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Right in front of his eyes were rows of delicious-looking chocolate bars waiting to ® touch ® be touched 3° We were very to find that we had left cookie boxes in the camper over the winter. © surprising © surprised 4, This latter chureh, about which little is known, is believed by some to already at the end of the fifteenth century, at the time of the founding of the little town of Karli-ova, later Karlovo, (#02 = 7H ®be built ® have been built 5 In monkey colonies, where rigid dominance hierarchies exist, beneficial innovations do not spread quickly through the group unless they first to a dominant animal. [2019 69 #7%«08)) @ teach Dare taught 6 She hurried out her cell phone, zoomed in on her daughter, and realized suddenly she was looking at a young lady. (216 + 0-5") @ that @ what 7 But, at each tum in the story when she told it, the Tiv interpreted the events and motives in Hamlet. their own cultural knowledge. oz @ using @used 8 Most seemingly impossible obstacles can be overcome by seeing possibilities, focusing on what is within your control, taking the first step, and then on the next step and the next step after that, (785 WE w= ® focus ® focusing 8 OF 7H > TSA hat BSA) that® 2 Be GTI HED EAS ote WBE o] Ba, > ovael a SHO r egy Eto be SILA, > 2SIBAfol at port oleh gag ganas Ace wanda Atel AGHIeANea pista > soto) Alt eye] Auer GL DS US MY toHAMIto have +7] sabe oo, > sual oir Bete Battal aA ae as > inat/wtat BH that oils Oat 29) Bel, SAMA Ee 91 what gets BoAe Fe go ole} ath > eangel et soveel Foi Bab aa A alate, > viaex a PAS Me eame ogo BU YAS Beer Ue stuey 02h cheek-wwe 033 sTuDY 03) Bz ole 01 @sitaree CHS 9] BE AYE &, olga Bel We? When people face real adversity — disease, ‘unemployment, or the disabilities of age—affection from a pet takes on new meaning. A pet’s continuing, affection becomes crucially important for @ those s enduring hardship because it reassures them that their core essence has not been damaged. Thus pets are important in the treatment of chronically ill patients. In addition, pets are @used to great advantage with the institutionalized aged. In such depressed or « institutions itis difficult for the staff to retain optimism when all the patients are declining in health. Children, who visit cannot help but remember @what their parents or grandparents once were and be depressed, by their incapacities. Animals, however, have no s expectations about mental capacity. They do not worship youth. They have no memories about what the aged once children, An old man holding a puppy can relive a childhood moment with complete accuracy. His joy and greet them as if they were .» and the animal’s response are the same. & Words check cnt ae ane 2 adversiy a afecton a ratain 2 optimism 0 worship o accuracy 034, menasruoy sions one ors stunts » «a « Beae BABE ARE 2 008 ae ® =e 02. ontorav soir aa 0 emma: CS 291 BE a YES, olga Bel 4S? Humans usually experience sound as the result of vibrations in air or water. Although sound that, humans can sense is usually carried through these media, vibrations can also travel through soil, s including rocks. ‘Thus, sound can travel through a variety of substances with different densities, and the physical characteristies of the medium through which the sound travels have a major influence on ® how the sound can be used. For instance, it requires more w energy to make water vibrate than to vibrate air, and it requires a great deal of energy to make soil vibrate. Thus, the use of vibrations in communication @ depending on the ability of the sender to make a substance vibrate. Because of this, large animals such «as elephants are more likely than small animals @to use vibrations in the soil for communication. In ‘addition, the speed @at which sound travels depends on the density of the medium which it is traveling through. a ooo aE. A Words Check 1 vibration 5 density © characteristic 2 physical 03. ersvrane arson cig gel Ue apes, ofeiat wel 2127 If an animal is innately programmed for some type of behaviour, then there ® are likely to be biological clues, It is no accident that fish have bodies which are streamlined and @ smooth, with fins and a powerful, s tail. Their bodies are structurally adapted for moving fast through the water. Similarly, if you found a dead bird or mosquito, you could guess by looking at @its wings that flying was its normal mode of transport. However, we must not be over-optimistic. Biological o clues are not essential. The extent to which they are inding varies from animal to animal and from activity to activity. For example, it is impossible to guess from their bodies that birds make nests, and, sometimes, animals behave in a way quite contrary to » what might be expected from their physical form: ghost spiders have tremendously long legs, yet they weave webs out of very short threads. To a human observer, their legs seem a great hindrance as they spin, and move about the web. ® Words Check orn nH aS 1 innately 2 program ® biological. © structurally 1 adapted 2 physical © tremendously © hindrance OG. evan nr cig gel Ue apes, ofeiat wel 2127 We all want to believe that our brains sort through information in the most rational way ( possible. On the contrary, countless studies show that there are many weaknesses of human reasoning. Common, s weaknesses in reasoning ® exist across people of all ages and educational backgrounds. For example, confirmation bias is ubiquitous. People pay attention to information that supports their viewpoints, while ignoring evidence to the contrary. Confirmation bias is not the same as being stubborn, and is not constrained to issues @ sbout which people have strong opinions. Instead, it acts at a subconscious level to control the way we gather and filter information. Most of us are not aware of these types of flaws in our s reasoning processes, but professionals who work to convince us of certain viewpoints ® to study the research on human decision making to determine how to exploit our weaknesses to make us more susceptible to their messages. ubiquitous 0% 88! ® Words Check oie 2 rational © confirmation 1 bias © stubborn 1 constrain 5 subconscious © exploit © susceptible sway oom ora O35, [03] we ote Rae 5 esuraine wu 22s cig gel Ue apes, ofeiat wel 2127 The Greeks’ focus on the salient object and i attributes led to ® their failure to understand the fundamental nature of causality. Aristotle explained that a stone falling through the air is due to the stone shaving the property of “gravity.” But of course a piece of wood @ tossed into water floats instead of sinking. This phenomenon Aristotle explained as being due to the wood having the property of “levity”! In both eases, the focus is ® exclusively on the object, with no o attention paid to the possibility that some force outside the object might be relevant. But the Chinese saw the world as consisting of continuously interacting, substances, so their attempts to understand it @causing them to be oriented toward the complexities of the s entire “field,” that is, the context or environment as a whole. The notion that events always occur in a field of forces would have been completely intuitive to the Chinese. salient Stl, Sata evity 708 ® Words Check i Is 1 attribute = fundamental 1 causality 3 exclusively © relevant © intuitive 036 mecasruoy ions one ors OG oeerezaz» aso cig gel Ue apes, ofeiat wel 2127 In professional sports these days, it is not unusual to hear players and coaches talking about process. ‘They talk about focusing on the process and following the process. Rarely @do they talk about scoring a goal, sa touchdown, a home run, a point, or achieving a good shot. It’s all about process. So, what do they mean by this? What they mean by focusing on the proc that they focus on the actions they need to @be taken, in order to achieve their desired result. They don't, that if you follow the steps required, then the result will look after itself. This is one of the big differences between professional and amateur sportspeople. Amateurs w focus on the result itself. The reasoning here is @ often focus on the result and forget about doing all, « the things that would almost automatically lead to the result. ® Words Check auc esol tot. 9 unusual 5 reasoning 0 amateur © automatically an (07 exreorazne sie rte 0g sm CHS a] DE Al ve &, olgial Bel te? CHS ol DE Al ve &, olgial Bel we? The Internet and communication technologies play Ithas been proposed that sleep funetions to conserve an ever-inereasing role in the social lives of young _ energy. This may be particularly relevant for warm- people in developed societies. Adolescents have been __ blooded animals (mammals and birds) that must quick to immerse themselves in technology with most expend a lot of energy to maintain a body temperature + @using the Internet to communicate. Young people _» higher than that of their surroundings. Indeed, many treat the mobile phone as an essential necessity of life small mammals living in cold climates, who lose heat and often prefer to use text messages to communicate __easily by having an unfavorable surface area to body with their friends. Young people also access social networking websites. As technology and _insulating burrows. Yet sleep does not appear ‘to o the Internet are a familiar resource for young people, it» have evolved only in warm-blooded animals. Some increasingly _ weight ratio, @ tending to sleep a lot, often in is logical ©what they would seek assistance from this __ studies on reptiles and amphibians indicate that they source. This has been shown by the inerease in __also sleep, and there are now strong indications of a websites that provide therapeutic information for __sleep-like state in some invertebrates, such as crayfish, young people. A number of ‘youth friendly’ mental _fruit flies, and honey bees. Also, though it is true that + health websites @have been developed. ‘the information the overall use of energy is reduced during sleep, as presented often takes the form of Frequently Asked _ @ compared with the active waking state, there is Questions, fact sheets and suggested links. It would almost as much reduction in energy use from just seem, therefore, logical to provide online counselling _resting quietly. The additional energy conservation in for young people. going from the resting state to sleep (is minimal. ‘invertebrate T8858 ®, Words Check 0 ashe ® Words check a ooo aE. 1 ever-increasing © adolescent 1 conserve © unfavorable 7 necessity 3 access 1 ratio 2 insulating © lagical © therapeutic 0 evolve © minimal swvay oom ora O37 [03] we ote Rae eae OG exseraaay a6 cig gel Ue apes, ofeiat wel 2127 who lives An independent artist is probably the one who closest to an unbounded ereative situation. Many artists have considerable freedom from external requirements about what to do, how to do it, when to sdo it, and why. At the same time, however, we know that artists usually limit themselves quite (forcefully by choice of material and form of expression. To make the choice to express a feeling by carving a specific form froma rock, without the use of high technology or colors, @ restricting the artist significantly. Such choices are not made to limit creativity, but rather to cultivate @it. When everything is possible, creativity has no tension. Creativity is strange in that it finds its way in any kind of situation, no matter how restricted, s just as the same amount of water flows faster and stronger through a narrow strait ® than across the open sea, strait at ov ® Words Check re seine ® independent © unbounded 1 considerable © external 1 requirement 9 restrict 0 cultivate © tension 038 menasruoy sion one ors: 1D erreciaae aes CHS ol DE Al ve &, olgial Bel we? Coming home from work the other day, I saw a woman trying to turn onto the main street and ‘having very little luck because of the constant stream of traffic, I slowed and allowed her to turn in front of, s me. I was feeling pretty good until, a couple of blocks later, she stopped to let a few more cars into the line, causing us both to miss the next light. I found myself completely @irritated with her. How dare she slow me down after I had so graciously let her into the traffic! w As T was sitting there stewing, I realized ® how ridiculous I was being. Suddenly, a phrase I once read. p eame floating into my mind: ‘You must do him or her a kindness for inner reasons, not because someone is keeping score or because you will be punished if you s don’t. I realized )what 1 had wanted a reward: If | do this nice thing for you, you (or someone else) will do an equally nice thing for me. stow 2 C1 acm esol ato. ® Words Check 1 constant 9 irritated 0 ridiculous © punish 7h 1d Hd Bel BEET tov ann t09001 9 en ane east eC! toe Ab BUCHAN, Sto, Be), YEA SACHAESA, beBAH to AAD, HAY SUICEA, Ue AE BLS *AIch. twoHVAVE AI n}ago} Holo} 4-H e] Biel Wh +F8 to BAHto bet HABA S Ech. + Matisse left for Paris to study art, with his father shouting, “Do you want me to see you starve?” 0 SEAN 124 OARS “1 UP 0} RE BE UPI Bake ol Train Aah) (Matisee?} 01a Ba portant distinction (to be made between denial and restraint). WRN UG EY (#910) x0 Afoott= 72=I0%0} 8 BB" IOV BIC.) + There is an EEE Bat Bay 28 9291 Go! orcs BAIS ole BAe that, whether, if $s) Ish, Sal 4144 thato) ole Galate BaeHal Fo, S Ajo], Wola] abe s}7}L} ZAMfact, news, idea, discovery, evidence, rumor $) Hol] 2 48-S FAAS 2 Mol $e Gao ols aps th, GAME ole att that oe Va FA) Bel olelziaz a ACPA thats: HEEIS, ' +The true champion recognizes [that excellence often flows most smoothly from simplicity, aft [that ean 5 vathat) eer z wt perio see teticae eee (ue ame eaz0ie asl ReEMMiee! 78 FER BeLIECE une ARR) I, Of SB Be Ato) Alot: + Unlike lawyers sientsts mast xpi acount for the posit [that they might be wrong) (eater Gel arise nielsol BEI 4 SHE 7HstHs BARIOS BAI Be) + [Whether such women are American or Tranian] or [whether they are Catholic or Protestant] matters Lstnetherg/t er) v Jess than the fact [that they are women soe (et oto) ofa feet 2 80 ee, Ane 8 elk] of 0) ofl ANAC? & BBC, SAGE 4 | eK 201SRAE $5 280! BOI FH Hi D BEA AOL FA Mie} @ 2b where W FOIR GALI + SIAL DOSES TON ARS ASK ORAS @ AAA @ HAL Flt BAO + BAD BASIC 2O1SBE FBSA 2081 (0% OFA @ BA @ Bol wx wel @ AKIN 9 Foie] Sel 4 Ba 2O1seE o@ BIE ZT 70% OBA that @ FO! Ale] 4 QIK] @ HAF alke @ BARE SA G ARI SAO} 21S 68 RH 208) 20% | ON @ BARA whore @ SI AH He AENO| BEN @ ESI FH DEL 0. 2O1SRE 38 BRA 8H 62% OANAHADICIRAY @ BAP BAA whether @ BAI EL @ too ~ WAND PA HH MEF PORES, ro Sek OAL @ HAA tat BBA @ WANS ARENel RIO, USE $s BETH 68% O BATRA that @ HOI FA UP] @ OHA @ HA RARRSL eh 2OUSAE 10M DRAB 27e 32% O BUEAYAF however @ BAGBA what @ FOR GA|4 Uk] BABS] eG CHEAE 10 | 2O1RAE TOR DRA BH 27H 76% OMAA that @ HAS BBO] PA MB spendsr ALAOAAA|+-ng © BAM where 042 menasruoy sites one: 1 ow He Lee) CHS wiziOl Bolg we OW este 242 TEAS, 1 In traditional societies resources continued to be scarce, consumption was more seasonally and communally orientated. @ where ® which Financial security ean liberate us from work we do not find meaningful and from ‘to worry about the next paycheck, (70 7 #8) @have ® having Only after some time and struggle the student begin to develop the insights and intuitions that enable him to see the centrality and relevance of this mode of thinking. 9% 75 ==) @ does ®do At some point, these days, a parent realizes his or her child left. Gna we) @ totend Dis tending ‘They'll go to the edge of a difficult slope, look all the way down to the bottom, and determine that the slope is too steep for them @Eeene) tying Stoty We would like to know the rate of natural soil formation from solid rock to determine topsoil erosion from agriculture is too great. @ that © whether Upon hearing about Sally's interest, Jennifer invited them both to visit her office just how deep Sally's fascination was. (2997 see @tosee ‘This has been spectacularly suecessful in many instances, with a number of pest problems permanently by importation and successful establishment of natural enemies. (#1) resolving ® resolved 8 OF 7H > SABA whore AAS USE 4 Neo eet > BRINe! So} salad Sateia nea, 4 aeete > oleh Sale| + aia] ALPHA) Fels} Bho] = ata) easy > SEAS wea Bavelel Wen eng seal & pane aoa Sra, > too BAL tolRatAL UE Awe oR at, ~abTeL UF tt > ois aaa ‘alate afoeg ssfaol Ske ad ag a, > oWaAtel MAE Bet Safely a Bel aol Uses sets, peneley with +P) 4a, FEMA AGIA BAL SE8 Baelsl HAMAS, $59) Waele ab Age stuey o¢Pre cheek O43 sTuDY HOARY 28 cos 1 esterase crs ae CHS Bol WE aI eS, ola Bel 2827 During the early stages when the aquaculture industry ‘was rapidly expanding, mistakes were made and these were costly both in terms of direct losses and in respect of the industry’s image. High-density rearing led to s outbreaks of infectious diseases that in some cases @devastated not just the caged fish, but local wild fish populations too. ‘The negative impact on local wildlife inhabiting areas @ close to the fish farms continues to be an ongoing public relations problem for the v industry. Furthermore, a general lack of knowledge and insufficient care being taken when fish pens were initially constructed ® meaning that pollution from excess feed and fish waste created huge barren underwater deserts. These were costly lessons to learn, + but now stricter regulations are in place to ensure that fish pens are placed in sites @ where there is good water flow to remove fish waste. This, in addition to other methods that decrease the overall amount of ‘uneaten food, has helped aquaculture to clean up its sw act. @® Words Check ove ae IS © costly © outbreak ® infectious 3 devastate 1 inhabit © insufficient 5 excess 5 barren 0 regulation © ensure 044, mesasruoy sions one ors 02 CS 291 BE a YES, olga Bel 4S? In most wilderness, the majority of groups © visiting the arca are small—usually between two and four people, But large groups do visit wilderness, and their potential to disturb campsites differs from @ that of ssmall groups. Although the effect of party size on campsites has never been formally studie it makes sense that a large group can cause impacts on an undisturbed site more @ rapidly than a small group. For example, along the New River in West Virginia, w the area of vegetation loss on sites used by large commercial rafting companies were more than four ‘times larger than the area on sites used by small groups of fishermen. At well-established campsites, however, a big group need not be a problem, as long as activities « are S)confined within the boundaries of the existing site. A Words Check we a © majority © potential © disturb © vegetation © confine » boundary cig gel Ue apes, ofeiat wel 2127 Not many years ago, schoolchildren were taught that carbon dioxide is the @naturally occurring lifeblood of plants, just as oxygen is ours. Today, children are more likely to think of carbon dioxide as a poison. That's sbecause the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere ®has increased substantially over the past, one hundred years, from about 280 parts per million to 380. But what people don’t know is that the carbon, dioxide level some 80 million years ago—back when our mammalian ancestors were evolving —@to be at least 1,000 parts per million. In fact, that is the concentration of carbon dioxide you regularly breathe ifyou work in a new energy-efficient office building, for @that is the level established by the engineering group, s that sets standards for heating and ventilation systems. So not only ®is carbon dioxide plainly not poisonous, but changes in carbon dioxide levels don't necessarily mirror human activity. Nor has atmospheric carbon, dioxide necessarily been the trigger for global warming, 2» historically. ® Words chock oe 1 lifeblood © concentration’ 1 ventilation 2 plainly © mirror © trigger QA, ersseana asin erean Che 9] US I oe &, ova Bel te? In the twentieth century, advanees in technology, from reftigeration to sophisticated ovens to air transportation, © that carties fresh ingredients around the world, contributed immeasurably to baking and pastry s making. At the beginning of the twenty-first century, the popularity of fine breads and pastries @ are ter than new chefs can be trained. growing even Interestingly enough, many of the technological advances in bread making have sparked a reaction, among bakers and consumers alike. They are looking to reclaim some of the flavors of old-fashioned breads that @were lost as baking became more industrialized and baked goods became more refined, standardized, and—some would say—flavorless, Bakers are s researching methods for sourdough breads of the past, and they are experimenting with specialty flours in their search for flavor. ) producing the handmade ® Words Check ere © advance 2 sophisticated 1 ingredient © spark 1 reclaim 2 refined 0 standardize © specialty sway ctor O45, [oa] we ote Rae 05 * CHS a] DE Al ve &, olgial Bel te? In some communities, music and performance have suecessfully transformed whole neighborhoods as © profoundly as The Guggenheim Museum did in Bilbao. In Salvador, Brazil, musician Carlinhos Brown s established several music and culture centers in formerly dangerous neighborhoods. In Candeal, ‘here Brown was born, local kids were encouraged to join drum groups, sing, and stage performances. The kids, energized by these activities, @ began to turn o away from dealing drugs. Being a young criminal was no longer their only life option. Being musicians and playing together in a group looked like more fun and ‘was more @ satisfying. Little by little, the crime rate dropped in those neighborhoods; the hope returned. In sanother slum area, possibly inspired by Brown’s example, a culture center began to encourage the local kids to stage musical events, some of @ them dramatized the tragedy that they were still recovering, from, ® Words Check 0 ashe 1 transform 1 profoundly 1 formerty 3 energize 0 dramatize © tragedy 046 mecasruoy sions one ors OG oeisoneam 2s cig gel Ue apes, ofeiat wel 2127 I remember one of the smartest I.T. executives for whom I ever worked strongly resisting the movement to measure programmer productivity that was popular at the time, He was fond of saying that the biggest, + problem with managing computer programmers is that you can never tell ®@ whether they are working by looking at them. Picture two programmers working side by side. One is leaning back in his chair with his eyes @ closed and his feet on the desk. ‘The other is, working hard, typing code into his computer. The one with his feet up could be thinking, and the other one may be too busy typing @to give it enough thought. In. the end, the busy typist could well produce ten times as ‘many lines of code as the thinker, which contain twice ‘as many new problems as the thinker’s. Unfortunately, most of the productivity measurement schemes I have encountered measuring effort or apparent activity. ‘They would reward him and punish his thoughtful neighbor. ® Words Check oie 1 measure © productivity 2 picture 5 scheme © apparent © thoughtful 07 cig gel Ue apes, ofeiat wel 2127 T hope you remember our discussion last Monday about the servicing of the washing machine supplied, to us three months ago. I regret to say the machine is no longer working. As we agreed during the meeting, s please send a service engineer as soon as possible to repair it. The product warranty says @ that you provide e parts and materials for free, but charge for the I believe the engineer's labor. This sounds ® u machine's failure is caused by a manufacturing defect. o Initially, it made a lot of noise, and later, it stopped @ to operate entirely. As it is wholly the company’s, responsibility to correct the defect, I hope you will not, make us ® pay for the labor component ofits repair. ® Words Check 0 ashe © warranty © spare 1 manufacture 9 defect 0 entirely © component OQ esr so cig gel Ue apes, ofeiat wel 2127 Oxygen is what itis all about. Ironically, the stuff that he ultimate life foree gives us life eventually kills it. 1 y cellular factories of energy, called mitochondria, ® that burn nearly all the oxygen we s breathe in. But breathing has a price. The combustion of oxygen that keeps us alive and active @ sending out by-products, Jekyll and Mr. Hyde characteristies. On the one hand, lies in tiny alled oxygen free radicals. They have Dr. they help guarantee our survival. For example, when w the body mobilizes to fight off infectious agents, it generates a burst of free radicals to destroy the invaders very efficiently. On the other hand, free radicals move @ uncontrollably through the body, attacking cells, rusting their proteins, piercing their : membranes and corrupting their genetic code until the cells become dysfunctional and sometimes give up and built into life as both die. These fierce radicals, protectors and avengers, are potent agents of aging oxygen free radical 38 ‘1% membrane (8) 82 8t ® Words Check oe a NO © ultimate 2 by-product © mobilize 3 agent rust © pierce 1 corrupt 5 dysfunctional 0 fierce © potent swuay oem on O47 [oa] we ote Reese pon CHS a] DE Al ve &, olgial Bel te? Don’t be afraid to move around and try different things, Dhowever old you are. The most important thing you want to find out is who you are and what capabilities you have. Give yourself a time limit to dig s into yourself and find out @ what you need. In this period, there is no way around it, so you have to be a risk taker. If you don’t take any ris s, you don't get any sweetness out of life. And the truth of the matter is that the sweetness in life ® comes with the risk. I've lived w my life @ taking risks and I wish T could tell you they were all suc sful, but they weren't. But you want to ‘know something? I learned more from my failures than 1. S)was from my successes. @® Words Check o an HEN a, 2 capably 2 lg into 9 around 048 menasruoysiions one ors 10 0 . cig gel Ue apes, ofeiat wel 2127 With all the passion for being slim, it is no wonder @that many people view any amount of visible fat on. the body as something to get rid of. However, the human body has evolved over time in environments of + food scareity; hence, the ability to store fat @efficiently is a valuable physiological function that served our ancestors well for tho 's. Only in the last ands of y few decades, in the primarily industrially developed economies, ® have food become so plentiful and easy o to obtain as to cause fat-related health problems. People no longer have to spend most of their time and. energy gathering berries and seeds and hoping that a hunting party will return with meat. All we have to do nowadays is drive to the supermarket or the fast-food, s restaurant, ©) where for very low cost we can obtain nearly all of our daily calories. ® words chock soot mc os a searity 2 physiological © primarily © plentiful

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