4. It´s about time you bought a new suit 5. It´s about time you to went to the laundrette 6. It´s about time you went to bed Sõnad 1. Telepathic - telepaatiline 2. Plainness- lihtsus 3. Prevent sb. From doing smth eemale hoidma 4. Attic pööning 5. Reverend kõrgeauline 6. Be blind - pime 7. Moors nõmmed 8. Governess koduõpetaja 9. Tray - kandik 10. Gloomy sünge 11. Neglected hooletusse jäetud 12. In the great võrel 13. Occupant asukas 14. Yelp klähvima 15. Trodden peale astuma 16. Tread, trod, trodden peale astuma 17. Whine kiunuma 18. Curl up kerra tõmbuma 19. Forgotten about neglected 20. Resting one´s body against leaning 21. Stepped on tread on 22. In a commanding voice käskivalt 23. Grabbed violently haarama 24. Wrapped around ümber põimuma 25. Nod pead noogutama 26. Shrug your sholders õlgu kehitama 27. Fold your hands ristama käed 28. Shrug your shoulders- kehita õlgu 29
The Wild Dog Barrier Fence staff has 23 employees, with two person teams which patrol a 300 km section of the fence once every week. They gather the corpses of dingoes who have been died in the traps. They reset the trap and cover it with sand. THE DINGO The dingo looks like a small wolf cousin to the coyote and the jackal. It’s a leggy dog, short pointed ears and bushy tail. The most common colour is ginger and yellowish-tan. It has a short fur. Dingoes rarely bark. They yelp and howl. The dingo is Australia’s largest carnivore. They hunt alone or in small packs. They hunt mostly at night. They eat rats, kangaroos, rabbits, lizards, and of course sheep. Sheep are really easy to catch because they are slow, panicky, and have nowhere to hide. The dogs pull them down by their necks and with powerful jaws tear the sheep into pieces. A dingo will kill up to 50 sheep at night, killing far more than it needs for food. They swallow meat in large chunks. Dingoes came
not actively fucking. And I'm afraid we'll have to spend time not actively fucking in places where we're forced to restrain ourselves." "Isn't that what we're doing now?" "Yes. And see, that's what I mean. I wasn't giving you credit for that. You should've done it in a less creepy manner"-I covered his lips with my fingers when he tried to cut me off-"but I admit you did try to set up a time to talk and I wasn't helpful." He nipped my fingers with his teeth, making me yelp and yank my hand away. "Hey. What was that for?" He lifted my abused hand to his mouth and kissed the hurt, his tongue darting out to soothe. And incite. In self-defense, I tugged my hand back to my lap. I still wasn't completely confident that we'd worked things out. "Just so you know there are no exaggerated expectations-when you and I spend time together not actively fucking, I won't think it's a date. All right?" "That covers it
any other office workers. At N.S.A., they arrive in one of three shifts, beginning at 7:20, 7:40, or 8:00 a.m. (and ending respectively at 3:50, 4:10, and 4:30 p.m.). Once in, the first order of business must be to finish reading the newspaper and shoot the breeze with one's officemates. When they get down to work, they write on cross-ruled paper with colored pencils, shuffle pages, look for significant patterns, look for plaintext, confer with colleagues, take coffee breaks. Sometimes a yelp of joy will pierce the concentration as a cryptanalyst breaks through. They have one advantage at least over workers in more ordinary fields: they cannot take their work home with them at night. But, in another sense, they cannot get away from it, for a problem in cryptanalysis grips the mind, teases and torments it more than other problems, and never seems to let go. If an idea occurs at home, the cryptanalyst may write a note to himself, or, if he lives close enough, he