour (265) An intense, heated emotion. When Gordie started to laugh, he started talking with animated fervour.(because he is in need of a drink) to get/have somebody over a barrel (281) in a situation in which someone has no choice about
Liialt tugev, too light, Ilmselgelt liiga intensiivne värvus. See loob Lisatud on üleliigselt värvaineid. Taunitav viga. vivid erk mulje "kunstlikkusest". Liialt too pale, Jäätis on kahvatu ja lumesarnase värvusega. Kerge viga. chalky, kahvatu, lacking kriitjas, ebapiisav värvus Ebaloomulik unnatural Jäätis on ebaloomulikult kollaka, oranzhi või Sulanud jäätis on segunenud friiseris värske Kergesti märgatav pruunja varjundiga, mis ei vasta piimarasva jäätiseseguga. viga. loomilikule värvile. Tabel 14 (järg). II. SULAMISKVALITEET
- the ability to classify it (grouping ability); - the ability to describe the material ("some say this ..., they are not wrong, but other say that ...." Etc.); - the ability to draw conclusions (on theoretical and practical materials); - your personal contribution (do something that no one has done before); - talking about the material (as if you are speaking to the first year student avoid sophistication in language, that may sound unnatural). Comment on examples (from where the example is taken how it is used explain all). NB! Comments everywhere. You have right to: · Supervisor discusses and specifies the topic with you; · Supervisor gives a tutorial where the supervisor sets general directions for your paper and recommends a book (source) for your study; · Supervisor reads your rough sketch (and if necessary checks faults); BUT! Supervisor does not have to correct your language.
mind. He reminds him of how Cassio was the go between during Othello’s courtship of Desdemona and begins to plant small, indiscriminant thoughts of adultery in Othello’s mind, pretending to be reluctant to answer questions and being very circuitous. Othello begins to show his own doubts, declaring Desdemona does not love him any more and that maybe her father was right in that her love for him was unnatural and unhealthy, that he was not good for her. After Iago leaves, he contemplates further the implications, how his wife might already be besot with another man and the choice he would need to make, to clear her from his heart. He tries to push those thoughts away. When Desdemona reappears, Othello is distant and quiet, looking for signs of her unfaithfulness. He brushes aside her handkerchief when tries to sooth the pain in his head and the two soon leave for dinner
Uued väljakutsed kvalitatiivuurijatele. Mida teha saavutatud teadmisega? Eetilised probleemid. *Ungari suitsidoloogia näide: mida rohkem fenomeni uuritakse, seda rohkem neid ka toimub. (60ndad-80ndad) 7) Uus aastatuhat. Globaliseerumine ja sellega seotud probleemid. Uued teooriad ja nende uurimine (rass, migratsioon, HIV/AIDS, Queer-teooria (Whereas gay/lesbian studies focused its inquiries into "natural" and "unnatural" behaviour with respect to homosexual behaviour, queer theory expands its focus to encompass any kind of sexual activity or identity that falls into normative and deviant categories.) Maailma mitmekesisus ja ühtlustamine: sarnasused-erinevused. Üks keel erinevad tähendused. Sotsiaalteaduslike uurimuste poliitilised eesmärgid. 8) Kaheksas ja üheksas moment Uurija poliitiline vastutus, uuritavate aktiivsus: osalus-tegevusuuring
To tell the secrets of my prison-house, I could a tale unfold whose lightest word Would harrow up thy soul, freeze thy young blood, Make thy two eyes, like stars, start from their spheres, Thy knotted and combined locks to part And each particular hair to stand on end, Like quills upon the fretful porpentine: But this eternal blazon must not be To ears of flesh and blood. List, list, O, list! If thou didst ever thy dear father love— HAMLET O God! Ghost Revenge his foul and most unnatural murder. HAMLET Murder! Ghost Murder most foul, as in the best it is; But this most foul, strange and unnatural. HAMLET 39 Haste me to know't, that I, with wings as swift As meditation or the thoughts of love, May sweep to my revenge. Ghost I find thee apt; And duller shouldst thou be than the fat weed That roots itself in ease on Lethe wharf, Wouldst thou not stir in this. Now, Hamlet, hear:
To produce strong, emotional effect on the reader. Poe came to conclusion that The most basic human emotion is fear, so he turned to the supernatural. His stories became much more popular than his poems. His stories were More or less successful. Poe's stories became popular because of Climactic arrangement of the events and the poetic style, appropriate for their mood. Poe's style: vocabulary is not natural, extremely formal. He prefers the literary, bookish layer of vocabulary. Unnatural way. Names are outlandish, fantastic. Repetition he repeats certain rhythms, motifs. He classified his stories into 3 categories: 1.Grotesque include a kind of grim, dark humour 2.Arabesque mostly horrors and strong emotions, fear. 3.Ratiocinative rational, logical analysis in reconstructing the order of events. Each category represented a different intention. He developed mastered, perfected stories. The short story of psychological effect
4 stuffed 8 put down 2 gills 11 beak separate occasions. 3 scales 12 arm 2 No 4 fin 13 front leg 2 1The fact that animals are kept in 3 1 the 8 have/get 14 on unnatural conditions is one of the 5 antler 14 hind leg 2 as 9 be 15 the biggest criticisms of zoos. 6 fang 15 fur 3 of 10 as 16 in 2That the animals are not free to 7 whiskers 16 claw 4 than 11 on 17 by roam, however doesn't mean that
banned until late in the fourth century. *Boadicea/Boudica At his death bed, Boudica's husband left half his possession to the emperor, expecting that this would protect his family. However, his property was confiscated. When Boudica, the queen of the Celts, protested, she was flogged and her daughters were raped. She swept trough Southern Britain with her tribe and tortured every Roman she met. A women having power seemed unnatural to the Romans. She fought back for 2 years, but finally took poison and died. *Hadrian's Wall It was built by the emperor Hadrian and it marked the Northen border of the Roman empire. Hadrian's Wall was built, beginning in 122, to keep Roman Britain safe from hostile attacks from the Picts. The wall stretched from the North Sea to the Irish Sea. In addition to the wall, the Romans built a system of small forts called milecastles. Sixteen larger
A. So there you are ... problem solved! 7 to lay off Rosie Yeah, these are good 8 turned up intentions, but not if we end up poisoning people in the long run. I 1F Discussion page 9 don't know, I just find the whole thing unnatural. I don't think we have a right 1 1 laboratory 5 crops to `play God' in this way. 2 controversy 6 harmful Leo I see what you mean. But to be 3 discredited 7 term honest with you, people have been 4 campaign 8 crisis crossing breeds for hundreds of years. 2 a, c, e, f It's just the methods that are new.
very serious or requiring careful v.critique judgment; finding fault n. criticism Syn. dangerous n. critic adv. critically It is critical to follow the directions for the experiment exactly as the instructor indicates. The runner accepted criticism from his coach very well. distort v. to change from the original shape or adj. distorted condition, usually in an unnatural way n. distortion Syn. deform Time and space are distorted when traveling at the speed of light. Distortion of the image from a microscope can be caused by low light. diverse adj. various; distinct from others adv. diversely Syn. Different n. diversity v. diversify Freud had many diverse interests in psychology. The diversity of life forms on Earth makes zoology an interesting area of study.
" "You are rather disposed to call his interference officious?" "I do not see what right Mr. Darcy had to decide on the propriety of his friend's inclination, or why, upon his own judgement alone, he was to determine and direct in what manner his friend was to be happy. But," she continued, recollecting herself, "as we know none of the particulars, it is not fair to condemn him. It is not to be supposed that there was much affection in the case." "That is not an unnatural surmise," said Fitzwilliam, "but it is a lessening of the honour of my cousin's triumph very sadly." This was spoken jestingly; but it appeared to her so just a picture of Mr. Darcy, that she would not trust herself with an answer, and therefore, abruptly changing the conversation talked on indifferent matters until they reached the Parsonage. There, shut into her own room, as soon as their visitor left them, she could think without interruption of all that she had heard
The British became interested in Siamese cats and imported them from Siam. The earliest documented imports were during the 1870s, but these were apparently not bred. In 1884, the departing British Consul-General Gould was given a Siamese cat by the Siamese king. He brought the cat to England and its progeny were exhibited at Crystal Palace in 1885. The early Siamese cats were round-headed, solid and muscular, but even so, their appearance was so extraordinary that they were described as an "unnatural nightmare of a cat". In Ceylon, the Siamese cat was, for a while, known as "Gould's Cat", having been introduced there by Mr Gould. The Burmese Sacred Cat was known to early British cat fanciers as the "Gold Cat". A wild cat of the region was known as the "Golden Cat" (Temminck's Golden Cat) or "Bay Cat". HC Brooke believed these similarities of name to be the reason that Temminck's Golden Cat was claimed to be an ancestor of the Siamese. The
Muusika. Kino. 7 (1989): 45. 3 ‘Echo of recordings’. Teater. Muusika. Kino 11 (1997): 78-79. Trans. from Christoph Schlüren, ‘Review of new recordings’ Fono Forum June (1996): 54. 4 Tiia Teder, ‘Helikristallide moodustamine’ (Forming Sound Crystals) Pühapäevaleht (Sunday Paper) 16 Mar. 1996. 5 E. S. Tüür. Cristallisatio. Booklet to the CD, ECM New Series, No. 1590. This illogical and unnatural comprehension has had, in my opinion, no positive outcome because there stand unsuitable polarised divergent means of expression and tremendous disparities of spiritual worlds behind them. Tüür has been called Estonia’s top composer by P. Kuusk in Eesti Päevaleht, December 1, 1997. Tüür replied: Bah, humbug! Such tales of whom to regard a genius in his lifetime and whom not to, bring along more harm than good. This is so much swampy ground that I would not fall into such a
sentences." Philosophers have made an issue of this. Let us use the term "entity theory" to mean a theory that officially takes meanings to be individual things. And there is some considerable support for entity theories in the way we ordinarily talk. We not only seem to refer to things called meanings using the word as a common noun, but we seem to use quantifier expressions in that connection. We sometimes even seem to count them: "This word has four different meanings." So it is not unnatural to turn first to entity theories. There are at least two different kinds of entities that meanings might be taken to be. First, one could take the entities to be mental items. Theories of that kind are sometimes called ideational theories. Ideational theories The whipping boy here is usually John Locke (1690/1955), since Locke seems to have held that the meanings of linguistic expressions are ideas in the mind. On this sort of view, what it is for a string of marks or noises to be mean-
I was, at least. Last night all the walls were down... almost all. I didn't know if we were still being as candid today. It left me tongue-tied. I waited for him to speak. He turned to smirk at me. "What, no twenty questions today?" "Do my questions bother you?" I asked, relieved. "Not as much as your reactions do." He looked like he was joking, but I couldn't be sure. I frowned. "Do I react badly?" "No, that's the problem. You take everything so coolly -- it's unnatural. It makes me wonder what you're really thinking." "I always tell you what I'm really thinking." "You edit," he accused. "Not very much." "Enough to drive me insane." "You don't want to hear it," I mumbled, almost whispered. As soon as the words were out, I regretted them. The pain in my voice was very faint; I could only hope he hadn't noticed it. He didn't respond, and I wondered if I had ruined the mood. His face was unreadable as we drove into the school parking lot
T h e reversal may be almost imperceptible at first, trickling bit by bit like grains of sand in an hourglass. For example, in the classic screwball comedy Topper, a man who has been rigid, disciplined, and meek his entire life enters into a polarized relationship with two playful ghosts, the Kirbys, who are loose, free, and rebellious. At first Cosmo Topper is driven to even greater rigidity to counteract the w i l d energy of the Kirbys. But this extreme position is unnatural and inherently unstable. Under continued challenge from the Kirbys, Topper experiments tentatively with the free, loose behavior of his polar opposites, then retreats to comfortable rigidity, repeating the process several times until reaching a tipping point where he can no longer resist, and gives himself over completely to their madcap strategy for living, totally reversing his polarity. In the end, he reverts to something like his old, meek behavior,
mounted the platform with solemn dignity, knelt, and received the axeman's three strokes with the courage that had marked every other action of her life. Thus did Mary, Queen of Scots, exit this transient life and enter the more enduring one of legend, as her motto had prophesied: "In my end is my beginning." There seems little doubt that she would have died before her time, the politics of the day being what they were. But there seems equally little doubt that cryptology hastened her unnatural end. 5. On The Origin of a Species "DATO and I were strolling in the Supreme Pontiff's gardens at the Vatican and we went from topic to topic marveling at the ingenuity that men showed in various enterprises, till Dato gave expression to his warm admiration for those men who can exploit what are called 'ciphers.' " So wrote Leon Battista Alberti near the beginning of the succinct but suggestive work that earned him the title of Father of Western Cryptology