... was a pragmatic (i.e. UK) version of audio-lingualism; the key difference from the audio-
lingual approach was that the language presentation and practice was situationalised and so was
always ... account of so-called ‘affective’ factors in language
teaching, and UK language teaching was famous for its engaging and ‘fun’ qualities; however, the
philosophy of the humanistic approaches was valuable, ... idea of
using the classroom to gradually raise students’ awareness about the target language rather than
imagine that teachers can teach it for active reproduction by endless practice; what...
... 1460. His great
work was training seamen. Many men afterward famous as discoverers and navigators, as Dias (dee'ahss), Da
Gama (dah gah'ma), Cabral (ca-brahl'), Magellan, and Columbus, ... mutinied. Ten years later Vasco da Gama sailed around the end of
Africa, up the east coast, and on to India, and brought home a cargo of eastern products. A way to India by
water was at last made known ... way to the discovery that America was not
part of Asia was Balbo&apos ;a. [6] He came to the eastern border of Panama (1510) with a band of Spaniards
seeking gold. There they founded the town of...
... Cockatoo. Dugong. Gamboge. Gong. Gutta-percha. Mandarin.
Mango. Orang-outang. Rattan. Sago. Upas.
PERSIAN.
Awning. Bazaar. Bashaw. Caravan. Check. Checkmate. Chess. Curry. Dervish. Divan. Firman. ... Hazard.
Horde. Houri. Jar. Jackal. Jasmine. Lac (a gum). Lemon. Lilac. Lime (the fruit). Musk. Orange. Paradise.
Pasha. Rook. Saraband. Sash. Scimitar. Shawl. Taffeta. Turban.
POLYNESIAN DIALECTS.
Boomerang. ... 'they askance their eyes'; as a noun, 'the backward and
abysm of time'; or as an adjective, &apos ;a seldom pleasure.' Any noun, adjective, or neuter verb can be used as an
active...
... months of their official debut, Led Zeppelin were
at the top of the bill at the Playhouse Theater in London, and the Pop
Proms at the Royal Albert Hall in London. On October 17, '69, a year and
two ... impression of their music is obvious, and can be heard in any
Rock band of today.Unfortunately, the machine that was Led Zeppelin
came to a screeching halt on the morning of September 25, 1980. When
band ... go into Bonham's bedroom to pull a prank on
him in his sleep, Bonham was found dead. After a night of heavy
drinking, Bonham had turned the wrong way in his sleep, and asphyxiated
himself...
... southward along
the coast of Spain, Portugal, and Africa, as far as the Canary Islands, then they
followed the track of Columbus to the West India Islands, and thence along the coast
of Florida] ... volumes of the North American Review contain a great deal of
interesting historical matter. The American Cyclopaedia and Thomas's Dictionary of
Biography are exceedingly serviceable in preparing ...
Roanoke)—Shea's Discovery and Exploration of the Mississippi
Historyof Scandinavia Cattin's North American Indians.
—Thatcher's Indian Biography.—Stone's Life and Times of Red
Jacket,...
... literacy
person had to buy an antique to get any.
Some other Shakespeare professors believe that the way a
person should act to be a great Shakespeare professor is
to teach as many people as ... concept was a good idea.
That watershed event caused a ripple effect. With others
finally interested in Etext, a "Mass Marketing Approach,"
and such it was, was finally appropriate, and ... literally `fax someone a pizza' or other meals, the
`faxing a pizza' being a standard joke among Internetters
for years, describing one way to tell when the future can
be said to have...
... proponents of the theory of
rational choice acknowledge that human actions are not always
rational. A number of factors are capable of fostering irrationality.
Sometimes the individual’s aims may not ... women.
Historically, norms of justice based on the idea of imbalanced
reciprocity have been as powerful and as prevalen t as those based
on the idea of b alanced reciprocity.
Neither of these ideas (of balanced ... balanced and of imbalanced reciprocity)
is capable of applying itself to real cases without further ado. For
inescapable practical reasons, neither idea can serve as the basis of a
conception of justice...
... mania in the United States.
We will recall here Buchanan's opinion about the Bank: "If the Bank of
the United States, after ceasing to be a national bank, and obtaining a
new charter ... that no one failed on account
of a smaller sum than $100,000. A drawing-room that had cost $40,000,
and a bankrupt's wine-cellar estimated to have cost $7,000, were cited
as instances of ...
were already unstable. But the point is to be noted that in reality
tariff change followed practical panic in this instance rather than
practical panic tariff change. The high protective war tariffs,...
... and with a reorganization
of the banks under the name of "National Banks." A change was due, but, as everything was made ready, it
was speedy. The first balance sheet of the National ... business."
PROTESTS AGAINST EXTRAVAGANCE
"All will agree with me that a reasonable economy, instead of the actual wild extravagance of government, is
more than ever a national need. Who will disagree ... will recall here Buchanan's opinion about the Bank: "If the Bank of the United States, after ceasing to be a
national bank, and obtaining a new charter in Pennsylvania, had restrained...
... of Kaya, Greater Kaya and Original Kaya, each fell
separately to Silla. Silla conquered Greater Kaya in 532 and Original
Kaya with the rest of Kaya in 562 (Young-sik Lee 2000, 1). Since Kaya ... the aristocracy. It also shows
that Kim Yusin, a “new Kim” from Kaya, was fully a member of the “old
Kim” aristocracy. Later, at the fall of Silla and at the fall of Koryo, the
aristocracy of ... BRIEFHISTORYOF KOREA
22
who lived on the Japanese islands. Kaya was particularly adept at met-
allurgy and exported metal to the other Korean kingdoms and Japan.
The iron cultures of Kaya and...
... tells us that the farther apart the bodies, the smaller the force. Newton’s law of
gravity says that the gravitational attraction ofa star is exactly one quarter that ofa similar star at half the
distance. ... that all galaxies are composed of quarks
rather than antiquarks; it seems implausible that some galaxies should be matter and some antimatter.
Why should there be so many more quarks than antiquarks? ... they had the
same luminosity – and so calculate the distance to that galaxy. If we could do this for a number of stars in the
same galaxy, and our calculations always gave the same distance,...
... wide
acceptance.
Brookhaven National Laboratory.
PHY-653 EPP
A BriefHistoryof Particle Physics
Slide 10 of 13
New Quarks and Leptons
1974
19741974
1974
New fourth quark called 'charm' ... 'elementary particles' discovered – ρ, ω, Ř, …, ∆, Ξ,
… a real mess!
All these particles explained by combinations of more
fundamental 'quarks', u, d, s and their anti-quarks.
... İ, carriers of the Electroweak
Interaction discovered at CERN, Geneva.
Carlo Rubbia
Simon van
der Meer
PHY-653 EPP
A BriefHistoryof Particle Physics
Slide 4 of 13
A Theory of Electromagnetism
By...
... heads tilted down
at a 45-degree angle.
My account does not require that any of the good answers
to a paradox be based on arguments. A good answer might
Fig. 1.1
4 ABRIEFHISTORYOF THE PARADOX
Oedipus ... with a riddle: Two sticks, a dash and a cake with
a stick down—what is it? Binalshibh was baffled. After the
attack on September 11, he realized that two sticks stand for
11, a dash is a dash and ... Thus, Anaximander’s law of compensation requires
the operation of at least one metaphysical overseer.
True, Anaximander’s primary emphasis is on secular
explanations. He played down the role of...
... PREDICAMENT
An individual, assumed to be the standard
exemplar of an invariant humanity, faces his world.
How can he think it, conceptualize it, comprehend
it? … In the end, the greatest classics ... the end, the greatest classics articulating
this vision will remain David Hume’s Treatise
of Human Nature and Kant’s three Critiques.
IAN HACKING (1975)
and
...
INTRODUCTION
I am a very conservative person.… e constancy
of God in my life is called by other names.
ABOUT TWENTY YEARS AGO,
...
... ‘‘organized support’’ of the market were
National City Bank, Chase National Bank, and the Guaranty Trust Com-
pany. Even of cials of J. P. Morgan and Company, this time lacking the lead-
ership of ... his associates became some of the most influential and powerful
individuals on Wall Street and in corporate America. In the mid-1980s it was
reported that the firm managed a pool of financial assets ... securities and bank
stocks.
In 1817 another renovation of the exchange’s organizational model was
made. The New York market was rivaled by the exchange in Philadelphia.
The Philadelphia market was so...