Food pleasure or nuisance. Food has been a global problem for many years. Bad eating habits and junk food is problem number one. Junk food doesn't only contain lots of fat and cholesterol, but also damages health badly. So what shall we do to avoid these crucial problems and make eating enjoyable not temtping ? The first thing to do - cut off junk food from your food ration. Fat, cholesterol are hardly removable from organism, especially blood veins. If blood is blocked then it may cause death. It is necessary to keep organism clean. Change your food ration for healthy and nutritious food like fruits, nuts, rice, vegetables etc. Also consume more dairy produtcs that have lot of carbohydrates and less fried meals. Boiled are prefered more. The second thing is activity. Pick up a sport which you like, the more action it has the better it is. While doing sports bad salts and chemical elements come out through sweat. After
He was very sad because he can't dance with his love. Fortunately a small bird named Nightingale saw him crying, the bird really wanted to help him, she knew that she had found this true lover of whom she had sung night after night. Nightingale wanted to find him the reddest rose in the world, she wanted to help the real true lover. She flew over the Rose-tree that was growing near the Student's window and asked the tree for one red rose. But the tree said that winter had chilled its veins and it has no red roses at all that year. It said that there is still a change to get one, but it didn't dare to talk that to Nightingale. But Nightingale wasn't afraid; she was ready to give everything for helping the Student. Rose-tree said that Nightingale must give her life-blood to the tree and sing for the whole night. Nightingale agreed. "Death is a great price to pay for a red rose" she said. And all night she sang and suffered the pain that a thorn made in her breast
onule, kuna nad ise nagu nii enam seda korras hoida ei jõudnud. Soovisime onule õnne ja kõik peale minu ja minu onupoja hakkasid ettevalmistusi tegema. Meie aga mängisime seni jalgpalli. Kell sai 7 ja rahvas hakkas kogunema, neid aina tuli ja tuli kuni enam ei tulnud. Rahvast oli pea 100 ringis, ning muidugi oli seal ka hulganisti vanu sugulasi kes tahtsid sinu käest kuulda kuidas sa viimased 3 aastat elanud oled, ning kui suureks sa oled kasvanud. Pidu veins kuni kell oli saanud umbes 2öösel olid kohale jäänud ainult meie pere, minu vanaema-vanaisa ja onu pere. Me istusime lõkke ääres grillisime vahukomme ja ajasime juttu. Eriti tore oli kuulata onu juttu kuna ta oli veidikene svipsis. Ta rääkis no selliseid lugusid oma noorus päevilt, et suu jäi lahti, nii vene sõjaväest kui ka pidutest ega ta muidugi praegugi eriti vana ju pole sai alles 40. Kuid üks lugu meeldis mulle teistest enam,
may have faded due to long usage and such words are known as linguistic (dead) metaphors (e.g. "the mouth of a bottle"). Stylistic metaphors fall into trite (overused) and original metaphors (genuine and individual). A trite metaphor is commonly used in speech (e.g. "a ray of hope"). A trite metaphor may become original if the writer prolongs it. Genuine metaphors are the fruit of author's imagination. Simple metaphors are based on a single image (e.g. "He felt ice water flowing in his veins"). A sustained (developed) metaphor is when you have several metaphors contributing to the same image (rivulet - streams - river). The function of metaphor is to stress an important feature in an imaginative (!) way. 2. Metonymy lexical and contextual meanings are based on the contiguity (): one word is used instead of some other word because the thing they stand for occurs very closely in reality. In metonymy transfer of meaning is very logical (!) (e.g. "a cup" means `to
Disease most severe when rain occurs before and after emergence. Powdery mildew Cottony fungus on green leaves late in summer - not largely Erysiphe cichoracearum damaging. Leaf spot Dead blotches on flower leaves before heading. Has not Septoria helianthi caused appreciable loss. Verticillium wilt Before heading, dead areas along leaf veins, bordered by Sclerotinia sclerotiorum light yellow-green margins. Decayed vascular tissue in cross-section of stem. Rust Rust colored pustules on leaves, latter black specks on Puccini helianthi stems. Sclerotinia head and stem rot Wilt soon after flowering. Light tan band around the stem at Verticillium dahliae soil level. Grey-black sclerotia (size of seed) in rotted heads
"What the hell is he into?" "Spanking's not deviant. Besides, he was going for missionary on the couch, so he's not averse to the basics." He fell into the couch, a brilliant smile lighting up his handsome face. "You're a huge challenge to a guy who obviously thrives on them. And he's willing to make concessions to have you, which I'd bet he's not used to. Just tell him what you want." I split the last of the wine between us, feeling marginally better with a bit of alcohol in my veins. What did I want? Aside from the obvious? "We're totally incompatible." "Is that what you call what happened on his couch?" "Cary, come on. Boil it down. He picked me up off the lobby floor, and then asked me to fuck. That's really it. Even a guy I take home from a bar has more going for him than that. Hey, what's your name? Come here often? Who's your friend? What are you drinking? Like to dance? Do you work around here?" "All right, all right. I get it
g. "It compelled me to dash a cup of joy from her lips." somebody was rejoicing that something has happened but the speaker wanted to make this person sad). Genuine metaphors are the fruit of author's imagination (e.g. "His lips were tight little traps", "Her voice was a song of castrated delight"). Simple metaphors are based on a single image (e.g. "He felt ice water flowing in his veins"). FGI 1081 Stylistics (I. Ladusseva) 13 A sustained (developed) metaphor is when you have several metaphors contributing to the same image (e.g. "Our family rivulet joined other streams and the stream was the river pouring into the church."). Metaphor is expressed by all notional parts of speech: nouns (e.g. "the eyes are
day. I skipped to the window, stunned to see that there was hardly a cloud in the sky, and those there were just fleecy little white puffs that couldn't possibly be carrying any rain. I opened the window -- surprised when it opened silently, without sticking, not having opened it in who knows how many years -- and sucked in the relatively dry air. It was nearly warm and hardly windy at all. My blood was electric in my veins. Charlie was finishing breakfast when I came downstairs, and he picked up on my mood immediately. "Nice day out," he commented. "Yes," I agreed with a grin. He smiled back, his brown eyes crinkling around the edges. When Charlie smiled, it was easier to see why he and my mother had jumped too quickly into an early marriage. Most of the young romantic he'd been in those days had faded before I'd known him, as the curly brown hair -- the same color, if not the
circumference. By April 6, 2007, as an example, I had cut from nearly 180 pounds to 165 pounds in six By April 6, 2007, as an example, I had cut from nearly 180 pounds to 165 pounds in six weeks, while adding about 10 pounds of muscle, which means I lost approximately 25 pounds of fat. The changes aren't subtle. The diet that I'll introduce in this chapter--the Slow-Carb Diet--is the only diet besides the rather extreme Cyclical Ketogenic Diet (CKD) that has produced veins across my abdomen, which is the last place I lose fat. There are just five simple rules to follow: RULE #1: AVOID "WHITE" CARBOHYDRATES. Avoid any carbohydrate that is, or can be, white. The following foods are prohibited, except for within 30 minutes of nishing a resistance-training workout like those described in the "From Geek to Freak" or "Occam's Protocol" chapters: all bread, rice (including brown), cereal, potatoes, pasta, tortillas, and fried food with breading
tint). It has been recorded in the wild in the Asian Leopard Cat and also in the domestic descendants of Leopard Cat hybrids, the Bengal. Albinism has spread from the Siamese to closely related Oriental breeds. Emma Stothers sent me this report of her albino cat in 2013. Pangur is an oriental longhair with very pale skin and nose. Her paw-pads and ears, are pink-tinted white threaded through with red veins. Her eyes look like faded lilac-blue (Emma describes it as an Elizabeth Taylor colour) and when you look closer, you can see that the pupil is a dull red, while what looks like lilac is just the pale blue refraction of the lens overlaid on more red. You can very clearly see the blood vessels beneath the iris which can be a bit creepy, because when the light hits Pangur in the right way, her entire eye turns a muted pinkish red. In the dark, they reflect bright red.