I am also grateful for permission to reprint excerpts from the following publications: Subtle is the Lord: The Science and Life of Albert Einstein , by Abraham Pais, copyright 䉷 1983 by Abraham Pais. Used by permission of Oxford University Press[r]
Paula ¡s /zÈéƯy 0ø get a nasty shock. Her car repairs will cost at least three hundred pounds. Don't be crieal oƒ David all the time. He hasn't been trained for this type of work, so it isn”t his fault ifhe”s a bít slow, "The pol[r]
too far from the rest of Europe. Iw / fo 3 my view, Northern Italy would be better. A:_ How/What* do you think, Lucy? C: I/Tm5 agree with Des when he says that Ireland isnt really a possibility. But Im not /T don S agree that Italy is <[r]
Can † use the phone? (The hearer knows that this means “your phone“.) Nouns used without articles often have a special meaning. l dislike cats. (Thịs means “dlf cgts“.) Most Western European languages have articles. So if you speak (for exampl[r]
IV. The passage below is a description of the beginning of an English lesson. At the places numbered, e.g. (1), the teacher might say something appropriate in English. What does the teacher say? IUs Monday morning[r]
Silva, Penny (ed.) (1996), A Dictionary of South African English on Historical Principles , Oxford: Oxford University Press. Simpson, J. A. and E. S. C. Weiner (eds) (1989), Oxford English Dictionary , 2nd edn, Oxford: Oxford Universit[r]
The Index will tell you where to find more information about particular determiners. diScourse markers Discourse means 'pieces of language longer than a sentence'. Some Wordgs and expressions are used to show how discourse is constructed. They can[r]
15 20 Although its strongest critics view the tourism industry as a rapacious predator — moving on to fresh conquests after one environment has been spoiled, and forever fuelling the desires of holidaymakers with the prospect of
Alexmder Barton Woodside, Vietnam and Chinese Model, Oxford University Press, 1971... John Kremers Whitmore, The Development of Lc Government in fiteenth Century.[r]
young increasingly want to get rich rather than live a life of deeper purpose. A third collateral effect of contemporary political economy is that the world is increasingly rendered into commodities to be sold. Indeed, this is the purpose of the growth economy.[r]
illustrate the varieties of usage and to display the best, thereby making it more memorable than a mere collection of lapses and solecisms would be able to do. 4. Recommendation. Recommendations are clearly set out. The blob °[r]
62 20 " " 63 Gerda Lerner, _The Creation of Feminist Consciousness: From the Middle Ages to _ _Eighteen-seventy_ New York: Oxford University Press, 1994 ,p.14 64 Pearl Green, “The Femini[r]
Michael Pettis, The Volatility Machine: Emerging Economies and the Threat of Financial Collapse Oxford University Press 2001 ISBN 0-19-514330-2 Paul Blustein, The Chastening: Inside the [r]
messages are displayed on a small screen buift into the handset); a cals register that stores details of any telephone calls that are sent or received; computer games programs that can be downloaded (copied from a server computer) and played on[r]
It so happens in nature that for all particles the inertial and gravitational masses are in the same proportion, and in fact they are usually made equal by a suitable choice of units; for example, by designating the same particle as unit for both. Newton took this proport[r]
e) This is lexical distribution, it is purely a matter concerning this lexical item. f) This is probably a neutralisation sub-case of distribution: the NEAR vowel and the FLEECE vowel fail to contrast before /l/. Do you make this distinction? Do you know people who do?
a city that may have a wall around it The University of Oxford, informally called “Oxford University” or simply Oxford, 34 …………… in the city of Oxford, in England, is 35 …………… oldest uni[r]