Unprepared monologue 1.INTRODUCTION: · Presentation of the topic (Think about the topic, what have other people said about it?) · Presentation of the theme (What is the message you want to convey?) · Preview of the body (In my presentation today I`m going to explain...;The topic of this presentation...) · Transition (Use linking devices,think of coheison..) 2.THE BODY: · Point one (Firstly, I`d like to..; My first point is...; To start with, I`d...; The first option is...;) · Point two (Secondly we can...; Another aspect is...; My next point is...; On the other hand...;) · Point three (Thirdly..; Let me move on to...; The third point is about...;) · Transition (Move to conclusion. Dont forget linking devices and coheison) 3.CONCLUSION: · Review and summary (Give an account of points...
approaches dissolution. Most decrepit and old people are shut away in nursing homes. Dead bodies, which in some older cultures are on open display for all to see , are hidden away. Try to see a dead body, and you will find that it is virtually illegal, except if the deceased is a close family member. In funeral homes, they even apply makeup to the face. You are only allowed to see a sanitized version of death. Since death is only an abstract concept to them, most people are totally unprepared for the dissolution of form that awaits them. when it approaches, there is shock, incomprehension, despair, and great fear. Nothing makes sense anymore, because all the meaning and purpose that life had for them was associated with accumulating, succeeding, building, protecting, and sense gratification. It was associated with the outward movement and identification with form, that is to say, ego. Most people cannot conceive of any meaning when their life, their world, is being demolished
cables, England's first offensive action of the war, forged the first link in a chain that helped to end it. Germany was now forced to communicate with the World beyond the encircling Entente by radio or over cables controlled by her enemies. She thus delivered into the hands of her foes her most secret and confidential plans, provided only that they could remove the jacket of code and cipher in which Germany had encased them. It Was an opportunity for which England was unprepared, but of which she promptly availed herself. On that first day of the war, the director of naval intelligence, Rear Admiral Henry F. Oliver, walked to lunch With the only man at the Admiralty to take any interest in cryptology, the director of naval education, Sir Alfred p Ewing. A few months before, Ewing had devised what he later called a "futile" ciphering mechanism, and he had spoken to Oliver about new methods of constructing ciphers. Oliver mentioned that some naval and
does determine content given all the relevant contextual features of a context of utterance. Thus, when we come upon the blackboard sentence, character tells us to look for the speaker (to find ("I",C)), and the hearer and the date of utterance; once we know those, we will know what has to obtain in a possible world in order for the sentence to be true in that world. I said that, when we encounter the blackboard sentence unprepared, we do not know (in full) what it says. And I was right. But there is another perfectly good sense in which we understand the sentence itself, and virtually any English speaker understands "I am sick now" entirely out of context. Kaplan argues that the "m"-word should be reserved for character rather than for content, on the entirely reasonable ground that ordinary English speakers surely know the meanings of everyday deictic sentences even when
the place; but she had not got beyond the words "delightful," and "charming," when some unlucky recollections obtruded, and she fancied that praise of Pemberley from her might be mischievously construed. Her colour changed, and she said no more. Mrs. Gardiner was standing a little behind; and on her pausing, he asked her if she would do him the honour of introducing him to her friends. This was a stroke of civility for which she was quite unprepared; and she could hardly suppress a smile at his being now seeking the acquaintance of some of those very people against whom his pride had revolted in his offer to herself. "What will be his surprise," thought she, "when he knows who they are? He takes them now for people of fashion." The introduction, however, was immediately made; and as she named their relationship to herself, she stole a sly look at him, to see how he bore it, and was not without the
I stumbled up and down the mountain side, my face and hands scratched by branches, hoping to intersect with the true path, but getting more and more hopelessly lost and frantic as night crept near. I had to get out of there. I knew it was a very bad idea to attempt to spend the night in the forest, 367 T H E W R I T E R ' S JOURNEY ~ T H I R D EDITION Christopher Vogler unprepared. People die of exposure out here all the time. I noticed for the first time that air on a mountain flows at different times of day like a mass of water. Cold air seemed to be rushing downhill all around me, flooding the bottomless canyon and chilling my blood, dragging my spirits further down. I dread that word "lost" and tried to deny it to myself, but I had to admit it. A whole host of unfamiliar sensations and thoughts came over me as I watched the
per square foot per class. Many "new and improved" recommendations are based on calculating profit first and then working backward to justify the method. Marketer-speak and ambiguous words have no place in 4HB or your e orts. Both will surface in conversations with friends who, in their best e ort to help, will do more harm than good. If in conversations with friends who, in their best e ort to help, will do more harm than good. If unprepared, one such conversation can single-handedly derail an entire program. These are two categories of words that you should neither use nor listen to. The rst, marketer-speak, includes all terms used to scare or sell that have no physiological basis: Toning Cellulite Firming Shaping Aerobics The word cellulite, for example, rst appeared in the April 15, 1968, issue of Vogue magazine, and this invented disease soon had a believer base worldwide: