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From The Number of Sents: 21485

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1. When we see our friends laughing, our mirror neurons fire up and mimic their laughter in our minds, making us happy.


2. The next day, standing in the courtroom, the judge stared the old man in the face and said, "Alright, before we proceed with the sentencing I'm going to request that you leave the building and gather each piece of paper that you cut up and threw away yesterday.


3. Unfortunately, as you bring the soup towards your mouth to taste it, the spoon slips from your hand, pouring its contents on your bare foot.


4. This is the great theme of modern music in the classical tradition, especially in the first half of the century: in competing with past composers for the attention of performers and listeners who loved the classical masterworks, living composers sought to secure a place for themselves by offering something new and distinctive while continuing the tradition.


5. In about 1809, Sequoyah began developing a system of writing, adapting letters from English, Greek, and Hebrew.


6. But after publishing it in 1922, Eliot kept his London bank job until 1925, rejecting the idea of embracing professional risk.


7. Frederick was so pleased with this response that he handed his own watch over to the man, saying, "Take this so you may be able to tell the hour also."


8. I could see he was about to turn around and run, leaving me on my own.


9. By 1821, he had created a system of 86 symbols, representing all the syllables of the Cherokee language.


10. Two days later, a fellow researcher called each woman, asking her to list every food item in her kitchen to help a food cooperative.


11. Also, they often have dietary restrictions, depending upon their religion.


12. Sometimes, saying how you feel just isn't enough.


13. There will be occasions when your tutor will point you in another direction, but if you offer an opinion, you will be impressing the lecturers, stimulating debate and, as importantly, saving yourself a lot of time.


14. As celebrities are generally considered to be competent individuals, and often even presented as flawless or perfect in certain aspects, committing blunders will make one's humanness endearing to others.


15. Using the computer system, he opened the automated windows and blinds, letting the outside light in.


16. BEFORE/ The frames cover the eyebrows, making him look strict.


17. In this way, crowdfunding can help make your dreams come true in many ways.


18. Some people are by nature more positive and optimistic, tending to focus on their positive characteristics and expecting that things will turn out fine.


19. For instance, the viewer can "walk" through a building, peering round corners or going upstairs, even if the building exists only in the computer's memory.


20. But there is a remarkable similarity in that people put special meaning and value on New Year's eats and enjoy the cuisines in the company of their family, hoping for a happy year.


21. Analysis of the errors leads the teacher to modify the teaching of these procedures, using the language 'even and three more' rather than 'even, count on three.


22. For example, while he was en route to Spain as his enterprise's traveling partner, a role typical for young men, pirates robbed him of all his goods, including a consignment of pearls, and of his own clothes.


23. When smoke from a fire is detected, the wasabi is released, irritating the noses of people.


24. I have always taught my children that politeness, learning, and order are good things, and that something good is to be desired and developed for its own sake.


25. Likewise, understanding how climate has changed over millions of years is vital to properly assess current global warming trends.


26. Hang up a sign if you need to, warning them to keep their hands off.


27. "Okay," said Tommy, taking a hold of the back of the chair.


28. Her signs were usually limited to two or three sign combinations, such as "PLAY ME NIM" or "GIVE ORANGE ME," and they were restricted to the topics of eating, drinking, and playing.


29. Meanwhile, observing the seller carefully, Paul sensed something wrong in Bob’s interpretation.


30. As the population grew, more and more people started to migrate into the cities, prompting more urbanization in Europe.


31. Readers and viewers of these other media follow along, reacting to the story and its twists and turns, without having a direct personal impact on the events they witness.


32. After the performance, the three refused to pay their bill, telling the owner of the café: 'You use the products of our labour without paying us for it.


33. Just follow his or her lead, have fun, sing songs together, listen to different kinds of music, move, dance, and enjoy.


34. A defeated wolf, for example, will roll over on its back, exposing its throat to the victor, who will not then deign to tear it out.


35. Therefore, the presence of these distracting thoughts and stimuli in a later situation can cue the recall of the to-be-suppressed concept, increasing its accessibility in memory rather than decreasing it.


36. Now, it is held in more than a hundred countries, including Vietnam, Chile, Japan, Australia, Germany, and Italy.


37. Therefore, home-based work, teleworking, or video conferences could be strongly recommended.


38. The wave hit the boat with an amazing force, knocking me off my feet.


39. However, even motor development varies, depending on one's culture.


40. Farms can also benefit the environment by protecting watersheds, enhancing wildlife habitat and fostering biodiversity.


41. They also noted that success was greater in those patients whose partners had also lost weight even though they were not included in the program, suggesting that recommended changes were being actively supported by the spouse.


42. For example, people spend billions of dollars every year on "natural" dietary supplements, basing their purchasing decisions on marketing claims that in fact may not have been tested.


43. Engaging in acts that would be considered inconsequential in ordinary life also liberates us a bit, making it possible to explore our capabilities in a protected environment.


44. He cast about, looking for the source of the fire, and for a second Steve thought he might miss the smoke.


45. While every person has a base level of water he or she needs, this water requirement will vary slightly from day to day, depending upon activity levels.


46. So Anderson resolved to transform every aspect of Interface's operations, moving to achieve a zero footprint goal by 2020.


47. Just as she reached her car, her keys slipped from her hand, falling to the ground.


48. He took another look at the motionless security guard, and scratched his chin, thinking.


49. His ambition was to conquer other countries, including Britain.


50. He forgot every word of his poem, including the title, but he didn't have a copy of it to read from.


51. He was suspicious, always coming to conclusions, judging, and generally assuming the worst of everyone.


52. Second, although it is found in many places, including the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific oceans, it needs very specific conditions to survive.


53. At the same time, they and the Egyptians became experts at externalizing information, inventing the modern library, a grand storehouse for externalized knowledge.


54. Moreover, trying to match employees with jobs can quickly lead to significant inefficiencies because of mismatches between a worker’s skill level and the level of skill required for a job.


55. For instance, hitting a student over the head with a stick while trying to get across the idea that two and two make four is not the best way to teach.


56. Existing travel information systems, such as electronic signage on motorways, are designed to consider travellers as crowds, lacking any form of personalised information format and delivery.


57. One of the reasons physical spaces, including our office desks, can be so revealing about us is that they're essentially the crystallization of a lot of behavior over time.


58. For example, Kofi Annan, the former secretary general of the United Nations, observed that "failure to act now could endanger our planet irreversibly, unleashing a spiral of increased hunger, deprivation, disease, and squalor.


59. I threw one over my shoulder, wishing a return to Italy someday.


60. The exact same concept applies to many areas of our lives, including happiness.


61. Modisumers cook creatively, change cooking directions, and create new, exciting dishes.


62. This brought together the Old World (Europe, Africa, and Asia) and the New World (North and South Americas), affecting nearly all the peoples of the world in one way or another.


63. In essence, trying to remember as many details as possible can actually work against being selective about what you let into your brain’s attic.


64. However, they also taught her the importance of sympathy, understanding, and a sense of justice.


65. There were also hunting tools, fishing instruments, and other artifacts.


66. For example, using a tape measure to determine the distance a javelin was thrown yields very similar results regardless of who reads the tape.


67. For example, being exposed to fine wine or Pavarotti changes one's later appreciation of wine and music, even if encountered in late adulthood.


68. They feared that if any escaped a lab, all water would turn into polywater, ending life on earth.


69. Interestingly, being observed has two quite distinct effects on performance.


70. The trees have made the street look pleasant, appealing, and less threatening.


71. When traveling by sea, knowing your exact location can mean the difference between life and death.


72. Another person loads each dabba onto the right train, sending them off in different directions.


73. They would light it with a flame from the bottom so that it burnt evenly, indicating the passage of time.


74. Children need to be able to delight in creative and immediate language play, to say silly things and make themselves laugh, and to have control over the pace, timing, direction, and flow.


75. Well into her discourse, a young African American boy, looking puzzled, asks, "What is pumpkin pie?"


76. Cute, baby-like features are inherently appealing, producing a nurturing response in most humans.


77. And this is not working as we understand it; they visit, hang out, talk and gossip, ensuring that the social cement that holds their society together is in good order.


78. The methods of increasing the degree of truth in our beliefs are well known; they consist in hearing all sides, controlling our own bias by discussion with people who have the opposite bias, and cultivating a readiness to discard any hypothesis which has proved inadequate.


79. Regarding climate effects in general, developing countries are likely to experience more negative effects of global warming.


80. They reproduced the same pattern, finding that people rated traits relating to emotion as negative 74 percent of the time.


81. Instead of sucking the soul from human bodies, turning computer users into an army of dull clones, networked computers — by reflecting the networked nature of our own brains — encourage the humanism of their users.


82. Factory farms are creating more problems by changing a once solar-powered, open-air farm into a carbon-powered factory: a perfect environment to breed pandemic viruses capable of wiping out whole populations, destroying our waterways, and using up our precious resources at alarming rates.


83. Destruction of the rainforest is caused by logging, farming, mining, and other human activities.


84. Thus, advertising has become a necessity in everybody's daily life.


85. For example, beginning in 1968 in Yellowstone National Park, a "natural regulation policy" has been employed in which wildlife such as elk and bears are no longer fed but are allowed to live or die based on natural factors such as weather, disease, and the availability of natural food sources.


86. That's a lot of beef, cheese, cooking and transport, and it really adds up.


87. In his portrayal the various ways in which the boys adapt to their new island surroundings and respond to their new freedom, Golding analyzes the broad range of ways in which human beings respond to change.


88. They quickly pick out a whole series of items of the same type, making a handful of, say, small screws.


89. As we grow older, the eye lens becomes more yellow, causing poorer color discrimination in the green-blue-violet end of the spectrum.


90. In an ancient tribe, however, living in small huts in a tiny village settlement, a mother would have been able to hear any of the babies crying in the night.


91. Moving here and there through his sacred gardens, picking his sacred flowers, was a small girl in a cotton dress and straw hat.


92. Think of it as an Olympic athlete would, training for the mile-run.


93. The 1906 Springboks were highly successful, winning nearly all their matches including Wales, the top British Isles nation at the time.


94. In a sense, generalizing on the basis of group membership is a kind of predictive mechanism we use in various social situation.


95. But he uses one peculiar brief and muffled bark only at certain times, conveying something in the direction of "I wanna come in now."


96. A star jump is a form of exercise in which you jump in the air and stretch your arms and legs in four different directions, making your body look like a star.


97. But when he traveled around the country, visiting the same hotels and restaurants, the Chinese travelers were treated with courtesy in 249 out of 250 establishments.


98. A recent drought has sent the price of corn up, making it too expensive for many farmers.


99. The point is, playing games together helps kids with their socialization.


100. Instead, Hamwi rolled up a waffle and put a scoop of ice cream on top, creating one of the world's first ice-cream cones.


101. For example, in most critics championing Douglas Sirk's films' social critique, self-reflexivity, and, in particular, distancing effects, there is still a refusal of the 'vulgar' enjoyments suspected of soap operas.


102. It passed directly over Brian, very low, touching the water gently once, twice, and stopped with its floats gently bumping the beach in front of his shelter.


103. Men's dress shoes had the smallest market share, taking up 7 percentage points less market share than these shoes for women.


104. By the time I returned he had driven off, leaving me with more than a $5 tip.


105. Then, on his way home, waiting for an underground train at Leicester Square tube station, he saw a discarded book lying on the seat next to him.


106. They have also been the basis of many classic fantasy novels and movies, including The Lord of the Rings and The Chronicles of Narnia.


107. Sometimes, however, if a person is already sensitive and upset about something, delaying feedback can be wise.


108. He would be sitting on the edge of his bed, punching dots, when the rumbling of wagons on the cobblestones outside told him that morning had come.


109. "Such keen connection between food and national or ethnic identification clearly indicates the truth that cuisine and table narrative occupy a significant place in the training grounds of a community and its civilization, and thus, eating, cooking, and talking about one's cuisine are vital to a community's wholeness and continuation.


110. However, finding ways to reverse the increasingly individualistic trend in Western societies is a much taller order.


111. This error in perception was actually an advantage, leading people to get what they needed.


112. On Pentecost Island in the South Pacific, Coming of Age Day does not mean parties and gifts.


113. Just as walking down the street involves the coordinated action of muscles, nerves, and control centers in the brain, having a conversation with someone involves coordinated actions like speaking at the right time, understanding the intentions of the speaker, and, often, mimicking facial expressions and posture.


114. Many people operate under a false sense of reality, believing that life should be good, fair, easy, and full of success.


115. When his grandfather started to walk, the sensors sent signals to the paired smartphone, raising an alarm.


116. Long exercise may require much more water to refill the body, depending upon the type of exercise and how much you sweat.


117. In its chosen winter home, it seeks out a large patch of habitat to pass the next seven months of its sociable life, joining other Tennessee Warblers as well as other warbler species.


118. The game encourages cognitive empathy because it turns out that success depends on fostering cooperation by considering the viewpoints of a range of stakeholders, including extremist and moderate political groups.


119. Consumers can collect additional information by conducting online research, reading news articles, talking to friends or consulting an expert.


120. This intentional error functions as an advance warning system, manned by the self-protection subself, providing individuals with a margin of safety when they are confronted with potentially dangerous approaching objects.


121. He is remembered for his automation designs, including water- operated ones.


122. Actually, several lines of evidence suggest that happiness does not depend on external circumstances - buying a nice house, getting promoted - as much as on internal factors, such as one's outlook on life.


123. He often became an itinerant performer, travelling among small towns and rural villages to perform during festivals or to celebrate important occasions in the lives of the local gentry.


124. Adams' first concern was to master his soul, seeking discipline, modesty, tolerance, calmness of spirit, and religious faith – all virtues in which he was weak, as he was the first to acknowledge.


125. On the other hand, being observed while doing some task or engaging in some activity that is well known or well practiced tends to enhance performance.


126. The great climatic change the lake underwent and continued evaporation, exceeding the inflow of fresh water, reduced the lake to one-twentieth of its former size.


127. Research has confirmed that in many tasks, experts' decisions are highly variable: valuing stocks, appraising real estate, sentencing criminals, evaluating job performance, and more.


128. This implies reading together, playing sports and games together, solving puzzles together, cooking and eating together, discussing things together, joking together, shopping together, building blocks together, and washing dishes together.


129. Whereas, jumping to a dispositional attribution is far easier.


130. They do relatively little developmental coaching and when employees do improve, they may fail to take notice, remaining stuck in their initial impression.


131. Space junk is made up of many things, including rocket parts, old satellites, and small fragments from collisions.


132. They know that artistic representation is always explaining, refining, and making clear the object depicted.


133. Far too often we lose patience with the process and quit too soon, missing out on what we could have gained.


134. Nasrudin went to a local bathing house dressed in very expensive garments, carrying a goldlined pouch at his side.


135. Trees can absorb and lock in carbon dioxide, keeping it from harming the environment.


136. By keeping livestock in windowless sheds and using artificial lighting and temperature control, growing seasons could be prolonged and it became possible to produce greater quantities of meat, milk, and eggs.


137. A twenty-first-century civilization could mine the atmosphere for carbon, extracting over 300 billion tons before lowering the CO2 concentration back to its natural, pre-industrial level.


138. Even more unfair is the practice of choosing guests of unequal stature and ability — in other words, inviting a well-known, highly accomplished person to represent the favored view and a relative unknown to represent the unfavored view.


139. The race is held once every two years, giving the environment time to recover from human impact in between events.


140. Sleep now, darling.


141. For example, making 9 of 10 free throws or running a mile in under six minutes is a goal that is difficult to attain, even for the highly skilled or fit child.


142. In a nutshell, it says that since travel times increase with traffic volumes, an additional car on the road slows down all other cars, increasing time costs for all the occupants of all the cars.


143. A massive piece of the nearby mountain had broken off, burying almost all the layers of the mine.


144. They combined individuality and innovation with emulation of the past, seeking to write music that would be considered original and worthy of performance alongside the masterworks of earlier times.


145. They were educational tools, passing knowledge from one generation to the next.


146. But such mental rehearsal is disastrous cognitive static when it becomes trapped in a stale routine that captures attention, intruding on all other attempts to focus elsewhere.


147. Police cars are parked on the street outside the house, their red lights flashing, pulsing through the front window and circling the pale walls.


148. In addition to that benefit, helping lower-ability students often pulls higher-ability students to a more sophisticated understanding of the material.


149. Whether you're nine or ninety years old, you should constantly be learning, improving your skills, and getting better at what you do.


150. When warm air rises, creating low pressure over the water surface, cooler air from nearby enters to fill the area.


151. "You sleep now, darling.


152. They also pollute clouds, making it harder for sunlight to pass through.


153. Most plastics break down into smaller and smaller pieces when exposed to ultraviolet (UV) light, forming microplastics.


154. A raven followed me along the trail, landing on tree branches and calling to me.


155. Many gifted children spend hours reading, building models, or drawing — "forgetting" their household duties and not even hearing you call their name.


156. The pedagogical tradition of requiring students to raise their hands in class has the obvious instrumental purposes of establishing classroom order, testing student comprehension of content by maintaining a disciplined climate conducive to answering questions, and facilitating group discussion.


157. One day Frederick the Great noticed this curious ornament and, deciding to have some fun with the man, took out his own diamond-studded watch.


158. The moment was captured in a photograph and spread fast on the Internet, warming many hearts all over the world.


159. Most dyes will permeate fabric in hot temperatures, making the color stick.


160. Similarly you need to avoid antipathy, that is, having a deep dislike of a particular viewpoint.


161. In addition, speaking a second language allows people to experience another culture.


162. Interestingly, being lazy has one advantage.


163. Then it came about that Angus McAllister, sitting with his legs bent in his potting shed like some dangerous beast in its den, saw a sight which first froze his blood and then sent it boiling through his veins.


164. When they are interacting with their babies, they appear to be serious, silent, and unsmiling, displaying an amazing lack of facial expression.


165. Those people usually try to compensate by driving big cars, having big desks or acting just plain nasty.


166. I spent hours in Dr. Woolley's lab, making copies of everything.


167. As usual, I was working at my dad's petrol station, pumping gas.


168. Others, including his coach, however, did not like his new style.


169. Circular time encourages meditation, idling, play.


170. When they finish the work, they evaluate it more favorably, rating it as more creative and successful.


171. Its body consists of 16 different sections, so it can move in many different ways by twisting, turning, and rotating.


172. For example, one of the best ways to write a book is to write it as quickly as possible, getting your thoughts onto paper without regard to style.


173. This is true of all Latin American countries, including Brazil, despite the enthusiastic media reports about that country.


174. I was both happy and nervous about making new friends, having different teachers for each class, and studying new things.


175. "We don't usually think that what we see, hear, and read is a series of narratives and images selected for particular reasons and grounded in the social worlds and interests of those producing the event, controlling the images, and delivering the commentary.


176. One rainy afternoon in 1940, sitting at his dining room table, the 15-year-old Goddard hit upon a plan.


177. The end result is that the airplane winglets help keep planes smaller, saving about 10% in fuel costs.


178. The terms we use in talking about time — budgeting, investing, allocating, wasting — are borrowed from the language of finance.


179. These days, looking at sociable robots and digitized friends, one might assume that what we want is to be always in touch and never alone, no matter who or what we are in touch with.


180. Eating Skippin' Jenny shows one's thrift, conveying a hope for more wealth in the coming year.


181. To repeat what has been said before, providing practice exercises across a variety of contexts and situations is what makes learning last — it is the way to promote transfer of learning.


182. For example, driving to Wales I observe 200 sheep in a field.


183. Small muscles develop while children are cutting, pasting, folding, and painting.


184. I taste chocolate and evaluate its quality, telling good chocolate from bad, faulty chocolate.


185. Music performances, cooking shows, and a kids' concert take place at the festival.


186. After reading the list, it was easier to recall examples of women and so, using the availability heuristic, people concluded there must be more women than men on the list.


187. The thunder rumbled again, sounding much louder.


188. Nevertheless, pushing this problem off onto future generations is a poor strategy.


189. While they are acting out the story of his life one day, Atticus stops them, telling them to see things from other people's points of view.


190. Parents often believe that they are providing help to their children when they constantly correct and criticize them, assuming that they will grow from these remarks.


191. Since opponents will undoubtedly attack, criticize, and blame, anyway, the advantages of being proactive, airing one's own "dirty laundry," and "telling on oneself" are too significant to ignore.


192. Of course, sleeping is important, but going to bed a half-hour earlier would be better than sleeping late and skipping breakfast.


193. As this process continues, the resulting clouds begin to expand, giving rise to rains and thunderstorms.


194. I was considering turning in my paper, knowing I'd failed the test, when I broke my pencil point accidentally.


195. However, if you want to try to create a connection with someone who does not like you, asking that person to do you a favor is more effective.


196. Biologists who study whale behavior generally have to be content with hanging around in boats, waiting for their subjects to surface.


197. Remember, being assertive will help you avoid unnecessary problems or stress caused by relationships with people in your life.


198. Unfortunately, working at night meant I could no longer have dinner with my wife and kids.


199. The engineer can even communicate with trapped people, assuring them that help is on the way.


200. The art world consists of a bundle of systems: theater, painting, literature, music, and so on, each of which furnishes an institutional background for the conferring of status on objects within its domain.


201. Even though unemployment is painful to those who have no source of income, reducing unemployment is not costless.


202. The surface is rough so that the reflected light is scattered, lighting up the interior evenly.


203. It is possible to do this by randomly picking up individual objects, one by one, identifying each one, and then moving it to the appropriate jar.


204. If the relationship with the mother is disrupted through separation or loss, the child will experience great sadness and distress, which can have long-lasting and even lifelong impact, depending on the severity of the loss.


205. A new manner to represent the problem is suddenly discovered, leading to a different path to a solution heretofore unpredicted.


206. When humans learned to communicate using oral and, later, written language, ideas, knowledge, and practices—how to make a fishhook, build a boat, fashion a spear, sing a song, carve a god—could replicate and combine like genes.


207. The granite is white and somewhat glossy, making it highly reflective.


208. When he mimicked his acting roles he frequently noticed how the position of his head shifted, placing increasing levels of stress on his neck and his breathing.


209. During the run-up to Christmas, increasing numbers of ads concern toys and games.


210. However, with the regulations that are present at most schools, contacting their children can seem impossible to parents.


211. He lent them money, saying they should pay it back whenever they could.


212. After Mujuru had learned the kushaura , his grandfather accompanied him, playing the kutsinhira part.


213. In movies, spaceships often 'warp' through space at several times the speed of light, covering distances between stars and galaxies in hours, minutes or even seconds.


214. According to the consulting firm McKinsey, knowledge workers spend up to 60 percent of their time looking for information, responding to emails, and collaborating with others.


215. Then he could see a man walking around outside his house, watching the smoke, but he could not see in to know what was happening inside.


216. That is, they may be in the same room as their child but watching TV, reading, on the phone, reviewing emails, or conversing with other guests.


217. If a dog goes to the door and barks, signaling an urgent need to go to the backyard, there's absolutely no mistaking what the dog wants or needs.


218. AFTER/ The frames do not cover the eyebrows, making him look less strict.


219. With the funds he has raised, he's building several more houses, including one for a homeless elderly woman and her dog.


220. In 1971, hydro was the second biggest source of electricity generation, but in 2007, gas was the second biggest, accounting for more than 20% of the total electricity generation.


221. The tasks were: driving a vehicle, getting out of the vehicle, opening a door, locating and closing a leaking valve, using a drill to cut through a wall, pulling a plug out of a wall socket and then plugging it in, navigating rough terrain, and climbing stairs.


222. So, the artists were able to apply paint more thickly and use heavier brush strokes, introducing a unique feel to their paintings.


223. She was smiling and nodding, urging him on with her wide eyes.


224. If teachers are motivated, they will perform better in their classroom, increasing the energy and enthusiasm of students.


225. In this stage, we can even imagine ourselves victoriously dancing on the top of that mountain, feeling successful and ultimately happy.


226. So, being full and feeling sated are separate matters.


227. "He then went into a clear, interesting presentation.


228. By 2030 most cars will be completely or partially driverless, depending on the rate of unmanned technology adoption.


229. The Center for Women's Business Research indicates that businesswomen (working women and female entrepreneurs) are the primary decision makers in households, making 95 percent of the purchasing decisions.


230. In fact, building stress into your life can actually make you live longer.


231. It was a brilliant afternoon, warm and sunny, and Susan walked all the way home, thinking about the script to start.


232. The researchers at the U.S. Army conducted a study of motorcycle accidents, attempting to correlate the number of accidents with other variables such as socioeconomic level and age.


233. After scanning the stairs, the robot set off to climb to the top, completing the task effortlessly.


234. Thus, occupying the passengers' time by making them walk longer gave them the idea they didn't have to wait as long.


235. Also, the acid in sodas interacts with stomach acid, slowing digestion and blocking nutrient absorption.


236. "Further, spending all our time with others doesn't give us the ability to hit the reset button and relax.


237. In short, brainstorming doesn't improve creative output-it reduces it.


238. For many of us, hurrying is a way of life.


239. Aerobic activities like walking, running, swimming, and cycling use your large muscles in a rhythmic way for a sustained period of time, which requires the heart to pump blood to deliver oxygen to your working muscles.


240. The empty dabbas are picked up by 5:00 pm and are returned to their original addresses by the same team, following the same procedure in reverse.


241. Caches of these coins are still being discovered in south India, offering us a glimpse of trade patterns two thousand years ago.


242. The soldier immediately distributed them to his comrades, saying that he had no occasion for money; and requested that if what he had done merited any compensation, he might be made an officer.


243. As a result, they tend to consider their own language as less useful and to neglect it, using the other language with increasing frequency and encouraging their own children to learn it.


244. Scientists, knowing how fast sound travels in water, can calculate how far it is to the bottom.


245. He left and went to wait in his car, leaving Erik to anticipate the arrival of soon-to-be furious concert-goers.


246. Thus, suggesting that they need to take active control is bad advice in those situations.


247. Communicating the vision to organization members nearly always means putting "where we are going and why" in writing, distributing the statement organizationwide, and having executives personally explain the vision and its justification to as many people as possible.


248. The principal was energetically addressing them, talking of the challenges and thrills of high school life, but she could not concentrate.


249. In the early 1990s, when e-mail first began gaining popularity, it was exciting to receive messages from other people and fun to write them back, knowing that our replies would reach them instantly.


250. According to the constitution, a citizen might file suit on behalf of an injured watershed, recognizing that its health is crucial to the common good.


251. Wind blew across the barren landscapes and water ran down from the mountaintops and slopes, taking the soil with them.


252. Although most people, including Europe's Muslims, have numerous identities, few of these are politically salient at any moment.


253. In April, Elvis posted on YouTube a video of the house as it was being built, getting six million views in four days.


254. Being nervous about holding up the afternoon edition of the newspaper, the editor telegraphed his correspondent, reminding him that the afternoon edition was being held up.


255. However, washing too often can make your skin dry.


256. To balance energy in with energy out, eating behaviors must be counterbalanced with ending each meal and allowing periods of fasting between meals.


257. By watching a show that is 'labelled' a comedy, this person expected to feel positive emotions, including happiness, amusement, and joy.


258. Maybe, they knew we would interpret their works accordingly, noticing the melodies, colors, shapes, and the words influencing each other.


259. Nevertheless, marketing and merchandising programs commonly treat these customers as if they are much older.


260. Animal communication is largely direct, offering few alternatives in the meaning potential of one of their signals.


261. The problem here is that there is a friction force between the wheels and the road, acting backwards, and it eventually acts to bring the bicycle to a stop if the cyclist stops pedaling.


262. He soon goes out to the fenced-in section of the yard, digging in the sand, filling a bottle of water through a funnel, and smelling the lavender.


263. This lighting up lasts long enough to shift the brain into a higher gear, encouraging further reading.


264. Both were working in New York City, and at lunchtime, when they had the chance, they would often steal out of the office and go to designer sample sales, hunting for discounts on clothes and accessories.


265. The three heads are the symbol of life, representing the past, the present, and the future.


266. After I returned to Katmandu, the capital of Nepal, I wrote emails to my friends, asking them to send children's books to my father's home in the United States.


267. Through longer-term programs, this organization treats chronic diseases such as malaria, sleeping sickness, and AIDS; and brings health care to remote, isolated areas where resources and training are limited.


268. Sales reduce inventory size, making room for the store to buy more stuff to sell, and they attract customers.


269. For example, mapping involves comparing the problems for similarity in structure and identifying their parallel elements.


270. Somehow, having an idea of the final image helps us to organize the smaller components in a way that makes sense.


271. Can you imagine that a successful fisherman goes to the shore, heats up a pan, and holds it over the lake, expecting that a fish will fly out of the water onto his pan ready for him to eat?


272. We are closed on New Year's Day, Independence Day, Thanksgiving Day, and Christmas Day.


273. This slower frequency of brain activity, occurring between eight to twelve cycles per second, correlates with a state of receptivity.


274. There are those naming experts who warn against this, saying that consumers will not take these seriously.


275. For instance, if you are afraid of a work presentation, trying to avoid your anxiety will likely reduce your confidence and increase your fear.


276. For example, reading more is a good habit, but if you're only doing it because you feel like that's what you're supposed to do, not because you actually want to learn more, you're going to have a hard time reaching the goal.


277. Witnesses who exchange their experiences will tend to make similar errors in their testimony, reducing the total value of the information they provide.


278. The cobra was contrite, promising not to harm any more villagers.


279. Flowers and insects are mutualists, but they are first and foremost looking out for themselves, satisfying their own needs.


280. On his first day, he worked through his break time and complained that the old man was wasting time, taking several breaks to eat and drink.


281. Working at degree level is all about reading, understanding and forming educated opinions based upon what you have read, but it is also, at its best, about having your own viewpoint.


282. When done by a beginner, both are awkward, frustrating, and slow.


283. An assertive counselor would find a way to call that person's attention to the fact that the joke is racist, explaining how it offended the hearer, and suggesting ways similar jokes could be avoided.


284. The repertoire varied according to the performing medium and from region to region, but the core was largely the same throughout most of Europe and the Americas, including operas and operatic excerpts from Mozart through Verdi, Wagner, and Bizet; orchestral and chamber music from Haydn through the late Romantics; and keyboard music by J・ S・ Bach, Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, and prominent nineteenth-century composers.


285. This allows customers to feel more relaxed, prompting them to choose easily and leave more satisfied with their choices.


286. Both describe a physical journey, reflecting the central character's mental and spiritual journey, down a river to confront the deranged Kurtz character, who represents the worst aspects of civilisation.


287. He used the vest to smother the flames on Rivera's arm and back, screaming for a medic even though he knew he wouldn't be heard.


288. Since human influence was contradictory to the wilderness ethic, the management ideal was to isolate conservation areas, keeping disturbance to a minimum, on the grounds that if left alone, nature's balance would prevail.


289. Furthermore, around 2020, speed will most likely be automatically monitored or controlled, taking away some of the risks but also the feeling of freedom that drivers still enjoy.


290. She lay quite still, listening.


291. Labels know the answer lies online, tapping the word-of-mouth forces that are replacing traditional marketing in creating demand, but they're still trying to figure out exactly how best to do it.


292. People threw garbage, including cans, plastic, and a lot of glass, onto it.


293. This prize is given each year to a work that "illuminates a significant and complex subject, demonstrating mastery of the subject, lucid writing and clear presentation."


294. In this instance, those specific freedoms that would have been satisfied only by Car A (e.g., appearance, comfort, handling quality) now are threatened and reactance will be aroused.


295. The experimenters explain that when people are farther apart, they consider the factors in a more abstract way, focusing on the main issues rather than getting hung up on less important points.


296. These interactions between artists can have unexpected results, producing works of art that have strong visual, auditory or emotional influences on people.


297. Scientists were able to study the brain activity as it responded to each word and record how it lit up as the readers encountered unusual words, surprising phrases or difficult sentence structures.


298. Once we arrive at the refuge at about 10:00 am, we will begin our six-hour hike, searching for birds and learning about the plants and animals of the refuge.


299. The fires also cooked some of the victims, furnishing high-energy food, rich in protein and fat and easily chewed.


300. He spent the next forty years working for a publishing house to provide stability in his life, writing poetry on the side.


301. One is a decrease in the amount of light that passes through the eye, resulting in the need for more light to do tasks such as reading.


302. Tundra plant species differ in rooting depth, timing of life-cycle development, and uptake preferences for different chemical forms of nitrogen (ammonium, nitrate, and amino acids).


303. That is, the skills of the employee may be higher than those necessary for the job, resulting in what economists call underemployment.


304. Even after many of the rules were overturned by radical concepts in more recent times, composers, more often than not, still organized their thoughts in ways that produced an overall, unifying structure.


305. With this bit of knowledge, however, Professor X can "predict" the actions of the students, using the same technique of categorizing they have used.


306. One day, he sat on a park bench, head in hands, wondering if anything could save his company from bankruptcy.


307. According to this view, the peculiar sounds of laughter have a direct effect on the listener, inducing positive emotional arousal that mirrors the emotional state of the laugher, perhaps by activating certain specialized brain circuits.


308. They absorb about one-fourth of humans' industrial carbon emissions, doing half the work of all Earth's carbon sinks combined.


309. This is what causes difficulty in seeing close objects clearly (called presbyopia), necessitating either longer arms or corrective lenses.


310. In Korea, Coming of Age Day is held on the third Monday of May each year.


311. There we were, on our last night in India, lying on the soft sand, enjoying the cool air and the impressive view, of the night sky.


312. I imagined that we were in an Indiana Jones movie, making a path through the forest to find evidence of the ancient Inca civilization.


313. This shrinking exposes the parts of the nails and hair that were once under the skin, causing them to appear longer than before.


314. Once, an American high school student managed to stay awake for 264 hours, breaking the previous record of 260 hours.


315. This was supposedly because Nova could be read as no va in Spanish, meaning "It does not go."


316. For those who do not regard herring as their favorite food, there are many boats and street food shops offering other traditional Finnish food, including warm salmon soup.


317. In contrast, Gauguin used flat colors and sometimes rubbed the paint into the canvas, leaving no trace of strokes behind.


318. Good teachers are always learning themselves, adapting what they know to a world that keeps changing.


319. It takes a few heart-pounding seconds to hitch itself upright again, giving the predators-in-waiting an edge.


320. "Frederick was so pleased with this response that he handed his own watch over to the man, saying, "Take this so you may be able to tell the hour also."


321. With my love, Elaine This light is then reflected back toward the ground, creating "sky glow."


322. Write about your hobbies: cooking, gardening, photography, knitting, jogging, sailing, scuba diving.


323. In addition, the oval-shaped slices are thought to resemble coins, symbolizing abundance and prosperity.


324. It is practiced in many countries all around the world, including Korea.


325. All of these are faster and less painful than death by beating, stabbing, and torture.


326. One day, he found a textbook, Using Energy.


327. Trees in the cities are on the job around the clock every day, working for all of us.


328. It distorts reality, keeping us from getting all the information we need and assessing issues clearly.


329. Steve tried feeding the starving gull, tossing torn bits of the buns toward the bird, luring him closer and closer.


330. Then it lowered itself and moved slowly to the left, eating berries as it rolled along, delicately using its mouth to lift each berry from the stem.


331. It features many events and activities associated with the mango, including mango eating competitions, quizzes, and mango carving.


332. According to the graphs, the primary source of electricity generation in both 1971 and 2007 was coal and peat, accounting for over 40% of the total electricity generation.


333. The restructuring of a problem can be caused by unsuccessful attempts in solving the problem, leading to new information being brought in while the person is thinking.


334. These articles typically move deftly from anecdote, to question, to theory, then back again, pulling you deep into the core issues surrounding the issue at hand.


335. Some seemed excited, walking like racing cars between passersby.


336. It did this again and again as I stood there laughing, wishing that I too could play in the wind.


337. As a matter of fact, using its resources, we all have a certain obligation to learn something of the way in which the Earth works.


338. But like all things we hope to teach our children, learning to cooperate or to compete fairly takes practice.


339. This involves teaching those other people to see the desirability of reaching that specific goal and, usually, showing them how to get there.


340. Many of the things he purchased, including Hunminjeongeum Haerye and Shin Yun-bok's picture book, are now Korean national treasures.


341. Host: Dr. Zimmerman, we all think we know what sleep is: the time when we are unconscious, resting and dreaming.


342. The potential benefits of a close, enduring relationship with a mentor are suggested by research indicating that children and adolescents who feel a sense of connection with a supportive adult engage in fewer health-risk behaviors.


343. The researchers rated children's imaginativeness by recording the novel elements (such as characters, setting, dialogue, and feelings) they used in their responses.


344. Whether or not we can get a definitive answer, we can be confident in the process by which the explanations were developed, allowing us to rely on the knowledge that is produced through the process of science.


345. Primate social systems, including those of humans, are implicit social contracts where, in effect, members agree to forgo their immediate self-interests, in order to gain greater benefits, in the long run, by solving some ecological problem more effectively.


346. For example, with minimal effort, keeping clean makes it more likely that others will want to spend time with you.


347. Penfield enthusiastically defended an early start for second language learning, basing his ideas on his studies on brain damage and his experience with his own children.


348. In addition, there is evidence that test anxiety may deplete one's capacity for self-control, increasing the likelihood of poor performance.


349. The Duke of Wellington called Napoleon "a fake," while Napoleon made fun of his rival, calling him "a coward."


350. Advocates of altruism do not deny that the motivation for much of what we do, including much that we do for others, is egoistic.


351. The chemical industry denied that there were practical alternatives to ozone-depleting chemicals, predicting not only economic disaster but numerous deaths because food and vaccines would spoil without refrigeration.


352. The courtyard is indeed very large, measuring 69 meters by 45 meters, covering an area of 3,105 square meters.


353. However, it is the responsibility of the children's librarian to inform the administration early in the budget process of needs for the next year, including a justification of why the funds are needed.


354. In short, maintaining good social relations depends on the capacity for guilt.


355. A: Before I tried to walk on a rope suspended in the air, I laid a rope on the ground and practiced breathing, focusing my eyes, and shifting my weight as if I were on a real tightrope.


356. Brainstorming is a form of creative thinking in groups, using a procedure in which all group members are encouraged to generate as many ideas as possible without holding back or worrying about being wrong.


357. If you "make a beeline for" someone or something, you go straight toward your destination, ignoring everything else along the way.


358. Months later, when the professor wrote to all the establishments they had visited to ask whether Chinese guests were welcome, however, the majority of the responses were, in fact, prejudiced and rather uninviting, showing that attitudes don't always predict behavior.


359. They discovered that half of the residents had been shopping outside the county, driving an hour to Sioux Falls to shop in larger stores.


360. However, this may appear rude to native speakers of English: "gravy" with falling intonation came across as a statement, suggesting "This is gravy.


361. By this time the 65,000 spectators were on their feet, cheering and applauding.


362. In determining adjacencies, consideration should be given to locating noisy library functions next to each other: circulation desks, browsing areas where users select audiovisual materials, and, possibly, the entrance to the children's area.


363. Fifteen days after, the army surrounded Furnes; and Boutteville commanded his staff officers to find a man steady and fearless for a surprise attack, which he wanted, promising a hundred pistoles as a reward.


364. Humans are among the few species whose unrelated members exchange favors, such as trading goods, engaging in social contracts, or forming organizations.


365. Modern comic books tell stories in a variety of genres, including comedy, adventure, romance, and even tragedy.


366. Animals-and people-who have been raised in extreme social isolation are poor at reading emotional cues in those around them not because they lack the basic circuitry for empathy but because, lacking emotional tutors, they have never learned to pay attention to these messages and so haven't practiced this skill.


367. Lambeau: They worked together for the remainder of their lives, producing some of the most exciting math theories ever written.


368. For the final task, climbing stairs, it was important that the robot be able to see its feet.


369. They found that they could understand and predict events better if they reduced passion and prejudice, replacing these with observation and inference.


370. On the Internet, you have a virtual world of information and misinformation cohabiting side by side, staring back at you like identical twins, one who will help you and the other who will hurt you.


371. Humans aren't naturally good at losing, so there will be tears, yelling, and cheating, but that's okay.


372. This pattern helps explain why access to more information is not, on its own, making us smarter.


373. Most seemingly impossible obstacles can be overcome by seeing possibilities, focusing on what is within your control, taking the first step, and then focusing on the next step and the next step after that.


374. But it leaves out the fact that Robert was also a willing, participating and contributing member of this crowd, and that he probably influenced the others to about the same degree that they influenced him.


375. He had carried out a number of adventurous explorations, including the first solo kayak trip down the length of the Nile River and standing on the top of Mt.


376. Of course, recording your dreams is not enough.


377. When you exercise, your heart beats faster, increasing the amount of blood that flows to your brain.


378. Art should include opportunities for children to use both large and small muscles in meaningful ways, building their body control and self-image.


379. Scientists not only have labs with students who contribute critical ideas, but also have colleagues who are doing similar work, thinking similar thoughts, and without whom the scientist would get nowhere.


380. As the consumption of alcohol is rising steadily, drinking is becoming a serious problem in Korea.


381. I recall Bill Burroughs, a colleague, and ex-scientist like myself, mentioning this paper over lunch.


382. In 2009, part of an old Russian satellite crashed into an American satellite, creating thousands of additional pieces of space junk.


383. Finally, the surfer grabs the robot, following the lifeguard's instructions.


384. "The security guard, who had worked for the company for many years, looked his boss straight in the eyes, showing no sign of emotion on his face.


385. However, thinking about it this way overlooks debt among people in low-income brackets who have no other way than debt to acquire basic necessities of life.


386. For example, the Rio Grande, separating the United States and Mexico, has frequently shifted its course, causing problems in determining the exact location of the international boundary.


387. In an effort to discover why, he studied his body in the mirror, watching his posture during movements very closely.


388. The elements of reality are fixed on these pieces; by combining them in his selected sequence, shortening and lengthening them according to his desire, the director builds up his own “filmic” time and “filmic” space.


389. It was her famous fish face: she was pushing her ears out, crossing her eyes, and opening her mouth wide.


390. In some cases the amount of young produced today is a hundred or even a thousand times less than in the past, putting the survival of species, and the fisheries dependent on them, at grave risk.


391. Beavers swim easily in streams, picking up rocks and sticks to build their dams.


392. As I looked into the sack, I quickly fingered the remaining presents, testing their weight, imagining what they contained.


393. We work, shop, and seek entertainment, for the most part, outside our own neighborhoods, necessitating a journey to work, to shop, and to visit the multiplex.


394. The answer is yes Scientific research provides convincing data to support the evidence that giving is a powerful path to lasting happiness Researchers have found that the areas in our brains that feel pleasure become activated when we give —meaning that besides doing good, donating our money or time actually makes us feel good This feeling is similar to a “runner's high,” a term created for that feel-good sensation that rushes through your body after a run They use the term “helper's high” to describe what happens to your body and your brain when you are kind to another person or give to them in some way Helping others may just be the secret to living a life that is not only happier but also healthier, wealthier, more productive, and meaningful.


395. As the storm grows, the wind increases, achieving speeds of as much as 118 kilometers per hour.


396. Finally, women write an estimated eight out of ten personal checks in the United States, making their financial power even greater.


397. Once upon a time, eating and drinking were considered to be the greatest of human pleasures.


398. Many people are somewhere in the middle, wanting some use and some protection.


399. While both contextual and global community factors are critical elements of a community survey, collecting and integrating all these data remains a major challenge in terms of cost-effectiveness.


400. Logically speaking, telling someone that the engaging in act X promotes outcome Y, or that not engaging in act X fails to promote outcome Y, provides the same objective information: Y (partly) depends on X・ However, the way in which that information is presented — in particular, whether the emphasis is placed on losses or gains — influences the decision-making process.


401. He also explained what needs to be done to create an album, from planning the album to arranging, recording, and editing the music.


402. That was why papa had gone to work, ending up in Louisiana in 1931.


403. That's because after death, the human body dehydrates, causing the skin to shrink, or become smaller.


404. Today, we do many things on the Web such as reading news articles, watching videos, and looking for weather forecasts.


405. Although I was able to engage her in a variety of learning activities, writing was a constant struggle.


406. In total, women's shoes constituted 40 percent, exceeding men's shoes by 5 percentage points.


407. For example, if a friend tells you that he or she likes you, you can interpret that in different ways, depending on the nonlanguage cues.


408. Characteristic of wakeful rest, alpha brain waves provide a bridge between the conscious mind and the subconscious mind, paving the way for creativity.


409. What is said of film likely applies to other dramatic narrative forms, including documentary, news reports, reality television shows, soap operas, cartoons, sports, game shows, and computer games — anywhere there is narrative, plot, character, and scenery.


410. "Meanwhile my father took me to a pony fair and let me try some ponies, but he always found some fault with them, leaving me in despair.


411. A simple way of looking at how much you like yourself is standing in front of the mirror, liking what you see, and how you feel about what you see (without distorting your image, both figuratively and literally).


412. Accordingly, the new society was entrusted with the task of monitoring music use, issuing licences to music users, negotiating fees, collecting fees and finally distributing the money raised to the composers and songwriters whose works were adding value to other people's businesses.


413. In one study, participants who briefly held a cup of hot (versus iced) coffee judged a target person as having a "warmer" personality (generous, caring); in another study, participants holding a hot (versus cold) pack were more likely to choose a gift for a friend instead of something for themselves.


414. Watching television, playing video games, reading books, and seeing movies are all great ways to forget your anger.


415. So, sneezing does not affect your eyes.


416. In an area of Turkey, nodding the head up and down means "no."


417. In experimental research by Arpan and Roskos-Ewoldsen, stealing thunder in a crisis situation, as opposed to allowing the information to be first disclosed by another party, resulted in substantially higher credibility ratings.


418. As traits and their gene frequencies within populations varied, they were inherited from one generation to the next, creating the best available fit of flower to animal.


419. Numerous self-help books promote the benefits of positive thinking and positive behaviors, assigning negative affect in general, and sadness in particular, to the category of "problem emotions" that need to be eliminated.


420. Similar marks and symbols functioning as trademarks have been found on Chinese pottery, possibly dating as far back as 2698 BCE, and in many other ancient societies, including the Egyptians, the Assyrians, and the Vedic civilization.


421. At the same time, without decisions to make, being a consumer would be easier but much less interesting.


422. According to those reports, living cells in these organs store information about a person.


423. The fans were even able to change perspectives, choosing to be either part of the audience, part of a team, or be on the field itself.


424. He planned the course during the week before the opening of the autumn semester, and saw the kinds of possibility that one sees as one struggles with the materials and subjects of an endeavor; he felt the logic of grammar, and he thought he perceived how it spread out from itself, permeating the language and supporting human thought.


425. His talk worked its way through the many different veins of the small neighbourhood, gathering momentum until it had reached a pitch strong enough to end up arresting his neighbour on the suspicion of theft.


426. Picture the trial of a defendant who has committed a vicious crime and the defense attorney pointing to what a terrible childhood the defendant had, having been abused as a child, and suggesting that his upbringing contributed to his current violent behavior, possibly implying it was beyond his control.


427. Other people are by nature more negative and pessimistic, focusing on their negative characteristics and thinking about the possibility of bad future outcomes.


428. Warming may ease extreme environmental conditions, expanding the production frontier.


429. Though parents may be tempted to hand a child a screen and walk away, guiding children's media experiences helps them build important 21st Century skills, such as critical thinking and media literacy.


430. A system using this technology employs as many as 14 cameras that capture a ball from various angles, showing exactly where the ball is at a certain time.


431. Doing these kinds of activities before going to bed can stimulate your brain too much, making it more difficult to rest.


432. They have to leave for the office early in the morning, riding on a packed train.


433. In late August, feeling the tug of the innate impulse that scientists call migratory restlessness, our Tennessee Warbler takes to the sky after dark, heading southeastward in a series of night flights.


434. This example also shows how language reflects culture - as livestock were so important, asking about the livestock's well-being was common enough to become a daily greeting.


435. People leave three peas on the plate, hoping for a year full of luck, fortune, and romance.


436. Alternatively, some residents express concern that tourists overcrowd the local fishing, hunting, and other recreation areas or may cause traffic and pedestrian congestion.


437. They include gold and silver coins from the reigns of Augustus and Tiberius (27 BC to AD 37), suggesting a vigorous trade in a large volume of goods.


438. As you know, pulling off this event will require a lot of planning and writing.


439. After setting a broken leg, delivering a baby, and cleaning an infected finger, he returned to the sick child's house with a load of firewood.


440. In such a case, these people suffer from an inevitable social and mental trauma, leading to emotional stress and a feeling that all of a sudden they have been disassociated from what once was their identity.


441. An initial report published on 18 October 2014 criticised the World Health Organization for its unsatisfactory reaction to the outbreak, blaming the epidemic on corruption and inefficiency in the WHO's African branch.


442. The British rulers at the time liked the idea and spread the Indian pajamas to the rest of the world, helping them to arrive in our bedrooms.


443. There are three simple ways to use the color wheel: combining analogous colors, choosing complementary colors, and mixing together analogous and complementary colors.


444. We all have such happy habits: from snacking to exercising, whether it's spending or saving, partying or solitude, arguing or making up.


445. Women's casual shoes ranked the second largest category of all the six specified categories, accounting for almost twice the percentage of men's casual shoes.


446. It appears that most freshwater life did not originate in fresh water, but is secondarily adapted, having passed from ocean to land and then back again to fresh water.


447. Individuals from extremely diverse backgrounds have learned to overlook their differences and live harmonious, loving lives together.


448. Even when a comedy program is broadcast in the evening, opening performers are often used to get audiences in the right mood.


449. I've seen couples from different ethnic groups merge into harmonious relationships, and I've seen people from different religions come together for a strong, lasting bond.


450. Individuals and teams, competing with each other, stopped sharing information.


451. But we can still learn about them, asking questions and using instruments that let us see or hear far better than with our eyes or ears alone.


452. According to experts in transportation research, the reaction of drivers to electronic signage messages decreases over time, showing a potential distrust of the displayed messages.


453. They collide like ocean waves crashing on a beach, causing the planet’s atmosphere to heat up.


454. When Mujuru was about eight years old his grandfather gave him his first formal lesson, teaching him the kushaura part to "Ndaona Buka Nhemawara."


455. The standard practice of open discussion gives too much weight to the opinions of those who speak early and confidently, causing others to line up behind them.


456. I know Adam hears him, but he begins to eat rapidly, shoveling in forkful after forkful of chicken.


457. She looked shocked for a moment, but then turned and shot the ball, sinking it for two points.


458. We may find ourselves reaching out to others in ways that were not necessary when we were a couple, relying on others and allowing them to rely on us.


459. If you see yourself as confident and successful before meeting a new person, applying for a job, or making a presentation, that is how you will perform in the actual situation.


460. In short, drinking in Korea can do a lot of damage to physical and mental health.


461. He carefully prepared a letter and answered the ad, emphasizing his interest in the job.


462. However, some wild mushrooms are dangerous, leading people to lose their lives due to mushroom poisoning.


463. There are both pragmatic and cultural factors that contribute to this, reflecting the fact that food is both a biological necessity and a powerful cultural symbol.


464. If you take a moment to list all the different descriptions of pain, including all negative feelings and sensations you can think of, and then create a similar list for pleasure, you may find your list for pain will be longer than your list for pleasure.


465. Also, horses brought by the Spaniards changed the lives of many Native American tribes on the Great Plains, permitting them to shift to a nomadic lifestyle based on hunting on horseback.


466. As a member of an aristocratic family, Kartini enjoyed her privileged status, studying and making friends with Dutch children.


467. Light pollution is controlled by maximizing efficiency, improving security, and creating a more aesthetically pleasing nocturnal environment.


468. In 1979 radioactive water leaked from a nuclear power plant at Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania, threatening the safety of the entire area.


469. What this means is that the people around you, constantly under the pull of their emotions, change their ideas by the day or by the hour, depending on their mood.


470. When you are starving and tired, eating healthy is difficult.


471. As adults, we likewise suspend disbelief and enter the rules of imaginative play when watching theatre, accepting whatever mimed or symbolic use of a prop is suggested by the actors.


472. Then, the rescuers and the rescued began singing the Chilean national anthem with the thousands of joyous people who came to support the operation, celebrating the heroics and the humanity of all those involved.


473. He knew about 150 words, including the names of 50 different objects.


474. There's a certain look on the face, a particular tone of voice, increasing volume, provocative statements, and even specific situations when we know that conflict will most likely escalate — in the car, during the "witching hour" before supper, first thing in the morning.


475. Among these, logging is the main reason for nature's loss.


476. Just imagine yourself deep in thought, hearing the perfect sequence of notes in your head, when suddenly, your finger touches the actual piano key, and it doesn't sound exactly like you imagined.


477. Recently, however, considerable doubt has been thrown upon Humboldt's narrative, owing to the fact that subsequent travelers have failed to discover any trace of so unique a method of fishing.


478. Survival stories like Mike's make people appreciate what they have when they are safe and sound at home with their family, leading their daily lives.


479. His sharp talons grasped the fish, and with a flap of his wings he took off, carrying his prize back to the nest.


480. All you have to do is stop rushing around, eating junk food, and watching TV.


481. They floated completely along the North Pacific currents, ending up back in Sitka.


482. Similarly, teaching people to accept a situation that could readily be changed could be bad advice; sometimes the only way to get what you want is to take active control.


483. Also, using the Internet excessively for a long time causes the size of the thinking part of the brain to be reduced.


484. Four ships sank and nearly 2,000 men died, making it one of Britain's worst sea disasters ever.


485. The diet industry (which includes diet programs, diet foods, and diet magazines and books) is enormous, with revenues of tens of billions of dollars, catering to an American public desperate to slim down.


486. The feathers on a snowy owl's face guide sounds to its ears, giving it the ability to hear things humans cannot.


487. As Ethan has shown us, lifting up those around us is also of great worth.


488. To her relief, it wasn't long before a whistle called the dogs out, leaving her unfound.


489. Over time, the taxi driver's role triggers a growth of neurons and synapses in the hippocampus, resulting in its increased size.


490. Indeed, even at a time when human-induced greenhouse-gas emissions were not exponentially altering the climate, warming the oceans, and leading to rising seas, our ancestors knew how to better listen to and respect the many movements and warnings of the seas, thus settling farther inland.


491. Then, at the top, it flipped over, tucked its wings in and dived straight down, spiraling as it went.


492. At an earlier date, cooking selected mutations for smaller guts and mouths, rather than vice versa.


493. Infrasound dissipates less rapidly in air, making it ideal for long­distance communication.


494. For example, reading an e-book, videoconferencing with grandma, or showing your child a picture you just took of them is not the same as the passive, television-watching screen time that concerns many parents and educators.


495. In a moment, the water rose to the level of the door, starting to fill his house.


496. Walking in nature, listening to soothing music, or meditating are some ways that we can promote this relaxation response in the brain, which results in a heightened ability to concentrate, focus , learn, visualize, and imagine.


497. Throughout this process, however, analyzing people to understand their personalities is not all about potential economic or social benefit.


498. Like Jenny and her sister, in our everyday life, we sometimes stubbornly wait for someone else to reach out to us, believing this is the only way we can become friends again.


499. Everything is curved, including the walls, the ceilings, and the wooden doors.


500. It is also quite normal and typical for bloggers to use pictures, wording, videos and many other resources in their blogs.


501. Paleolithic artists at Lascaux painted over 600 images and made more than 1,500 life-like carvings of animal, including images of horses, cows, deer, and bulls, deep within the caves.


502. The task that took the longest time for HUBO was the sixth one, pulling a plug out of a wall socket and putting it back into another.


503. This type of misunderstanding often leads to debates about the value of fundamental research, putting at risk the very types of scientific investments that are necessary to continue technological progress.


504. These were pulled by their faithful, hardworking team of huskies or qinimiq.


505. Remember, focusing too much on the goal can prevent you from achieving the thing you want.


506. And a lot will go into repair of climate damage or adaptation to future climate damage ─ for example, investing in new protective walls along the coast to keep the rising ocean back.


507. They either believe they have unlimited time, thinking that they will have more time tomorrow to get something done, or they underestimate how much time they really do have.


508. This allows the solids to carry the waves more easily and efficiently, resulting in a louder sound.


509. Cultures have rarely been completely isolated from outside influence, because throughout human history people have been moving from one place to another, spreading goods and ideas.


510. People spend time dancing, singing, and having a great time with one another.


511. As soon as I open the front door to look outside, they're beside me in a flash, standing expectantly, ready for an adventure.


512. Among many possible activities, walking is one of the easiest ways to get some minutes of exercise after a meal.


513. When regions can no longer produce food, people will be forced to move to other areas, making them "climate refugees."


514. Scientists who have journeyed to Africa have watched elephants in the wild for years, allowing the elephants to get used to them so that they could observe their behavior at close range.


515. I knew I wanted to continue exploring, meeting people from different backgrounds, trying new foods, and discovering unique landscapes.


516. Looking at the world through art, we come to appreciate it from unexpected, surprising, and fresh perspectives.


517. I walked across to a cafe and sat down at a table, putting my bag on the seat beside me.


518. The lawyer was outraged, assuming this to be an example of Latin American gender bias.


519. This included many artists, writers and musicians who would visit the ashram, offering their talents and services.


520. Besides, your feet can actually be different sizes at different times of the day, getting larger and returning to "normal" by the next morning.


521. However, ethologists, researchers who study the biological bases of behavior, claim that expressions of anger, pouting, fear, and sadness are built into our biological makeup and are universal.


522. "Now," said Grandfather, setting Tommy down on a wooden chair to explain things to him.


523. For instance, deciding whether to spend Saturday afternoon relaxing with your family or exercising will be determined by the relative importance that you place on family versus health.


524. It is too easy to drift through school and college, taking the traditional, conventional studies that others take, following the lines of least resistance, electing "snap courses," and going with the crowd.


525. We tend to compare ourselves with those around us, trying to "keep up with the Joneses ," and so when we are doing comparatively well we are happier.


526. Simply watch your puppy's activities, waiting for a particular behavior to occur; when one happens, reward him.


527. Using this basic six-dot cell, Louis eventually worked out sixty-three characters, representing the entire alphabet, numbers, punctuation symbols, contractions, some commonly used words, and later, musical notation and mathematical signs.


528. "Jin: Well, reading comic books is not something to be embarrassed about, though.


529. For example, if you are upset that you did not do well on a chemistry test and want to avoid worrying about it, your mind may automatically watch for anything that might remind you of tests or chemistry, and when some cue arises (e.g., seeing the person who sits in front of you in that class), your conscious mind quickly turns attention elsewhere (e.g., you don't say hello to that person).


530. What is it about this person that is compelling, interesting, attractive, or inspirational?"


531. For example, women may worry about many things at a time, while many men can classify their worries, dealing with only one problem or stressor before moving on to the next one.


532. 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 die.


533. They excel at research, using logic and the information gained through their senses to conquer complex problems.


534. For example, interacting with others may require the youth to learn how to lead and how to follow.


535. In the late 1800s, the railroads were the biggest companies in the U.S. Having achieved such a huge success, even changing the landscape of America, remembering WHY they started doing this business stopped being important to them.


536. It allows them a safe place to practice getting along, following rules, and learning how to be graceful in defeat.


537. Cage believed that music could be made with any sounds, including the whispers of the audience or the sound of hearts beating.


538. As for a new way of working out, using virtual reality technology, an Italian company has recently released an innovative product.


539. As a general rule, language extinction occurs gradually when two tongues, belonging to two peoples with different levels of economic development, come into contact.


540. Garments are manufactured using toxic chemicals and then transported around the globe, making the fashion industry the world's second-largest polluter, after the oil industry.


541. There are also many special events, including an archery tournament, fireworks, and a music festival.


542. Write about your work: teaching, nursing, running a store.


543. Beautiful and interesting sounds can be made, assuming you know how to make them - or, more precisely, how to make other musicians make them.


544. Unless your signature style is to wear colors that clash, using the color wheel will help you choose colors that are natural and pleasing to the eye.


545. I heard the familiar "ding-ding" as a white Cadillac rolled over the cable, signaling the arrival of a customer.


546. When he was eight years old, his father died, and less than a year after this tragedy, his mother passed away, leaving him an orphan.


547. Consumers facing such decisions consider not only the product's immediate consumption outcomes but also the product's general effect on society, including how the manufacturer behaves (e.g., toward the environment).


548. It is an amazing record, considering that most of the dabbawalas are illiterate and that not a single piece of paper is used in the delivery process.


549. For a child, it could be placing with trembling fingers the last block on a tower she has built, higher than any she has built so far; for a sprinter, it could be trying to beat his own record; for a violinist, mastering an intricate musical passage.


550. The excavation uncovered the remains of a gymnasium, a wrestling arena, changing rooms and baths.


551. When pathologists made two assessments of the severity of biopsy results, the correlation between their ratings was only .61 (out of a perfect 1.0), indicating that they made inconsistent diagnoses quite frequently.


552. Maybe this is why walking can clear your head, helping you think better.


553. You just have to keep doing something, seizing the next opportunity, and staying open to trying something new.


554. Later theorists, such as Carl Rogers, substantially expanded this definition, suggesting that people deny thoughts, facts, or events that are at odds with their own self-concept.


555. Trying to find the keys, trying to remember when an event is supposed to take place, where it's going to be held, and with whom you are going.


556. The answer is that they sit inside the gold crystal structure, taking the place of a gold atom, and it is this atom substitution inside the crystal lattice of the gold that makes it stronger.


557. Actually, they're hoping you're sitting by your computer, waiting for news about them.


558. In high latitudes, melanin reduces the penetration of sunlight in the skin, reducing its ability to make vitamin-D.


559. I hesitated for a few more seconds, weighing the choices of turning back and disgracing myself or jumping and risking death.


560. I've seen people from opposite ends of the spectrum economically and politically that ended up in happy, lasting marriages.


561. An open ending is a powerful tool, providing food for thought that forces the audience to think about what might happen next.


562. Cats can be either liquid or solid, depending on the circumstances.


563. After Krom gave up in frustration, Jaki went over to the tire, removed the other tires that were blocking it, and carried it over to Krom, being careful not to spill any water.


564. This helps you lower the level of your anxiety and stress, increasing your confidence and making the presentation much easier.


565. However, private capital started to flow into seed production and took it over as a sector of the economy, creating an artificial split between the two aspects of the seed's nature: its role as means of production and its role as product.


566. Show yourself leaping down the steps four at a time, coat unzipped, shouting in the wind, "Hurray, I did it!"


567. Art methods involved in art therapy include painting, drawing, collage, and sculpture.


568. Holding up a stack of brochures titled, Staying Fit and Heart Healthy, he exclaimed, "We have these!"


569. They cut out parts of rats' brains, trying to make them forget a maze, and found that it didn't matter what part of the brain they chose; the rats never forgot.


570. Because sound travels much faster in ground than in air, ground­borne vibrations, if perceived, can serve as an early warning system, arriving well before airborne sound from the same source arrives.


571. Therefore, being fashionable can be a very expensive pastime.


572. Astronomical stars, the ones visible in the sky at night and scattered across the universe, produce their own light and heat rather than, as with the planet Earth, relying on other bodies for illumination and warmth.


573. In 1950, the researchers gave up, concluding that memory must be somewhere else.


574. Very heavy rains, however, could carry away soil and plant nutrients, hindering the growth of vegetation, thereby leaving a reduced food supply for the animals that depend on that vegetation.


575. "Easy, darling.


576. As the tropical depression moves over warmer waters, the clouds expand and the winds begin to build up speed, becoming a "tropical storm."


577. They can walk through a glass tunnel, looking up at the penguins sliding through the water.


578. He began walking faster, forcing Marvin to jog to keep up with him.


579. As just a 20yearold archaeology student, Cambel went to the 1936 Berlin Olympics, becoming the first Muslim woman to compete in the Games.


580. Over the last three decades, transport policies in Freiburg have encouraged more walking, cycling, and use of public transport.


581. Sometimes, however, you will want to use your life more directly in your fiction, dramatizing actual incidents.


582. In these movies, children are solving problems, helping their families, and pursuing their dreams.


583. Dwindling reservoirs and waterways, rising seas that threaten homes, droughts that prompt hunger: such possibilities evoke lessons from the past about human well-being.


584. In addition, children at play often take on other roles, pretending to be Principal Walsh or Josh's mom, happily forcing themselves to imagine how someone else thinks and feels.


585. She lay there, sweating, listening to the empty thunder that brought no rain, and whispered, "I wish the drought would end.


586. Eventually, he got rid of the dashes, perfecting an alphabet made up entirely of dots.


587. When his body finally stopped spinning, his arm pointed away from the dancers on stage and directly at Dan Tres, standing among the spectators.


588. From the classic philosophers through Shakespeare to the works of Chekhov, Ibsen, and the great novels of the 19th century, exploring the emotions of sadness, longing, and depression has long been considered instructive.


589. Most people are familiar with Humboldt's graphic description of the Indian method of capturing those creatures — namely, by driving the wild horses of the surrounding plains into the streams, and keeping them there until the eels, by frequent shocks, have exhausted their stored-up electricity upon them, when, becoming even more helpless than other fishes, they are readily captured.


590. There are many reasons for taking such an action, including the need to recover costs or meet deadlines.


591. And then 20 years from now, one of you can find yourself right here where I stand, giving a graduation speech.


592. Though a common complaint may be that technology is turning consumers into increasingly passive individuals, handing over their intellectual skills and abilities, as well as emotional and physical functioning, to an array of gadgets and devices, for many people, nothing could be further from the truth.


593. Only half of the map survives, but it shows much of the southern part of the earth, including Antarctica.


594. You must follow through with those orders, including taking and finishing all medications in the manner they are prescribed and complying with your doctor's request to keep records of your blood pressure or blood sugar.


595. As a result, they shy away from MST, rationalizing that because they are not coaching elite athletes, mental skills training is less important.


596. Recent evidence suggests that the common ancestor of Neanderthals and modern people, living about 400,000 years ago, may have already been using pretty sophisticated language.


597. They also had many objects in each room, including tiny books, furniture, and dishes.


598. Intent on one of the pictures, she took a step back and hit the small table, tipping it over.


599. As a slightly careless man, Fleming left some bacterial cultures on his desk.


600. So, eating a bowl of tteokguk on the morning of New Year's Day means that you have become one year older.


601. When they "multitask," they switch back and forth, alternating their attention until both tasks are done.


602. He began to jump backward over the bar, head-first, curving his body over the bar and landing on his back.


603. But even more importantly, studying history helps us ask and answer humanity's Big Questions.


604. By volunteering, I became part of the lives of local families — sharing meals, playing with their kids, and visiting their homes.


605. So the sorting sequence is nonrandom, producing runs of items of a single type.


606. The 6-year-olds spoke and sang to themselves, reminding themselves they would get more treats if they waited.


607. It is possible, though unlikely, that he is laughing at funerals, sneering at coronations, feeling malice at weddings.


608. In most developed countries, farming is no longer the major industry in rural areas.


609. "I've almost perfected the Cloner," whispered Dr. Woolley, pointing at a machine with wires hanging out of it.


610. I walked up to the stage and took my place behind the microphone, grabbing both sides of the podium as though I was on a sinking ship and hanging on for dear life.


611. The sense of hearing gives us a remarkable connection with the invisible, underlying order of things.


612. Participation in the Inca Project was a blessing to me, allowing me to learn the importance of volunteering.


613. One objective factor in determining whether an argument is a good one for a person concerns whether the person is ignoring evidence that they already have, refusing to believe what the evidence clearly points to, or failing to seek out evidence that they could readily acquire if only they checked.


614. This overstated, often fictionalized version of nature is no more real ― and yet no less real ― to them than the everyday nature right outside their doors, waiting to be discovered in a child's way, at a child's pace.


615. They also provided a setting for discipline, allowing those instructors to examine and correct the work of many students at once or in succession as they solved problems at the board.


616. One of the keys to end all wars, hatred, bigotry, suffering, violence, and disease is kindness.


617. In her letter, Linda thanked Rebecca from deep within for, in essence, taking off her warped glasses, shattering them against the floor, and insisting she try on a new pair of glasses.


618. The Nobel Prizewinning biologist Peter Medawar said that about four-fifths of his time in science was wasted, adding sadly that "nearly all scientific research leads nowhere."


619. Their dorsal fins are sharply triangular and very tall, reaching up to 6 feet in height.


620. he asked, offering up a weak smile.


621. What is apparent at the global level is that great changes have swept the entire world since the second half of the twentieth century, inducing major modifications in diet, first in industrial regions and more recently in developing countries.


622. Near the end of our visit, having completed our volunteer work, we went by train to the nearby ruins of Machu Picchu.


623. Changdeokgung was originally the secondary royal palace complex of the Joseon Dynasty, following Gyeongbokgung.


624. In addition, putting your plan down on paper will not only clarify your thoughts.


625. The high school grounds were filled with well-dressed people, posing in fancy dresses and suits for cheerful photographers.


626. Flow can be achieved when you are involved in tasks such as making music, playing sports, reading, solving puzzles, or doing whatever interests and challenges you.


627. Bach, Beethoven, and Brahms of course survived well beyond their social and cultural settings, taking on new meanings in the recordable world.


628. The novel is an allegory, meaning that the characters and objects all have a symbolic significance that is used to convey the novel's central themes and ideas.


629. However, we can anticipate that personal growth and performance will progress faster in young, developing athletes who are given mental skills training than in athletes not exposed to MST.


630. "The past is messy, but historians make sense of the mess by collecting evidence, making meaning of it, and organizing it into some kind of discernible pattern.


631. He was now too weak to swim, having already swum several hours to find his way back to land after being washed out to sea.


632. But suppose that a few days from now you are shown a long list of names, including those of some minor celebrities and "new" names of people that you have never heard of; your task will be to check every name of a celebrity on the list.


633. Feelings may affect various aspects of your eating, including your motivation to eat, your food choices, where and with whom you eat, and the speed at which you eat.


634. This will set up a fundamental power shift, putting the individual at center stage.


635. Since there are three decades of evidence that dominating instruction with a system of controlling external rewards may contribute to inferior learning, using a pedagogy based on theories of intrinsic motivation appears to be a more reasonable and effective approach to enhancing learning among culturally diverse students.


636. The waitress reads the dishes on the menu, including "eggs and Spam," "eggs, bacon, and Spam," and "Spam, Spam, Spam, eggs, and Spam!"


637. I was able to point out to my buddy that his wife wasn't trying to be a strict trainer; she was just more of a sensing, thinking, judging sort of person, and he was more of an intuition, feeling, perceiving sort of person.


638. People could detect scenes in response to such questions with an accuracy well above chance, suggesting that the gist of a scene can be extracted within a fraction of a second.


639. The remainder of the colony votes with their bodies, flying to the spot they prefer and joining in the dance until one potential hive overcomes all other dances of the neighborhood.


640. These might include painting with a roller, creating a path from stones, or creating a large mural.


641. By contrast, at middle- and upper-income levels, overspending takes on a variety of meanings typically influenced by what people think of as essential for their well-being and associated with the so-called "good life" that is so heavily marketed.


642. from snacking to exercising, whether it's spending or saving, partying or solitude, arguing or making up.


643. While some people are natural humorists, being funny is a set of skills that can be learned.


644. When I was five or six, my mother decided that it was time I learned French, so she bought a book of French fairy tales and read them aloud, translating as she went.


645. This is easy to do by encouraging them, taking them seriously, and conveying the fact that you believe in them.


646. To make matters worse, teaching resources are scarce.


647. In the recent economics literature, following the work of John Roemer, the determinants of economic outcomes are separated into those due to " circumstances"" that are beyond personal control, such as family background, and " effort,"" for which an individual can be held responsible.


648. Taking care of his two-year-old nephew, Milo, for the weekend, Jake quickly goes through the house, hiding the dishwashing detergent and other chemical cleaners and inserting guards into the sockets so he doesn't get hurt.


649. The average person's belief about themselves is, in general, flattering.


650. As Plato noted, the analytical intellect polarizes reality into subject and object, overlooking the essential unity that exists between the self and the world.


651. On the other hand, looking for information not explicitly disclosed by the patient can also be seen as a violation of trust.


652. I stared at it a few seconds before I got up the nerve to turn it over, expecting the inevitable F. You can only imagine my shock when I saw I had passed the test!


653. He spun quickly, avoiding the rattlesnake's attack.


654. Availability on the part of parents gives children a strong sense of worth, creating in them a feeling of being wanted.


655. To the service representatives, learning to sell was a very different game from what they had been playing.


656. In a classic set of studies over a ten-year period, biologist Gerald Wilkinson found that, when vampire bats return to their communal nests from a successful night's foraging, they frequently vomit blood and share it with other nest-mates, including even non-relatives.


657. Those dirty pots and pans taunt you from miles away, reminding you that you can’t really relax until they’re sitting clean and tidy in the cabinets.


658. Marco, his voice breaking, has given the police a quick description of the baby ─ six months old, blond, blue eyes, about sixteen pounds, wearing a disposable diaper and a plain, pale pink onesie.


659. Since life began in the oceans, most life, including freshwater life, has a chemical composition more like the ocean than fresh water.


660. Suddenly, moving backward to our pre¬-ownership state is a loss, one that we cannot accept.


661. She had no way to get money, so decided to go knocking door to door, explaining that she needed a place to stay until she could contact her family back in Japan to send her some money.


662. Benadonner ran home quickly, destroying the causeway behind him.


663. I finally decided to jump, choosing possible death over temporary embarrassment, so off the cliff I went.


664. He cocked his head, studying Brian.


665. From 2004 to 2007 Korea had more than 200,000 researchers each year, recording the largest number in 2007.


666. Thus, seeking closeness and meaningful relationships has long been vital for human survival.


667. One night, I opened the door that led to the second floor, noting that the hallway light was off.


668. This growing interest is, in turn, driving a boom in translation.


669. The women in the kitchen took turns making a fuss over the baby, acting like it was their job to keep her entertained.


670. As soon as the last letter of a sequence had been presented, participants in the study wrote down all six of the letters they had seen, guessing at any letters they couldn't easily recall.


671. Therefore, knowing how to protect yourself during an earthquake is very important.


672. Hence, raising awareness of children from a very early age about the particular characteristics of SNS and the potential long-term impact of a seemingly trivial act is crucial.


673. He returned to India in 1892 and began studying yoga and Indian languages, including Sanskrit.


674. Contrary to what we usually believe, the best moments in our lives are not the passive, receptive, relaxing times ― although such experiences can also be enjoyable, if we have worked hard to attain them.


675. The research also found that reading the more challenging version of poetry, in particular, increases activity in the right hemisphere of the brain, helping the readers to reflect on and reevaluate their own experiences in light of what they have read.


676. So, looking at a person's ears is a great way to check his or her identity.


677. These data may be positional, involving the latitude and longitude of a place, an address, a road, or a border.


678. When you face a severe source of stress, you may fight back, reacting immediately.


679. Thereafter, whenever his grandfather was not busy, he sat with Mujuru, teaching him new songs, and then practicing the performance of the kushaura and kutsinhira parts together.


680. In the process of connecting everything to everything, computers elevate the power of the small player, encouraging freedom and democratic practices.


681. Try not to wait until you are really hungry to think about eating.When you have a newborn baby, preparing food will probably take longer than usual.


682. Consumers also reduce uncertainty by buying the same brand that they did the last time, believing that the product should be at least as satisfactory as their last purchase.


683. However, the other company proceeded with more seeming clarity and discipline, dividing the problem into its parts.


684. Fortunately, enrolling at the Hobbiton Institute of Photography is one of the easiest, most cost-effective ways to take your photography to the next level.


685. Each evening Mujuru sat beside his grandfather as he played, watching his fingers and longing to be able to play as well as his grandfather.


686. The students had tried to "warm up" their digital messages by using emoticons, typing out the sounds of laughter ("Hahaha"), and using the forced urgency of TYPING IN ALL CAPS.


687. Today, we are so swamped by communicative resources and so used to making full use of them, changing, juxtaposing and alternating them, that it seems almost pointless to investigate the patterns of such rapid, taken-for-granted and apparently unpredictable mixes.


688. It's important to do your best when performing your job, cultivating your marriage, raising your children, and competing for the league bowling championship.


689. Brian couldn't stop shivering, thinking that the bear could return and attack him anytime.


690. Many animals, including warm-blooded mammals, change body position or posture to help regulate internal temperature.


691. The body has been viewed as a 'natural' phenomenon ― a fixed, unchanging fact of nature.


692. Our misinformation owes partly to psychological factors, including our tendency to see the world in ways that suit our desires.


693. In the realm of psychological experience, however, quantifying units of time is a considerably clumsier operation.


694. All sorts of things can affect internal body temperature, including heat generated in the muscles during exercise, fevers caused by disease, and the external temperature.


695. They never noticed one much, they were so busy with other things, focusing on other famous people, unable to have or express kind feelings, or just working too hard.


696. However, in many school physical education programs, team sports dominate the curriculum at the expense of various individual and dual sports, like tennis, swimming, badminton, and golf.


697. In the "snake" condition, the chimps all entered the enclosure with the fur on their backs spiking up and approached the danger zone with extreme caution, poking at the leaf bed with sticks rather than with their hands.


698. Of course, using 3D printers saves a lot of energy, too.


699. Second, promoting positive body image to children is essential.


700. Clearly, generalizing about groups or objects is a most common pattern of thought.


701. A split second later my body hit the water, causing much pain, but as I surfaced to the top of the water and swam to shore, the first thing I realized is that I was not dead.


702. This huge, burning hole certainly looks like an entrance to a horrible place!


703. As a young man, Ehret traveled around Europe, largely on foot, observing plants and developing his artistic skills.


704. Most individual actors were at least part-time itinerants, contributing to the image of the vagabond good-for-nothing that afflicted his profession for centuries.


705. He strolled up the street to the photographer, saying, "I see you're interested in our operation."


706. For example, going into debt to purchase a car, clothes, and vacation can keep us from qualifying for a house or the kind of home we dream about.


707. Following flooding, a river's course may shift, altering the boundary between states or countries.


708. Most animals, including our ancestors and modern-day capuchin monkeys, lived very close to the margin of survival.


709. LaPiere wrote to hotels and restaurants along the route, asking whether they would accommodate him and his Chinese guests.


710. A continuous depreciation of the exchange rate, implying a decline in the value of the domestic currency in comparison with foreign currency, reflects the inherent weakness in an economy, and prevents foreigners from investing in it.


711. In a complex, intellectually demanding and high-pressure task such as that of air traffic controllers, for example, having chronically high anxiety is an almost sure predictor that a person will eventually fail in training or in the field.


712. When his voice broke, he went to Rome to study and he remained in that city for about 20 years, holding appointments at various churches and religious institutions.


713. Other behavioral options include making loud noises, retreating into a shell, rolling into a tight ball, choosing to live in a predator-free area such as underground, or relying on safety in numbers by living in a group.


714. The flood of inventions that followed the Civil War utterly transformed life, transferring human attention and energy from the mundane to soaring skyscrapers and airplanes.


715. He attended University College London, where he studied physics, graduating with a Bachelor of Science degree in 1937.


716. As a consequence, more primary products have to be imported, contributing to a negative balance of payments.


717. By early afternoon, working in the heat and the thin air, I was exhausted.


718. As a result, Americans of all ages are taking up jogging, walking, or other forms of aerobic exercise.


719. Twin sirens hide in the sea of history, tempting those seeking to understand and appreciate the past onto the reefs of misunderstanding and misinterpretation.


720. Most people, hearing these phrases for the first time, cannot correctly guess their meanings.


721. When photography came along in the nineteenth century, painting was put in crisis.


722. They are skilled at breaking the components of a system into smaller elements, knowing something of the details of each operation for which they are responsible.


723. A cat in a small box will behave like a fluid, filling up all the space.


724. Now, it is a modern winter necessity, coming in a variety of styles and colors.


725. When she sits at the piano, singing in the twilight, or stands leaning against the Venus in the corner of the room, she presents herself more gracefully.


726. We stayed in Cusco for two days, recovering from the long hours of flight and adjusting to the high mountain area.


727. When Philip entered the tent with the medicine, Alexander took the cup from him, handing Philip the letter.


728. Most of the indigenous peoples, accustomed to rule by small elites, simply accepted their new governors, making the imposition of Western rule relatively easy.


729. Since photographs did such a good job of representing things as they existed in the world, painters were freed to look inward and represent things as they were in their imagination, rendering emotion in the color, volume, line, and spatial configurations native to the painter's art.


730. Many people offer an equal split to the partner, leaving both individuals happy and willing to trust each other in the future.


731. At cooking contests that use lobsters as the main ingredient, visitors can taste unusual dishes, including lobster Caesar salad and lobster wraps.


732. We're looking for a cast of fifteen principals to play members of the Gibbs and Webb families plus minor characters, and we'll also need about a dozen stagehands, lighting and sound technicians, makeup artists, and dressers.


733. Bigger than Earth, it constantly expands and contracts, creating both gravity waves and sound waves.


734. The empty dabbas are picked up by 5:00 p.m. and are returned to their original addresses by the same team, following the same procedure in reverse.


735. Some sleds were short, measuring only a few feet long and pulled by several dogs.


736. In previous roles, working from home increased my productivity.


737. "Through the studio, also known as the Yellow House, he wanted to create a space where artists could work together, inspiring one another.


738. Samuel Smiles, a nineteenth-century English author, wrote, "It is doubtful whether any heavier curse could be forced on man than the complete gratification of all his wishes without effort on his part, leaving nothing for his hopes, desires, or struggles.


739. It doesn't matter what the circumstances are; the end result is that 99 times out of 100 you end up on the couch with a bowl of chips or bag of cookies in your hand, telling yourself it's the only way you can relax.


740. During the war, he was involved in naval weapons research, working on the development of magnetic and acoustic mines.


741. After an hour of hard, boring work, everyone rated how much they enjoyed the afternoon.


742. Next, it chews berries or charcoal, mixing them with saliva to make paint for the bower's walls.


743. We can receive self-rewards, congratulating ourselves for being kind and caring, or we can avoid self-censure, escaping shame and guilt.


744. He awoke repeatedly in a cold sweat, shivering uncontrollably.


745. "Japanese researchers tried hundreds of smells, including rotten eggs, before they ended up deciding on wasabi, the famous Japanese seasoning.


746. Now, engineering professor Anthony Brennan believes that he has found a solution.


747. For most people, the standards for cleanliness are defined in a way that can be met with little effort, and, for most people, keeping clean has more benefits than costs.


748. John: Actually, calling is not as convenient as texting.


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From The Number of Sents: 21486

TARGET: w


1. Movies were first seen as an exceptionally potent kind of illusionist theatre, the rectangle of the screen corresponding to the proscenium of a stage, on which appear actors.


2. 'The dictionary defines courage as a 'quality which enables one to pursue a right course of action, through which one may provoke disapproval, hostility, or contempt.


3. During the post-Revolution frenzy, he spoke out against the use of the guillotine, for which he almost lost his life.


4. A linear settlement, in which houses are lined up along both sides of a river, canal, or road, has an intermediary position and often is characterized by the worst conditions of the other two settlement forms.


5. Several months later, Rourke held a series of seminars at Berkeley, in which a serious gap in his argument was uncovered, and most experts feel that there is no hope that his proof can be corrected.


6. Thomas Norton is best known for his long alchemical poem, The Ordinal of Alchemy (1477), which is subtitled Crede-Mihi, or Believe-Me, by which Norton, in typical alchemical fashion, implies that his work, and no other, contains the secret of alchemy.


7. Elvis had read about the tiny-house movement, in which people construct homes measuring 500 square feet or fewer, and believed he had the construction know-how to build a similar structure for Smokie.


8. One company developed what it called a 'technology shelf,' created by a small group of engineers, on which were placed possible technical solutions that other teams might use in the future.


9. In the UK alone, more than 5 million tons of plastic are consumed each year, of which only an estimated one-quarter is recycled, with the remainder going to landfills.


10. Professor X is known only as part of the group called professors, about which there are certain general ideas.


11. Then, to interpret those finds, they had to learn Russian, Bulgarian, and Romanian, without which they would never have learned the true nature of the site.


12. The festival also has a parade and a race called the Great International Lobster Crate Race, in which participants run over lobster crates floating in the harbor, sometimes falling into the cold water.


13. Energy necessarily depends on a pre-existing polarity, without which there could be no energy.


14. A: Unlike samullori or nong-ak, in which there are many performers, jultagi has only a couple of performers.


15. The primatologist Duane Rumbaugh and his colleagues showed chimpanzees two trays of chocolate chips, of which they could choose only one.


16. The past couple of decades have seen many corporations joining with charities in what is called "cause-related marketing" efforts, in which a corporation donates a certain percentage of its profits from a particular item.


17. On the fifth task, for which it had to use a drill to cut through a wall, HUBO failed on its first attempt.


18. The term cafeteria is used because choices are similar to those in a cafeteria, in which a diner proceeds down the line and chooses those foods that he or she would like and leaves the others.


19. In one study, Krueger and Clement asked their participants to complete a personality test, in which they had to agree or disagree with various statements.


20. What interested me the most about the new house was the stable in the backyard, in which my father let me make a small space for a pony.


21. An exclusive reliance on cold rationality as a means of understanding the world denies us access to important realms of human experience, without which we may be unable to deal with a difference effectively.


22. Her first major performance was in the 1951 film The Secret People, in which she played a ballet dancer.


23. By the time a child reaches age 18, they will have witnessed some 200,000 acts of televised violence, of which 16,000 will have been murders.


24. Out of them an estimated 9% has been recycled and another 12% has been burned out in the UK alone, more than 5 million tons of plastic are consumed each year, of which only an estimated one-quarter is recycled, with the remainder going to landfills.


25. In the political sphere, the result was democracy, in which supporters of rival policies vied for rhetorical supremacy; in philosophy, it led to reasoned arguments and dialogues about the nature of the world; in science, it prompted the construction of competing theories to try to explain natural phenomena; in the field of law, the result was the adversarial legal system.


26. This approach is the foundation for the modern Western way of life, in which politics, commerce, science, and law are all rooted in orderly competition.


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From The Number of Sents: 21484

TARGET: w


1. A well-known example is the word sandwich, which comes from the 4th Earl of Sandwich.


2. Peter and Iona Opie, who devoted a lifetime to studying the culture of schoolchildren, showed that rhymes, sayings, and career objectives tend to be transmitted more from child to child than from parent to child.


3. Fifteen days after, the army surrounded Furnes; and Boutteville commanded his staff officers to find a man steady and fearless for a surprise attack, which he wanted, promising a hundred pistoles as a reward.


4. Some say that the word comes from an old form of German halâ, holâ (/hala hola/), which was used to draw people's attention.


5. You are probably safe carrying on a conversation with a passenger while driving on an empty highway, and many parents have discovered, perhaps with some guilt, that they can read a story to a child while thinking of something else.


6. Theoretical support came soon from E. Lenneberg who, in his Biological Foundations of Language, noted that the rapid growth of nerve connections, which ceases at puberty, coincides with the child's acquisition of language.


7. He had his first one-man exhibition at the Galleria del Milione, Milan, in 1932, and in 1938 moved to Rome, where he lived for most of the rest of his life.


8. One of the most fascinating and often controversial aspects of pain research is the placebo effect, which has received much attention over the last few years.


9. Minorities that are active and organised, who advocate and defend their position consistently, can create social conflict, doubt and uncertainty among members of the majority, and ultimately this may lead to social change.


10. Many years ago I visited the chief investment officer of a large financial firm, who had just invested some tens of millions of dollars in the stock of the ABC Motor Company.


11. Thomas Norton is best known for his long alchemical poem, The Ordinal of Alchemy (1477), which is subtitled Crede-Mihi, or Believe-Me, by which Norton, in typical alchemical fashion, implies that his work, and no other, contains the secret of alchemy.


12. Many people out there think that they've got the answer, that their approach is the best, that they have the truth.


13. Similarly you need to avoid antipathy, that is, having a deep dislike of a particular viewpoint.


14. A clay pot is an example of a material artifact, which, although transformed by human activity, is not all that far removed from its natural state.


15. He developed his passion for photography in his teens, when he became a staff photographer for his high school paper.


16. Both were working in New York City, and at lunchtime, when they had the chance, they would often steal out of the office and go to designer sample sales, hunting for discounts on clothes and accessories.


17. Martin L. Hoffman, who has focused on the guilt that comes from harming others, suggests that the motivational basis for this guilt is empathetic distress.


18. We imagine, in getting to know someone, that we replace a "fiction" with the "reality" of nonfiction.


19. Today, when working with startups, I am amazed at the creativity you have to have when you only have $25,000.


20. This is because tears contain sodium chloride, which is the chemical name for salt.


21. He thought, however, that technology should be shared by everyone.


22. He used the metaphor of an iceberg to describe the large portion of learning, informal learning, that remains invisible.


23. Once we start understanding that knowledge isn't all in the head, that it's shared within a community, our heroes change.


24. She also quit her pottery class, which had been her favorite activity.


25. So, Virginia Smith, who swam for Bredard Community College and has won several awards in national competitions, has been named the school's new swimming coach.


26. When a principle is part of a person's moral code, that person is strongly motivated toward the conduct required by the principle, and against behavior that conflicts with that principle.


27. Medusa was a Gorgon who looked so terrible with snakes around her head, that if you looked at her directly you would turn into stone.


28. But the wheat was given to them on the beach, where it quickly became mixed with sand.


29. As a result, when we estimate how our next summer vacation will make us feel, we overestimate the positive.


30. In fact, they became bigger than most trained sea lions in the past, which weren't given enough food.


31. For instance, when software developers were asked on two separate days to estimate the completion time for a given task, the hours they projected differed by 71 %, on average.


32. However, Johns Hopkins did not worry about losing prospective pre-med students, whose demand curves for education at Johns Hopkins were relatively inelastic.


33. Here he was, with more money than he or his heirs would know what to do with, when he realized that his company was poisoning the environment.


34. He found that the few institutions that did turn up positive effects tended to rely on self-selected samples of students, which makes it difficult to draw conclusions about what actually led to the results.


35. Ehret's reputation for scientific accuracy gained him many commissions from wealthy patrons, particularly in England, where he eventually settled.


36. One might therefore sometimes suspect, in the absence of the positive occurrent feelings, that one no longer loves.


37. However, when someone exhibits some difficult behavior, you might want to reserve judgement for later.


38. In crying out, the danger-spotting squirrel draws attention to itself, which may well attract the predator.


39. According to later research, that rule is only an approximation, because it overlooks individual differences.


40. So great, in fact, is this joy that comes from seeing a newly-made boomerang work perfectly, that one is always tempted to put the stick away after throwing it enough to test it thoroughly, and then to make another designed to act in a different way.


41. When you're eager to get your slice of the pie, why would you be interested in giving a hand to other people so that they can get their piece?


42. Warren Bennis, who teaches and runs a center that studies leadership at the University of Southern California, has written about leadership for decades.


43. The average annual hours increased with age except for the group aged between 25 and 34, which volunteered an average of 133 hours.


44. The inconsistency, which illustrates an ethical tension between the good of the individual and that of the public, persisted across a wide range of survey scenarios analyzed.


45. Tu survived to spend two years in a Philippine internment camp before he immigrated to the United States, where a Seventh-day Adventist minister and his wife adopted him.


46. As he made better and better spyglasses, which were later named telescopes, Galileo decided to point one at the Moon.


47. But it is easy to stumble towards the end of a long journey, which can be exhausting.


48. Loneliness can creep into your life as you get older, which is why it's nice to find some ways to not be lonely.


49. And where digital spaces are concerned, that is simply not the case.


50. "I hope you shoot only tin cans in the garden, but I know you'll want to hunt birds," he says to his children, who are learning how to shoot a gun.


51. Changing, which always stems from a firm decision, becomes job number one.


52. Panic The word panic comes from the Greek god Pan, who lived in a forest.


53. The same literature, which can be found in almost any standard text on child development, indicates that limits that are too severe or too harshly enforced are also problematic.


54. People who enjoy the best relationships with others, who live life with the least frustration regarding their differences, have learned that differences are to be expected, a fact of life.


55. Many Chinese movies are well known for their grand scale, which is only natural if we think about the size of the country.


56. In short, when something really good happens, or when somebody makes us happy, we say "happy as a clam."


57. Wayne Gretzky said, "The highest compliment that you can pay me is to say that I work hard every day, that I never dog it."


58. The fact that information is conveyed in this high-tech manner somehow adds authority to what is conveyed, when in fact the Internet is a global conveyer of unfiltered, unedited, untreated information.


59. We can infer, for example, that the more fluently we retrieve an item from memory, the more often we must have encountered it in the past.


60. Trying to find the keys, trying to remember when an event is supposed to take place, where it's going to be held, and with whom you are going.


61. Claude's father, Erroll Massop, who came to the United States from Jamaica, worked hard to make that happen.


62. [Miya, 15, Indonesia] Two years ago, my village was hit by a tsunami, which killed many animals and destroyed the forest.


63. People of Northern Burma, who think in the Jinghpaw language, have eighteen basic terms for describing their kin.


64. Many governments have stepped in to censor it because of increased violence and unsuitable graphics, which direct to its crimes.


65. Yet a little creature that came to be called Babel Fish evolved that, when placed in the ear, would automatically and clearly translate what a person was saying into the listener's own language.


66. The company website, whose content and design were attractive enough to increase the consumers' brand loyalty, did not have the same impact in the Danish market.


67. This is the place where we operate from what we are comfortable with, where we know well what we are capable of and can consistently achieve expected outcomes and results.


68. Thus, Linda's changes may have been caused by her new kidney, which was acting as if it were still inside the donor.


69. We headed to the recording booth, where two singers were recording music for their rock band.


70. Linda, who sat next to her, passed the sheet without signing it.


71. Imagine, for example, that baseballs are pitched to two different batters.


72. It is a survival need, as is stability, which is another force of nature that can limit the capacity to change.


73. Later, when the news media carried the story that the child's family was struggling to pay their medical bills, donations came in from everywhere.


74. In Africa, she canoed up the Ogooué River and pioneered a route to the summit of Mount Cameroon, which had never been attempted by a European.


75. The Nile, which gave birth to Egyptian civilization, flows through Cairo, the capital of Egypt.


76. The same weariness and want of expression occurring at the next attempt, Reynolds went and communicated the circumstance to his royal patron, who devised the following trick.


77. The 8-year-olds focused on aspects of the marshmallows unrelated to taste, such as appearance, which helped them to wait.


78. For example, karateka particularly values a broad external focus (called zanshin), which allows the fighter to detect an attack from any direction.


79. These tendencies can inflame the anger of the hurt person, who, in contrast, may see an offense as bigger than it really is.


80. In almost all situations, that's a very good thing: The context provides lots of information, and communication is much more efficient when it makes use of that information.


81. For our example question, which number doesn’t belong in the box?


82. This phenomenon reflects a unique feature in the health care industry ― provider-induced demand, which allows health care providers to maintain their income even as competition increases.


83. Early one night in 1973 in my old and cheap apartment in Bangor, Maine, I got a phone call from my agent, Bill, who was helping me publish my first novel.


84. In Siberia, for instance, the actual exploration challenge is the time required to access, produce, and deliver oil under extreme environmental conditions, where temperatures in January range from —20℃ to —35℃.


85. The Nautilus was fully powered by electricity, which seemed like magic to many people at that time.


86. Many artists have considerable freedom from external requirements about what to do, how to do it, when to do it, and why.


87. At night, the lights could be seen from outside the stable and took turns flashing, which appeared as if people were moving around with torches.


88. For example, when the body mobilizes to fight off infectious agents, it generates a burst of free radicals to destroy the invaders very efficiently.


89. This doesn't mean, however, that it has been beneficial to everyone.


90. The final stage of waste-water treatment is disinfection, which kills harmful bacteria and viruses.


91. In fact, by the time the introductions were over, he looked at his friend Bobby Wilson, and he said, "Bobby, when I get to six grade, they're going to announce my name, and I'm going to run out in the spotlight to the middle of that basketball floor.


92. The good news is, where you end up ten years from now is up to you.


93. Then, when you feel yourself beginning to get frustrated, you can use that strategy to help cool yourself down.


94. The mold was from the penicillium notatum species, which had killed the bacteria on the Petri dish.


95. It will be either direct, when the government invests the tax dollars in whatever capacity it considers to be most necessary, or indirect, when the government passes legislation that makes the desired activity more profitable.


96. They were known as far back as the days of ancient Egypt, when they were made of baked tile.


97. In addition, because the ocean is warmer, more water has evaporated from it, which leads to higher levels of humidity: this result has also been observed.


98. And the burden falls primarily on women, who are typically the guardians not only of their own health, but that of their husbands and children.


99. They also learn new tastes and ways of thinking, which may lead to a better understanding between hosts and tourists.


100. However, when a child is hit or told he/she is nothing, the innocence of a child is taken from us; he/she begins to lose her innocence.


101. No, that's not the reason.


102. Hardy invited Ramanujan to come to England, where they could work together.


103. For example, if a student, who has a habit of submitting his assignments late, seems well liked by peers and professors but is clearly treated harshly by one of the professors, then the student seems to cause a distinctive reaction from this professor.


104. So, when someone is threatening to go to war, or trying to convince us and mounting a huge public relations campaign to justify it, the news media have a responsibility to question everything.


105. For the first time in history, when governments, corporations and private individuals consider their immediate future, many of them don't think about war as a likely event.


106. I was considering turning in my paper, knowing I'd failed the test, when I broke my pencil point accidentally.


107. Well, why don't you serve your best dish to your mom?


108. In an experiment, when people were asked to count three minutes in their heads, 25-year-olds were quite accurate, but 65-year-olds went over on average by 40 seconds.


109. They tell us the structure of the test, that is, what should be accomplished and how we should accomplish it.


110. Confound him, too, who in this place set up a sundial, to cut and hack my days so wretchedly into small portions."


111. So, when you visit your favorite restaurant, do not just taste the food.


112. They must use kerosene to light their homes, which is expensive and dangerous.


113. The concept of a living library was created in Europe, where people of many different races and nations live together in communities.


114. The ultimate life force lies in tiny cellular factories of energy, called mitochondria, that burn nearly all the oxygen we breathe in.


115. But Russia's hopes were damaged by what happened in 2010, when forest fires during searing summer heat destroyed whole villages, killed more than 50 people, left thousands homeless and enveloped the capital, Moscow, in a poisonous smog.


116. The liberalization of capital markets, where funds for investment can be borrowed, has been an important contributor to the pace of globalization.


117. However, when she turned back to look at the back seat, she saw that the gift box had fallen on the floor.


118. Conversely, leaders who emit negative emotional states of mind, who are irritable and bossy, repel people and have few followers.


119. Well, that's because many Indians love to sing and dance.


120. Then the employee would consider the interests of the local company, which probably needs him to continue working in Mexico City.


121. A "cultured" person, by this definition, is a highly educated person who is closely aware of these arts, who goes out to enjoy them often, who reads poetry, and perhaps buys paintings.


122. The earliest writing system has its roots in the Neolithic period, when humans first began to switch from hunting and gathering to a settled lifestyle based on agriculture.


123. If you are traveling in a group of four people or more, you can use our airport pick-up and drop-off service, which is cheaper than the airport bus or train.


124. It implies that all species are cousins, that is, any two species on earth have shared a common ancestor at some point in their history.


125. The heavy smoker also poses a special hazard in closed cars, where airspace is so limited that CO(carbon monoxide) levels can quickly approach 35 ppm, an amount that could affect the driver's ability by distorting his hearing, perception, and motor skill.


126. The primitive people proved to be as quick as those in the twenty-one literate countries at recognizing several basic emotions, such as happiness, fear, anger, disgust, sadness, and surprise, that an American in the photo displayed.


127. Moreover, few people had access to books, which were handwritten, scarce, and expensive.


128. He was questioned further by the investigators and eventually admitted to leaving his post to visit his girlfriend, who also worked at the hotel.


129. During the drill, one student throws the ball to each of the other students, who stand side by side in a line in front of the student throwing.


130. For example, whether it is going to rain at a given place on a summer day depends greatly on the environmental conditions, which change greatly from day to day.


131. Then, when a large food item was found by scavenging or the downing of prey, there had to be sharing in a way that avoided potentially deadly combat.


132. The foragers' secret of success, which protected them from starvation and malnutrition, was their varied diet.


133. There can be broad, influential factors, sometimes of an economic nature, that hold down the performance of everyone being judged.


134. Similarly, when purchasing my home, I discovered that the seller was very interested in closing the deal as soon as possible.


135. Some pirates would also attach wax to their earrings, which could be used as earplugs when they fired cannons during battles.


136. Later, when he had a chance to meet the author, Hopkins told him about this strange occurrence.


137. Suppose, for example, that I look at a fruit bowl, and think that there is an apple and an orange in that bowl.


138. Around the same time, the ants found my food, which was quite a distance from the window.


139. As a general rule, historians find it difficult to isolate events in history and argue their impact upon society, when they are so well woven into the continuous tapestry of life.


140. That is, the natural state of an object was one of rest, with the exception of celestial bodies, which were naturally in motion.


141. Acid also delays the growth of bacteria, which extends the expiration date of a product.


142. 'Well, that's true, but only in the sense that science never proves that any theory is positively true.


143. The previous year, when Jordan was not playing for the Wizards, far fewer spectators had attended the team's games.


144. But that was all unbeknown to NT tourism chief Alistair Shields, who found it in a store room and decided it would brighten the walls at the Department of Tourism and Culture in Darwin.


145. Once, when Franklin was serving as a representative for the people of the state of Pennsylvania, a powerful opponent made a long speech criticizing him.


146. Hardest hit may be Africa, which could lose two-thirds of its cropland due to desertification, which occurs when the land loses its ability to produce vegetation and turns into deserts.


147. For example, when the student says, "I ain't got no pencil," the teacher might say, "Oh, you don't have a pencil.


148. And if we could be certain that additional benign research would affect the benefit of the whales, who could oppose it?


149. Yet, when all six were allowed into the enclosure after the leader had been shown food, the group headed straight for the food.


150. For that very reason, Elton John and Paul McCartney aren't in the dictionary, but both Marilyn Monroe and Elvis Presley, who died decades ago, are.


151. A few minutes later she appeared in her swimming costume, which she had not worn for 60 years: she had decided to have a go at swimming too!


152. But as some researchers found, that does not necessarily make things safer.


153. However, some advances may also carry increased  [risk / benefit] to the athlete's body, which may not stand up to the increased forces of movement.


154. This leaves less blood for your muscles, which in turn increases your heart rate.


155. Others prefer to put their file cabinets and supply shelves in the far corner of the room but keep their desks near the door, where they can more easily monitor student activity.


156. Eventually, when they become the oldest ants in the colony, they begin to work as foragers.


157. Before voicing her objections, however, she called a colleague back in New York, who told her that he, too, had been excluded from preliminary talks during his last negotiation in that country.


158. Lenneberg supported his neurological account of the Critical Period Hypothesis with evidence from aphasic patients, who showed a more rapid recovery if the damage had taken place before puberty, and with feral children, children who had suffered social isolation and had not learnt language before puberty.


159. In contrast to younger children, who primarily see commercials as entertainment, children of this age can be very skeptical about commercials.


160. Fire whirls, which are also known as fire tornadoes, usually occur during powerful bush fires.


161. For a certain amount of time, you can ask them questions and listen to their stories, which are as fascinating and inspiring as any you can find in a book.


162. When Sherrill said, "Why, that's me," the voice coach's jaw dropped.


163. If someone picks up his or her phone, that person has to pay for the whole dinner.


164. The more we surround ourselves with people who are the same as we are, who hold the same views, and who share the same values, the greater the likelihood that we will shrink as human beings rather than grow.


165. With no bureaucracy, little to lose, and a passion to prove themselves, when it comes to innovation, small teams consistently outperform larger organizations.


166. Feelings may affect various aspects of your eating, including your motivation to eat, your food choices, where and with whom you eat, and the speed at which you eat.


167. Before slipping into the hold of the boat, she had scattered powder, which Swedish scientists had developed, unnoticeably on the floor above in order to distract the dogs.


168. Because each component of an ecosystem interacts with other components of that system, action or change in one element often leads to action or change in others, which transforms the ecosystem.


169. It is always possible, of course, that an emergency could force such a store to close at least briefly.


170. There is an axiom in ecology that 'complete competitors cannot coexist': in other words, where two populations of organisms use exactly the same resources, one would be expected to do so slightly more efficiently than the other and therefore come to dominate in the long term.


171. He survived the ordeal and in 1973, returned to his hometown, where he was awarded the Silver Star Medal.


172. Unlike the creation of a vision document, where spirit and optimism about the future must reign, a schedule has to come from the opposite perspective.


173. If you are tired, you can relax in our common room, which has books and games you can borrow for free.


174. But when people believe a behavior is risky, that approach doesn't work.


175. His mind travelled to his grandad, who was in another battle for his life.


176. This kind of art is called op art, which is short for optical art.


177. It is sensible to avoid the really obvious quotation, which may be a jewel of our literature in its proper place, but in the context of your essay will strike the reader as a cliché.


178. This exciting festival takes place in April, when the new year starts based on the Thai calendar.


179. We tend to assign different meanings and values to particular amounts of money, which leads to some truly bizarre financial behavior.


180. Felix:When I was ten, I read an article about Wangari Maathai, who is a Nobel Peace Prize winner.


181. Medusa was killed by the hero Perseus, who cut off her head.


182. The service representatives also had a great deal of product knowledge and hands-on experience, which is obviously important in sales.


183. Two months later, when the ship arrived in Jamaica from Britain, H4 was only five seconds slow.


184. This kind of measurement would help explain why one eighty-year-old has so many more youthful qualities than does another eighty-year-old, who may be biologically eighty or even ninety years old.


185. And if we lived in an unpredictable world, where things changed in random or very complex ways, we would not be able to figure things out.


186. A tree's silence could be because of a serious illness or, perhaps, the loss of its fungal network, which would leave the tree completely cut off from the latest news.


187. Kate and Joan, who had not seen each other for three months, were chatting happily in Joan's apartment.


188. At dawn I contacted my guide, who told me that I had suffered through a scorpion sting that was not fatal.


189. The king was taking a rest in the area near Sangdo, which used to be a thick forest with few houses around.


190. Such materials restrict the penetration of light, and therefore more of the light is reflected from the upper layers of the water, where the longer red, yellow, and green wavelengths predominate.


191. Count de Boutteville, who became later so famous under the name of the Maréchal de Luxembourg, served in the army of Flanders in 1675, under the command of the Prince of Condé.


192. Changdeokgung has gained worldwide recognition for its architecture, which harmonizes beautifully with its natural setting and is based on scientific principles.


193. The entrepreneur had gained local fame for both his extraordinary business know-how and his demonstrated negligence in taking care of himself; his personal motto was, "Rich food, why walk?"


194. Giving it your all is a necessary part of success, which gives us pride and joy and a sense of self-worth.


195. Raden Adjeng Kartini, a pioneer in the area of education for girls and women's rights for Indonesians, was born in Japara, the northern coastal area of Central Java, when Indonesia was under Dutch colonization.


196. "Even if we build the throne hall facing south, that's not enough to ensure that the interior will get sunlight all day long," they said.


197. Afterward, the movie Amadeus, a celebration of the genius of Mozart, which he also directed, swept eight Oscars including one for best director.


198. Some researchers found that, when preschool classrooms were changed to reduce noise levels, the children spoke to each other more often and in more complete sentences, and their performance on pre-reading tests improved.


199. Interestingly enough, the storm has a calm center, which is called the "eye."


200. Although Hutchison was interested in the topic, he was becoming increasingly annoyed with Kobayashi-san, who kept pausing to ask whether Hutchison understood him.


201. Finishing the note, Mike almost gave up on his life, when he saw through the window a boat approaching.


202. However, when he sat down to play, he did something unexpected.


203. 'We veiled our own names... because ―without at the time suspecting that our mode of writing and thinking was not what is called feminine... we noticed how critics sometimes use for their chastisement the weapon of personality, and for their reward, a flattery, which is not true praise.'


204. Through our ears we gain access to vibration, which underlies everything around us.


205. It must be remembered that there may have been more subtle effects of global exchange, both good and bad, which we may not be fully aware of.


206. Consider Henrik Ibsen's play, A Doll's House, where, in the end, Nora leaves her family and marriage.


207. Well, when your brain is loaded with too many decisions to make, it may go on "autopilot."


208. After leaving the White House in 1829, he was a congressman until 1848, when he died in his eighty-first year.


209. Therefore, why should advertising of a new product be directed at older consumers?


210. One of his most frequently performed piano works, Pictures at an Exhibition, was composed in his efforts to capture what he felt about the paintings of an artist friend named Viktor Hartmann, who died at the early age of 39.


211. The laser pointer, which became popular in the 1990s, was at first typically thick to hold in the hand.


212. Instead of saying "gravy" with a rising intonation, the Asian assistants would say "gravy" with a falling intonation, which is their normal way of asking a question.


213. When we say, for example, that there were a hundred people at the market, we don't mean that there were exactly one hundred people there.


214. Sometimes called brood parasites, these bees are also referred to as cuckoo bees, because they are similar to cuckoo birds, which lay an egg in the nest of another bird and leave it for that bird to raise.


215. For example, a person might buy a bottle of water, but after reading an article on possible risks of plastic bottles, that same person might avoid an identical bottle of water the next day.


216. Paradoxically, when you ask basic questions, you will more than likely be perceived by others to be smarter.


217. When you burn fossil fuels, carbon gas is produced, which has a harmful effect on the climate.


218. Sound is simply vibrating air which the ear picks up and converts to electrical signals, which are then interpreted by the brain.


219. We can tell someone we love them in a sad, happy, or soft tone of voice, which gives nuance to our feelings―but the meaning of the words "I love you" remains the same.


220. In reality, the building is surrounded by air, which applies friction to the falling marble and slows it down.


221. He was able to produce and distribute trillions of new Zimbabwe dollars, which is why they eventually became more valuable as toilet paper than currency.


222. In a way, that's exactly what they did.


223. As an example of this, when one of the major high street banks in Britain tried to gain a competitive advantage by opening on Saturday mornings, it attracted a number of new customers who found the traditional Monday-Friday bank opening hours to be a constraint.


224. We'd suggest you familiarize yourself with Thornton Wilder's wonderful play; you can also rent the 1940 movie version, which is close but not identical to the original.


225. With Elizabeth Cady Stanton, whom she met in 1851, Anthony was the principal organizer and ideological voice of the National Woman Suffrage Association that they formed in 1869.


226. If the sailors had a clock that showed the exact time at the place they left from, they could compare it with the time where they were, which could be easily determined using a sundial.


227. That bias leads us to assume a vertical position, which is one of the few possible ways to drown.


228. Understanding the Essence of Things This story is about his father, who tried to teach Feynman to have a scientific perspective.


229. So, when the owner starts the car, it plays the same music or the same radio station that was playing in the home.


230. It was the latter that interested Thompson, who noticed that they ran few advertisements while staying longer in the family home than newspapers, thus making them potentially a more effective medium.


231. This kind of change could be linked to sunspot activity, which has a periodicity of 11 years.


232. Magritte's work The Treachery of Images, which he painted between 1928 and 1929, focuses exactly on this idea.


233. The kitchen was packed with wives, all of them laughing and talking loud, none of them being helpful except for Lois from next door, who was pulling bowls out of the refrigerator.


234. Wiseman's conclusion was that, when faced with a challenge, 'unlucky' people were less flexible.


235. My trip to Venice would not be complete without a gondola ride along the Grand Canal, which snakes through the city in a large S shape.


236. The people in Group 1, who had done the researcher a personal favor by returning some of the money, rated the researcher the highest.


237. However, when your nose is stuffed, the smell cannot reach the nerve cells because of the mucus.


238. The first written documents, which come from the Mesopotamian city of Uruk and date back to around 3400 B.C., record amounts of bread, payment of taxes, and other transactions using simple symbols and marks on clay tablets.


239. To alleviate such concerns, the first Congress approved 10 amendments to the U.S・ Constitution, commonly known as the Bill of Rights, which were adopted in 1791.


240. According to Japanese myth, the reason for not cooking is to soothe the fire god, Kohjin, who might be angry if someone used fire so early in the year.


241. One day in February 2009, Stephanie called Betty, her best friend, who was the only employee of her business Best Wedding.


242. In 2017, approximately 7 billion bushels of com were used for food, seed, and industrial purposes, which was the largest amount of com used for those purposes.


243. They may think, mistakenly, that it has no connection with Modern English.


244. More often they create and play and remember what it was like to be a child, where the journey from A to B was seldom straight and never narrow.


245. I had accepted a job offer from Dr. Gilbert, who had opened a medical clinic at an inland village last year.


246. Tarsiers can rotate their heads at least 180 degrees, which gives them a wide field of vision for spotting prey.


247. He pointed to the case of goldsmiths, who earned much higher wages than workers of a similar skill because they were perceived to be trustworthy―a characteristic that is rare and not easily provable.


248. Students are still routinely taught in their introductory economics classes that in a market economy, when engaged in market transactions, individuals act out of self-interest ─ whether it be by maximizing profits as producers, or by maximizing satisfaction as consumers.


249. Suddenly the young woodcutter realized that during break times while the old man was having a drink, he was also re-sharpening his axe, which the young woodcutter never did.


250. This was my way of occupying my time to avoid feeling alone, which was caused by the lack of contact with my parents and other people.


251. But if, from this lack of certainty, we jump to the conviction that we had better not care about global heating, that there is no evolution and the world was created six thousand years ago, or that traditional medicine must be more effective than modern medicine — well, we are simply stupid.


252. Analyzing the mechanism through which this was achieved, literary scholar Michael Wood in his book America in the Movies described our films as a "rearrangement of our problems into shapes which tame them, which disperse them to the margins of our attention," where we can forget about them.


253. However, when a bill was introduced in Congress to outlaw such rules, the credit card lobby turned its attention to language.


254. So Ekman traveled to New Guinea, where an isolated Neolithic culture had recently been discovered.


255. To help avoid committing these errors, engage in perception checking, which means that we consider a series of questions to confirm or challenge our perceptions of others and their behaviors.


256. For example, when one ground squirrel sees a predator in the distance, it will sound an alarm call that alerts other squirrels to run for cover.


257. Plus, when it is moved, it must be kept cold.


258. But even when there is no single causal act, that doesn't stop people from assigning one.


259. Although extreme statements, they are based on the truth that clothes create a powerful impression, which can, at the same time, be quite misleading.


260. This delicious cake contains less fat than traditional cakes, which are made with lots of butter.


261. For instance, when they meet other elephants after a long while, they express their happiness by rushing towards each other with their heads high up while flapping their ears.


262. I was about 150 yards off the beach, when I felt a sudden chill in the air followed by an uncomfortable stillness.


263. Recently on a flight to Asia, I met Debbie, who was warmly greeted by all of the flight attendants and was even welcomed aboard the plane by the pilot.


264. For example , the Erie Canal, which took four years to build, was regarded as the height of efficiency in its day.


265. This angered his father, who thought the boy was willfully telling lies.


266. It was further helped by the frequent occurrence of lightning-struck fires, which trapped and killed many of the fleeing animals.


267. However, when you start putting the plan into practice to achieve your goal, the happiness, excitement, and a lot of fuel suddenly disappear.


268. To lions, a moving torch could only mean that a person was holding it, which would stop them from approaching the stable.


269. It was then, at the age of 21, that Matisse discovered his talent in painting and decided to become an artist.


270. High levels of melanin protect darker skin against sun damage, so melanin usually is beneficial in tropical environments, where sunlight is most intense.


271. However, Edison, who was in charge of the federal government project, rejected Tesla's idea.


272. Many people believe, along similar lines, that the only way to maintain one's ethical integrity in business is not to go into business.


273. And, when Gulbenkian left his collection to found a museum in Lisbon upon his death in 1955, he showed that he cared about people after all—just not the ones he happened to know.


274. A building had occupied this same spot some two-and-a-half thousand years earlier, when it was part of a wooded sanctuary outside the original city walls, on the banks of the River Ilissos.


275. It's also more formal and distant, which makes the readers lose attention.


276. Many plants and animals, which cannot survive without water, have had to creatively adapt to living in such dry areas.


277. The between-meal interval is normally about 4 to 6 waking hours — about the length of time the body takes to use up most of the readily available fuel — or 12 to 18 hours at night, when body systems slow down and the need is less.


278. The ancient Greeks used an awards system to recognize design achievements, which performed some of the same functions as the modern patent system.


279. Tell me, when can we be together for the rest of our lives?


280. Psychologists agree that one important factor in loneliness is a person's social contacts, that is, friends, family members, co-workers, etc.


281. Green, which has a calming and restful effect, is said to be good for heart conditions.


282. However, when the students finished the task, the researchers said that the students were not allowed to keep the poster that they had rated as the third-most beautiful.


283. If we went to an event in person, we would see something quite different from the images selected and presented on television, and we would develop our own descriptions and interpretations, which would be very different from those carefully presented by media commentators.


284. So, for example, when you feel happy, you smile.


285. Making better decisions when picking out jams or bottles of wine is best done with the emotional brain, which generates its verdict automatically.


286. He was only ten when his father died, and his mother moved the family to Cedar Rapids, Iowa, where Wood went to school.


287. You see the world as one big contest, where everyone is competing against everybody else.


288. During the summer, my friend Amber, who lives in London, turns the clocks forward by one hour.


289. For example, when a damselfish comes near, the mimic octopus will change its shape into that of a sea snake.


290. Months later, when the professor wrote to all the establishments they had visited to ask whether Chinese guests were welcome, however, the majority of the responses were, in fact, prejudiced and rather uninviting, showing that attitudes don't always predict behavior.


291. And on that point, I'd like to put in a plug for my dog, Shep, who understands at least functionally a number of my words.


292. If you see yourself as confident and successful before meeting a new person, applying for a job, or making a presentation, that is how you will perform in the actual situation.


293. This shift began around 9500 BC in a region known as the Fertile Crescent, which stretches from modern‑day Egypt, up to southeastern Turkey, and down again to the border between Iraq and Iran.


294. However, when you can't spend money, you can always learn more about your craft online or practice with what you already have.


295. These places and people were then photographed and information written about their history and stories, which was then communicated, first using print and now digitally.


296. Furthermore, we will offer free cooking classes, where you can learn how to prepare nutritious meals.


297. In line with this are the histories of two professional hockey teams, the Vancouver Canucks and the Pittsburgh Penguins, that switched from nonblack to black uniforms.


298. Their pottery, sculptures, and other manufactured goods had symbols on them to note the tradesmen who created them, which are the predecessors of modern trademarks.


299. Why does the "pure" acting of the movies not seem unnatural to the audience, who, after all, are accustomed in real life to people whose expression is more or less indistinct?


300. Ecotourists, when it comes to animals, prefer the 'good' and the funny, are in awe of the big, fascinated by the bad, but are not interested in the ugly or the dull.


301. It's another thing when citizens don't know something, but think they know it, which is the new problem.


302. Well, that's up to each individual to decide on his or her own.


303. We arrived in India during the Holi festival, which is the Hindu celebration of the coming of spring.


304. Imagine, now, that you knew that the red pieces formed an apple at the centre of a bowl of fruit.


305. Interestingly enough, some nutrition scholars are suggesting that the human diet took a wrong turn at the end of the Pleistocene, that the "whole enterprise of agriculture" might turn out to be "harmful to human health."


306. I made up many characters, which all responded and interacted with each other.


307. She reported directly to me for the three years of her tenure with that company until 2015, when I retired.


308. Why do Mumbai workers not take their lunch boxes with them in the morning, when they leave for the office?


309. Written language is more complex, which makes it more work to read.


310. Consumers buy produce and other goods from local farmers, who buy farm supplies from local businesses.


311. It was only when people began to write, and even more so when printing was invented, that ideas no longer needed to be stored in brains, but could instead be recorded elsewhere relatively faithfully.


312. One 10-year-old boy, who had read the second Harry Potter book four times, proudly announced that he could name all of the numerous courses that Harry and his friends studied at their school.


313. Because they have taken on the flexibility, adaptability, and self-connecting governance of organic systems, we become more human, not less so, when we use them.


314. When the surrounding temperature increases, the activity in the hive decreases, which decreases the amount of heat generated by insect metabolism.


315. The situation quickly changed, however, when German troops came to aid Wellington at the right time.


316. What we would like to have is one or a few measurable biological changes that mirror all other biological age changes without reference to the passage of time, so that we could say, for example, that someone who is chronologically eighty years old is biologically sixty years old.


317. They might use integrated pest management (IPM), which involves using a pest's natural enemies, such as adult lady beetles and their larvae, because they feed on lice that kill plants, instead of chemical pesticides.


318. Qat is an integral part of culture in contemporary Yemen, where qat houses abound.


319. In the other type, which became soccer, players kicked the ball.


320. He discovered that there is a bird, called a kingfisher, that has the ability to manage sudden changes in air resistance.


321. It's one thing when citizens don't know something, and realize it, which has always been a problem.


322. There stood his donkey, which looked as old and weathered as the farmer.


323. Tea, therefore, supplements the basic needs of the nomadic tribes, whose diet lacks vegetables.


324. "Below the chair was another letter, which was exactly the same as the first.


325. A globalizing world will require the redesign of prevailing international institutions, which are currently dominated and governed by the interests of superpowers, into global institutions based on cooperation among equals and which benefit all societies equally.


326. Still, when everyone was asleep, lions were able to get through the fence.


327. In the 1950s, when my dad was a little boy, my grandpa built a 600-square-foot cottage.


328. You know, and will know for a while, that these are not the names of minor celebrities.


329. For example, when dental surgery is needed, a dentist simply scans the patient's mouth.


330. Common foods for osechi are broiled fish cakes, simmered black soy beans, and red or white herring roe, which symbolize good health, a good harvest, and prosperity.


331. The 200 sheep, which in data terms is a lot of data points or observations, is a very small sample of the total possible numbers of sheep alive today.


332. Refusing offers to move in with relatives, she started her own online consulting business, which allowed her to pursue a growing career at home.


333. The person assured her, in no uncertain terms, that she would be there for her since she had been there for her many times.


334. Aerobic activities like walking, running, swimming, and cycling use your large muscles in a rhythmic way for a sustained period of time, which requires the heart to pump blood to deliver oxygen to your working muscles.


335. Instead, people typically get so involved in doing a program or getting a result ―like winning a title in a dog show― or they worry so much about getting hurt, that they fail to listen to what their animals have to say.


336. With Jan Novák, Forman wrote his autobiography, Turnaround: A Memoir, which was published in 1994.


337. Perhaps this is why we think so fondly about the joy of childhood, that freedom of mind and body before the world becomes familiar and predictable.


338. Instead, everyone comes from a perspective, or point of view, which, by its very nature, is limited and partial.


339. Suddenly, he realized that it wasn't the money, real or imagined, that had turned his life around.


340. New evidence suggests, however, that squirrels also sound alarm calls for former playmates, not genetically related.


341. Write Mayor Doe and tell him, in no uncertain terms, that it is his responsibility to protect the children by installing crosswalks and traffic lights at dangerous intersections.


342. I thought I had everything finished, but the next day at school, I suddenly remembered I'd forgotten to study for the test on Romeo and Juliet, which I had to take during my lunch hour!


343. This approach seemed out of integrity to my friend, who saw his ministry as one of serving those in need, not annoying a mob.


344. Tiny fish, which scientists refer to as "cleaners," swim into the mouths of bigger fish, which are referred to as "clients."


345. Dorothy Hodgkin was born in Cairo in 1910, where her father worked in the Egyptian Education Service.


346. Factories were discharging mercury into the waters of Minamata Bay, which also harbored a commercial fishing industry.


347. Exercising becomes mindless, which is 'the goal' of addiction.


348. Now, that line would mean a slow death for one unfortunate feathered creature.


349. Two weeks later, a heart was available, and Erroll took Claude to the hospital for a transplant, which was successful.


350. The duration of copyright protection has increased steadily over the years; the life-plus-70-years standard was set by the Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998, which increased the 50-year limit established by the 1976 Copyright Act.


351. You might also think of spam email, which is unwanted but might fill up your inbox.


352. After a few days of refueling, the bird once again takes off after nightfall and heads to northern South America or southern Central America, where it will spend the winter.


353. With these features, the robot can even get close to Humboldt penguins, which are the shyest of all penguins.


354. In a classic set of studies over a ten-year period, biologist Gerald Wilkinson found that, when vampire bats return to their communal nests from a successful night's foraging, they frequently vomit blood and share it with other nest-mates, including even non-relatives.


355. Likewise, if a baseball player's batting average is .250, which means he normally gets a hit one out of four tries, and he has struck out the last three or four times at bat, many spectators will think he is extra likely to get a hit the next time he is up.


356. You bring me into existence by recognizing me.A Zulu folk saying makes the meaning of the greetings clearer: Umuntu ngumuntu ngabantu (/oo-MOO-ntoo ngoo-MOO-ntoo ngah-BAH-ntoo/), which means A person is a person because of other people.As a casual daily conversation opener, sawubona and ngikhona may be as simple as Hello How are you?


357. In To Kill a Mockingbird, there are characters like mockingbirds, who are innocent and harmless.


358. He mailed them to a professor at Cambridge, who immediately recognized the brilliance in his work and brought Ramanujan to England.


359. In the early 1990s, when e-mail first began gaining popularity, it was exciting to receive messages from other people and fun to write them back, knowing that our replies would reach them instantly.


360. The exchange rate, which is the price of the domestic currency in terms of a foreign currency, is an important indicator of macroeconomic stability.


361. The studio was full of the latest equipment, whose size and complexity amazed me.


362. After hatching, chickens peck busily for their own food much faster than crows, which rely on the parent bird to bring them food in the nest.


363. Others connect it to the French word holà (/ola/), which roughly means Hey, there!


364. Since you've already decided to buy a pair of jeans, why not buy a pair of sneakers too?


365. Another protection charm against the evil eye is hamsa, which represents good luck.


366. The lottery and permit locations will experience an increase of up to $4.00 or more, which more accurately reflects the cost of creating these more complex recreation opportunities.


367. For example, when we see something, we are responding to light entering our eyes; and when we taste things, we are responding to chemicals in the mouth.


368. If we assume that the 300 million U.S. citizens meet the 3-burgers-per-week average, that's the rough equivalent of the annual carbon output from 10,000 SUVs.


369. For example, when two-year-old children and chimpanzees had learned that, of two boxes presented to them, the one with a triangle of a particular size and shape always contained attractive food, they had no difficulty applying their training to triangles of very different appearance.


370. In fact, that's what authors largely have done.


371. "The dabbawalas are proud of their 99.99 percent accuracy rate, which means just one mistake in every six million deliveries.


372. Untreated, the total absence of insulin leads to ketoacidosis, which can cause loss of consciousness and, without intervention, death.


373. He feels insecure when he is left alone; for example, when you are out of the house and he is in his crate, or when you are in another part of the house and he cannot see you.


374. In the first quarter of the game, when I got the ball on the rebound, I heard my dad above the crowd yelling, "Give her the ball!"


375. Even in this minor case, for example, I can move the concept ‘blueberry’ around in order to appreciate why people have gone blueberry picking for millennia, why raising blueberries has become big business in Maine, and why blueberry futures are not a bad investment.


376. Initial attempts to expel the foreigners led to devastating defeats at the hands of Westerners, whose industrial technology gave them far superior weapons of war.


377. For that reason, Mary Ellen O'Toole, who is a retired FBI profiler, emphasizes the need to go beyond a person's superficial qualities in order to understand them.


378. Sometimes, I was worried, though, that Mat would flatten me for going out with the girl he likes.


379. In India, where staying cool is very important, a pair of wide pants made of light and soft fabric seemed to be the perfect way to stay cool.


380. After all, that's what counts.


381. The Nile River Flows The Nile, which gave birth to Egyptian civilization, flows through Cairo, the capital of Egypt.


382. True, artists often desperately want their audience to understand and appreciate their creation, which is why they may pay attention to criticism and audience reaction.


383. The 4 Deserts Race Series, which consists of four long races in different parts of the world, is one of the most difficult footraces in the world.


384. Thus, the cylinder, which requires a little more aluminum than a sphere but stays still, is used!


385. Culture freed humans from the limitations of their biology; according to evolutionary biologist Mark Pagel, when humans discovered culture, they achieved a momentous shift in the balance of power "between our genes and our minds.


386. However, fundamentally Mortier knows exactly how to retain the balance between tradition and innovation, which guarantees the continuity of this festival.


387. Today, that amount would be more than 6 billion won.


388. The mothers, who were told to be themselves, naturally looked horrified.


389. In this study, when college students who negotiated the purchase of a motorcycle over an online instant messenger believed they were physically far apart (more than 15 miles), negotiations were easier and showed more compromise than when participants believed they were closer (a few feet).


390. Sincerely, Philip Hurley, President Richardson Tire and Auto Supply Company In this rarified air, Connors felt he had all the time in the world to decide how, when, and where to hit the ball.


391. One day, when I was little, I was playing in a field and a kid said to me, "See that bird?


392. Thus, when communicators are attempting to determine if a speaker is sarcastic, they compare the verbal and nonverbal message and if the two are in opposition, communicators may conclude that the speaker is being sarcastic.


393. Except for extraordinary exceptions, when people find ways to intervene using methods more powerful than our tendency to equilibrium, our habits, behaviors, thoughts, and our quality of life stay pretty much the same too.


394. For example, a couple who have just bought their first house will not currently be in the market to buy another larger house, but very well might be in five to seven years' time, when perhaps they have started a family or are earning more money.


395. Recent measurements using radiometers on satellites suggest that solar energy, which is an input to our climate system, can vary considerably.


396. However, fashion is constantly changing, which means that people who want to be fashionable have to buy new clothes every few months.


397. And, according to this philosophy, that neutron would be exactly the same as one found in an atom of my cat's whisker.


398. This effect was reversed, however, when the seating arrangement was either angular (think L­shaped) or square.


399. Until the twentieth century, when composers began experimenting freely with form and design, classical music continued to follow basic rules relating to structure, not to mention harmony.


400. Plastic is extremely slow to degrade and tends to float, which allows it to travel in ocean currents for thousands of miles.


401. Perhaps we should say of it what Spinoza said of regret: that whoever feels it is “twice unhappy or twice helpless.” Laurence Thomas has suggested that the utility of “negative sentiments” (emotions like grief, guilt, resentment, and anger, which there is seemingly a reason to believe we might be better off without) lies in their providing a kind of guarantee of authenticity for such dispositional sentiments as love and respect.


402. The dabbawalas are proud of their 99.99 percent accuracy rate, which means just one mistake in every six million deliveries.


403. But archaeologists are not asked to cooperate with tomb robbers, who also have valuable historical artifacts.


404. As a result, we didn't have much of a relationship when I was young other than him constantly nagging me to take care of chores like mowing the lawn and cutting the hedges, which I hated.


405. For example, when Alex was shown two red blocks and three green blocks and asked, "How many red blocks?"


406. All obeyed, except one, who continued his road.


407. Anyway, why did she do that today?


408. In 1975, he directed One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest, which became only the second film in history to win Oscars in all the five major categories.


409. These are fantastic behaviors that, when taught properly, teach brilliant self-confidence and self-control.


410. They identified the corpse as the neighbor's husband, who died ten years ago.


411. "What I did was this: In preparation, I put a bit of sugar about 20 centimeters from their entry point into the room, which they didn't know about.


412. But we live in an in-between universe, where things change, but according to rules.


413. We were amazed by the outstanding building skills of the Inca civilization, which prospered more than five centuries ago.


414. However, when Wilma was 11, everything changed.


415. Thus, that morning, she gives her younger brother $20 and instructs him to keep it if she fails to study that evening.


416. He was sent away to the island of St. Helena, where he died in 1821.


417. Superficial analogies between the eye and a camera obscure the much more fundamental difference between the two, which is that the camera merely records an image, whereas the visual system interprets it.


418. For their unique invention they received the 2011 Ig Nobel Prize, which honors achievements that "first make people laugh and then make them think."


419. On behalf of the Board of Directors and Officers of the Heyerdahl Corporation, I would like to express sincere appreciation and congratulations to Davis Construction Company for successfully completing the reconstruction of our headquarters building in Woodtown, which was destroyed by fire last year.


420. These were their perfume dispensers, which changed over time.


421. With properties of all shapes and sizes available, you're sure to find the perfect one for you, where everybody fits.


422. Of course, coaches, when hired by such an owner, likely have sizable information about the low likelihood of being the coach at that club for the next five years.


423. So when a salesperson tells you that, for example, extracts made from the roots of echinacea help prevent colds, ask if that statement has been scientifically tested — and if so, how, when, and by whom and how valid and reliable the test results are — before you decide to try this herbal remedy.


424. However, when you were born, you had a lot more bones!


425. In addition, when farmers have direct access to consumers, they are able to keep more of each dollar earned from a sale, because the middle­man is eliminated.


426. In science, where alone something approximating to genuine knowledge is to be found, men's attitude is temporary and full of doubt.


427. After the 25-minute ride, you will arrive in Staten Island, where you can hop on the returning ferry and ride back to Manhattan.


428. This had been a place for athletics and exercise, where the young men of Athens had trained to become soldiers and citizens.


429. However, as is often the case, when someone takes the chance and reaches out, everyone wins.


430. It was a pack of batteries, which was not a gift I wished for.


431. In fact, Korea now has the world's highest death rate from liver cancer, which is closely related to drinking.


432. People like to give things to others who listen to them, who value them, who consult with them.


433. Ciao, just like greetings in many other languages, serves as both hello and goodbye.The word comes from the Venetian phrase sciao vostro (/schao vostro/), which means I am your slave.Of course, this does not mean that a person who says ciao will actually become the slave of the listener.


434. Elvis Summers, 38, met Kenneth McGhee, 60, in September 2015, when Kenneth appeared at Elvis' Los Angeles apartment building looking for cans and bottles to recycle.


435. Meanwhile, Atticus agrees to defend an African-American man named Tom Robinson, who has been accused of attacking a young white woman, Mayella Ewell.


436. The appeal of confidence as a marker of skill and knowledge is so potent that adults demonstrate a tendency to give prestige and respect to overconfident individuals, whose metacognitive assessment of their ability exceeds their actual performance; such individuals consistently attain higher rank than their skills merit.


437. So, when they are leaning forward on their knees, the COG of girls is over the BOS, while the COG of boys is not.


438. He became a regular on The Jack Benny Program, where he provided voices for many characters — human, animal, and nonliving objects such as a car in need of a tune-up.


439. Some of these festivals cater for a small minority of lovers of a particular art form such as modern music, which does not find a sufficiently large audience in the established artistic venues.


440. Her work on vitamin B12 was published in 1954, which led to her being awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1964.


441. So, when he approaches, you can easily catch him by grabbing his long hair.


442. The blue lights in Glasgow, which mimicked the lights atop police cars, seemed to imply that the police were always watching.


443. Frequently checked out books, that is, popular books (ex, the Dan Brown blockbusters), will be made available in special spaces near the entrance of the library to make it easy for members to find them.


444. When the first experimenter returned and tried retrieving the object from the first box, the great ape would help the experimenter open the second box, which it knew the object had been transferred to.


445. Cora was surprised when Ms. Calico told her that she would like to recommend Cora for a summer program in London, where they had a cartography class.


446. The soldier in question, who had the character of being the bravest man in Boutteville's army, presented himself, and taking thirty of his comrades, of whom he had the choice, he executed his commission, which was of the most dangerous nature, with courage and success beyond all praise.


447. This is particularly true of thriller and horror genres, where audiences are kept on the edge of their seats throughout.


448. The Lindau Lighthouse, which was completed in 1856, is located in Lindau, the southernmost part of Germany.


449. After the war, Audrey and her mother moved to London, where she studied ballet, worked as a model, and in 1951 began acting in films, mostly in minor or supporting roles.


450. Microbeads contain toxins, which can cause great harm to us.


451. That requires, of course, that his parents know where they themselves stand.


452. When Westerners hear Indonesian gamelan music first time, which is based on seven pitches per octave with varied tunings, it's more likely to sound like noise.


453. Andrew, whom nobody had noticed before the tournament this year, came to progress to the final match.


454. Khan studied economics in college but spent much of his time at Delhi's Theatre Action Group, where he studied acting.


455. But unlike the symphony, which might have a dozen violinists joining on the first violin line, the string quartet features only one player per part: first violinist, second violinist, violist, and cellist.


456. The principle is the same as that of a movie screen, which has a rough surface in order to reflect the projected image equally to all parts of the audience.


457. If I am to rely, for so much of my knowledge, on the work of others, then it behoves me to ensure, as much as possible, that the opinion which I accept is the best-informed opinion available to me.


458. This basic principle of customization allowed a constant stream of incremental modifications to be introduced, which, if demonstrated by experience to be advantageous, could be integrated back into the mainstream of tradition.


459. That would mean, for instance, that countries such as Germany and the United Kingdom, which have been emitting for longer than most countries, would bear a larger share than their current emissions implied.


460. In addition, that region has a relatively high birth rate.


461. Then after a long silence, Manfred came to him and said, “Erik, if you don’t get another piano, Keith can’t play tonight.” Erik knew that Keith had requested a specific instrument, which the Opera House had agreed to provide.


462. Afro's early work, which included landscapes, portraits, and still-lifes, was influenced by Cubism, but after the war he developed a loose improvisatory abstract style influenced by Abstract Expressionism.


463. The billionaire Chuck Feeney, who is the co-founder of the Duty Free Shoppers Group, spends his money in a unique way.


464. Local fishermen wore these sweaters, which their wives knitted for them.


465. Another green strategy is to use less ink, which is what many people already do.


466. The typical plot of the novel is the protagonist's quest for authority within, therefore, when that authority can no longer be discovered outside.


467. Caring for both soldiers and civilians suffering from sickness, Inglis became ill in Russia and was forced to return to Britain, where she died in 1917.


468. Walking in nature, listening to soothing music, or meditating are some ways that we can promote this relaxation response in the brain, which results in a heightened ability to concentrate, focus , learn, visualize, and imagine.


469. The visiting-team room was painted a blue-green, which had a calming effect on the team members.


470. Such buildings make difficult demands on structural engineers, who have to make paradoxical forms work while concealing how the trick is pulled off.


471. He would be sitting on the edge of his bed, punching dots, when the rumbling of wagons on the cobblestones outside told him that morning had come.


472. It wasn't until World War I, when women fought to wear pants for work, that pants on the playing field also became acceptable for females.


473. Joan internalized the anger, which then turned to guilt in a matter of a minute!


474. The strings were then tied to bamboo poles, which allowed the farmers to control the puppets.


475. Demand for the mineral, which is used to make high-quality chemical fertilizers, made it very valuable.


476. In 1735, he completed his project, which he named H1.


477. The dabbawala service began around 1890, when a banker hired a young man to deliver a lunch box from his home to his Mumbai office.


478. And when in sixth grade, John's team got to go to the Old Mill Street Gym in Circleville, Ohio, where he'd seen that basketball game in the fourth grade.


479. According to the study, when we watch ads, we silently pronounce the brand or product names without thinking.


480. The engineers thought that if it worked for birds, why not for airplanes?


481. One informed coach, who accepted the position in these circumstances, demanded and received a five-year guaranteed contract at several million dollars each year.


482. It is not surprising, then, that business schools and large corporations around the world learn from the dabbawala system.


483. An unmusical person can recognize an octave and, perhaps once instructed, a quality of tone, that is, a C or an F-sharp.


484. The film is an adaptation of Joseph Conrad's novel Heart of Darkness, which is set in the African Congo at the end of the 19th century.


485. This bias, toward granting influence to group members who may not in fact deserve it, is similar to that described by status characteristics theory, which argues that rank differentiation in newly formed groups is partly influenced by members' personal characteristics - such as race, age, sex, and occupation.


486. Immediately the authorities isolated the problem to the assembly line, which transported all the packaged boxes of soap to the delivery department.


487. Research shows, however, that creativity loves constraints.


488. It should be noted, though, that no development in the Internet job age has reduced the importance of the most basic job search skill: self-knowledge.


489. The concept, that we are allowed to experiment and make mistakes, is crucial in the development of self-esteem.


490. He moved from Delhi to Mumbai to pursue a full-time career in Bollywood, which led him to great fame.


491. Today, a girl from a small village reminded them about the precious gifts, truly a wonder, which they already knew but easily forgot.


492. However, where the degree of competition is particularly intense a zero sum game can quickly become a negative sum game, in that everyone in the market is faced with additional costs.


493. Particularly haunting is the loss of confidence in our neighbor, who is now everyone on Earth, since our social web has now become global.


494. Some historians say that ancient Egyptians could have explored Antarctica around 4,000 BC, when it was not yet frozen, and drawn a map at that time.


495. The Hupa people, who reside in Northern California, had two main ceremonies each year, the First Salmon Rite in the spring and the Acorn Feast in the fall, both foods being major components in their diet.


496. Its weight caused the tray to tilt, which opened a pipe at the bottom of the machine.


497. Fast-forward another billion years to our world, which is full of social animals, from ants to wolves to humans.


498. The lack of real, direct experience in and with nature has caused many children to regard the natural world as mere abstraction, that fantastic, beautifully filmed place filled with endangered rainforests and polar bears in peril.


499. If after watching a stand-up comedian a member of the audience stated 'that was really funny', it would suggest that the person thought the comedian was good, which contains a suggestion of recommendation.


500. By adjusting their width, the body increases or decreases blood flow to the skin, where heat can escape into the air.


501. When done well, when done by an expert, both reading and skiing are graceful, harmonious activities.


502. In the Netherlands, for example, where one fourth of its land area is located below sea level, an interesting form of shoes developed as a way of getting around the muddy roads.


503. It is sometimes said, these days, that while "global warming" is a threat to most peoples and societies on this planet, there will be winners as well as losers.


504. Richard Burton went on to become a praised actor of stage and screen, who was nominated for an Academy Award seven times, but never won an Oscar.


505. But that doesn't absolve them from criticism for holding the typically false beliefs they end up with — for example, that I'm perfectly healthy, that my friends won't be hurt if I lie to them, and so on.


506. New media may also include aromas, such as Disney's "Soaring Over California" attraction at the California Adventure theme park, where audiences smell orange orchards and pine forests while enjoying a simulated hang-gliding experience across the countryside.


507. To Kill a Mockingbird is the story of a young girl growing up in a southern town during the 1930s, when African-American people were facing severe discrimination.


508. Wanting to make the best possible impression, the American company sent its most promising young executive, Fred Wagner, who spoke fluent German.


509. Furthermore, it is the behaviour of some tourists, and the structure and development of tourism itself, that often generate negative attitudes within the host community.


510. Think back about thirty years, when there were only three or four networks on television.


511. Likewise, you can showcase your own charm and individuality with your own unique style, which can become a part of your personal image: a signature style.


512. Linda told her doctor, who said something shocking.


513. Throughout Claude's early life, Erroll worked hard to pay the medical bills, which were huge.


514. Research shows, for example, that the thrill of winning the lottery, and the horror of acquiring a physical handicap, both diminish more quickly than expected.


515. If both the spoonful and the pot full of soup have the same temperature, why would the larger sample cause more damage if it came in contact with your skin?


516. All movement incurs a cost of some sort, which is usually measured in terms of time or money.


517. '"Grandpa got most of the materials for his little house from the Oakland docks, where he was working.


518. On October 12, the first rescue worker was sent downward to the miners, who greeted him with nervous relief.


519. We like to make a show of how much our decisions are based on rational considerations, but the truth is that we are largely governed by our emotions, which continually influence our perceptions.


520. They defied their perception of the song to produce a transcription, for example, that started and finished on middle C (rather than F) because they believed that if "Happy Birthday" started on C, then it must be in C major and should therefore end on C. As these students got older, they relied more on what they knew theoretically about music rather than what they heard and knew perceptually, with the result that they made surprisingly inaccurate transcriptions of familiar melodies.


521. It is the mark of effortful activities that they interfere with each other, which is why it is difficult or impossible to conduct several at once.


522. Fossil fuels are not renewable, which means that sooner or later we are going to run out of them.


523. Unfortunately, that's not always the case.


524. John was once in the office of a manager, Michael, when the phone rang.


525. The paving stones have gaps between them so that water can flow into and through the soil beneath, where it is carried away by the underground system they made.


526. However, it's an amazing place, full of excitement and wonder, where a variety of animals survive in their own way.


527. As they chatted, Kenneth, who is also known as Smokie, revealed that he had been homeless since his wife died about a decade ago.


528. Since they never lock their doors, why do they bother to install doors with locks on them?


529. However, Asch had secretly instructed all but the last person in each group, who was the real subject of the experiment, to say that the medium-length line was the longest.


530. For example, when you go to the grocery store, the bagger may ask, "Paper or plastic?


531. When he looked at our door, he just passed by, which caused me to break into a flood of tears.


532. Galileo, who heard about the Dutch spyglass and began making his own, realized right away how useful the device could be to armies and sailors.


533. The origins of contemporary Western thought can be traced back to the golden age of ancient Greece, when Greek thinkers laid the foundations for modern Western politics, philosophy, science, and law.


534. [Panic] The word panic comes from the Greek god Pan, who lived in a forest.


535. Ekman recruited hundreds of these subjects, who had never been previously exposed to outside cultures, and, through a translator, presented them with photographs of American faces illustrating the basic emotions.


536. Modern psychological theory states that the process of understanding is a matter of construction, not reproduction, which means that the process of understanding takes the form of the interpretation of data coming from the outside and generated by our mind.


537. People learned from skilled doctors, who were often their fathers.


538. Gregorio Dati was a successful merchant of Florence, who entered into many profitable partnerships dealing in wool, silk, and other merchandise.


539. But at school they learned, and very quickly, that children earn Nature Trail tickets for running the quarter-mile track during lunch recess.


540. I have double-checked with my supervisor, Gloria Arrelo, who assured me that she recorded my overtime on the time sheets she sent to your office on October 17.


541. A defeated wolf, for example, will roll over on its back, exposing its throat to the victor, who will not then deign to tear it out.


542. After graduating, he joined the United States Marine Corps, where he captured scenes from the Korean War as a combat photographer.


543. However, this is not the case in countries such as Australia and New Zealand, where the majority of our tourist sites (including the ancient indigenous sites) are, in one way or another, products of the 20th century.


544. A few artistic souls went further to begin dancing in klompen, which makes a pleasant series of rhythms, eventually providing a basis for modern tap dancing.


545. Few people would choose to walk or bike on roadways that lack safe sidewalks or marked bicycle lanes, where vehicles speed by, or where the air is polluted.


546. Most importantly, where was Dr. Woolley?


547. So, if you were working on a school project and needed to do research, which would be greener: using electronic devices or hitting the library?


548. Standard English allows access to certain educational and economic opportunities, which is the primary reason for teaching it.


549. Do you happen to live in a fast-paced city, where you feel in a constant hurry?


550. Briefly, when it senses a dangerous parasite, the body is mobilized to produce special cells, which are carried by the blood into battle like a kind of army.


551. But she did want to do things―things that would mean something, that would matter.


552. Dr. Paul Odland and his friend Bob travel frequently to South America, where they provide free medical treatment for disabled children of poor families.


553. One can easily argue, for instance, that its dominance has led theorists to overlook important differences between various sorts of music.


554. After an hour, my frustration reached its climax, when I saw a man riding a pony with a brand-new saddle.


555. This set of beliefs is known as the 'Lake Wobegon' effect, after a fictional community in the stories by Garrison Keillor, where all the children are above average.


556. The home-team room was painted a bright red, which kept team members excited or even angered.


557. In the luxury trade, that describes an incredibly high-priced article displayed mainly to manipulate consumers.


558. In the short run, a reduction in unemployment may come at the expense of a higher rate of inflation, especially if the economy is close to full capacity, where resources are almost fully employed.


559. They demanded a second test, which also turned out to be a success.


560. Our daily activities produce greenhouse gases, which contribute to the greenhouse effect and climate change.


561. Likewise, when the fuel cell becomes the automotive engine of choice, the car companies focusing on increasing the efficiency of the internal combustion engine may find themselves left behind.


562. Another 10 percent of the decline, according to Putnam, is traceable to suburbanization, and the accompanying increase in commuting time, which leaves less time available for involvement in after-work nonprofit activity.


563. For example, in a mountain ecosystem, predators such as mountain lions exist in much smaller numbers than deer, which serve as mountain lion prey, yet insects live in huge numbers because they are food for a variety of species of other insects, birds, mammals, reptiles, amphibians, and fish.


564. His wish was granted, and he was exuberant until he touched his beloved daughter, who turned into a gold statue.


565. In these cases, peers promote positive social norms and feelings of belonging, which are important to positive youth development.


566. "The security guard, who had worked for the company for many years, looked his boss straight in the eyes, showing no sign of emotion on his face.


567. It all started in 2011, when Topher White visited Indonesia as a volunteer.


568. Her family name, Mankiller, which came from her great-great-grandfather, actually means a warrior protector of Cherokee villages.


569. When it does not develop, the right side, which deals with intuition, grows more to help out.


570. 🥕 Rivera, who was closest to the dispenser, spun around.


571. Slowly the trapezoid becomes thinner and thinner, and all that is projected on the retina is a vertical line, which is the thickness of the door.


572. By 1919, when female runners wore shorts to participate in track events, people raised their eyebrows a bit, but no one ordered them off the field.


573. By 'happiness' is meant something rather peculiar, that is, the subjective state of mind of well-being that people are asked to self-report according to the qualitative or numerical scale proposed in the survey question.


574. The other artist, however, won the competition, when his picture of a curtain fooled not animals, but his competitor, who tried to pull the painted curtain aside to see the picture behind it.


575. Finally, when the bladder is fully expanded, the fish is at its maximum volume and is pushed to the surface.


576. Whenever a business wants to grow, it has to find investors, who are people that are willing to give the business the money that it needs.


577. Two years later, Ynus founded the Grameen Bank, which means "village bank" in Bengali.


578. Dreams have been regarded as prophetic communications which, when properly decoded, would enable us to foretell the future.


579. After that, she worked for a government office in Washington D.C., where she was fired just because she was a woman.


580. For example, who would take our son to his day care center each morning?


581. However, that rule may have done as much harm as good.


582. People who communicate to others about themselves rather freely, who are frank and open, who express their views, opinions, knowledge, and feelings freely, and who share their knowledge and personal experiences with others can be considered as the self-disclosing type.


583. In 1887, when the land was up for sale, grandpa bought two hundred acres from the Granger family.


584. Some researchers believe it is related to damage that happens before, during, or soon after birth to the left side of the brain, which controls logic skills.


585. As you might suspect, this change is one reason why older adults do not see as well in the dark, which may account in part for their reluctance to go places at night.


586. For example, when they needed to fight under the deck, they moved the patch to the other eye.


587. Democracy differs from an authoritarian state in that the latter outlaws all but one political party, which then has full control over the agenda and legislation.


588. It is not hard to see that a strong economy, where opportunities are plentiful and jobs go begging, helps break down social barriers.


589. The top of the beetle's shell is covered with bumps that attract drops of water from the morning fog, which then roll down the wax-covered sides and straight into its mouth.


590. Luis Urzúa, who had taken a major role as a democratic leader while underground, was the last one to come up to the surface on October 13.


591. When the consumer agrees to purchase the product under the original terms, that behavior might be used by the consumer to infer his sincere interest in the product.


592. The source that showed the biggest increase was nuclear, which rose from 2.1% in 1971 to 13.8% in 2007.


593. Human conscious attention is limited by what it can attend to at any moment, which means that consciousness is restricted to a limited subset of the musical relationships.


594. Today, we are so swamped by communicative resources and so used to making full use of them, changing, juxtaposing and alternating them, that it seems almost pointless to investigate the patterns of such rapid, taken-for-granted and apparently unpredictable mixes.


595. Both describe a physical journey, reflecting the central character's mental and spiritual journey, down a river to confront the deranged Kurtz character, who represents the worst aspects of civilisation.


596. Within days he received warm grateful letters from both boys, who noted at the letters' end that he had unfortunately forgotten to include the check.


597. DJ: Dana, when I was young, I was shy like you.


598. Later, when he began to thank Hoover for his noble gesture, Hoover quickly said, "You shouldn't be thanking me, Mr・ Prime Minister.


599. In particular, they hunt monkeys, which are not easy to catch for the larger and more terrestrial chimps.


600. If that were so, why would people go to the trouble of writing poetry?


601. It is possible, though unlikely, that he is laughing at funerals, sneering at coronations, feeling malice at weddings.


602. Before the washing machine was invented, people used washboards to scrub, or they carried their laundry to riverbanks and streams, where they beat and rubbed it against rocks.


603. Mex., where she was to live for more than four months as part of an experiment aimed at examining how the stresses of long-term isolation could affect space  travel.


604. We should recognize, too, that contemporary psychology is not divided as neatly into different schools of thought, as it seemed to be in its early days.


605. While this approach can work well for problems that are similar to those previously solved, it often fails, and fails miserably, when a new problem is particularly novel.


606. Anyone looking for an alternative experience can now visit Lascaux II, an exact copy of the Great Hall of the Bulls and the Painted Gallery sections of the original cave, which was opened in 1983.


607. As a result of sensory-specific satiety, when people consume a variety of foods, they tend to overeat.


608. They point out that even infants who are born blind and deaf, who have had no chance to learn these gestures, express themselves in the same way.


609. In addition, snorers usually breathe through their mouth, rather than their nose, when they sleep.


610. If I tell you that I've just placed some fresh strawberries on the kitchen table, why should you have to detect their presence by sense of smell?


611. OK, Claire, why don't you start first?


612. One day, when I sat down with one woman and told her I would show her how to make changes to the files, she sighed with relief.


613. For example, if you have failed in a certain area before, when faced with the same situation, you anticipate what might happen in the future, and thus fear traps you in yesterday.


614. Most people are familiar with Humboldt's graphic description of the Indian method of capturing those creatures — namely, by driving the wild horses of the surrounding plains into the streams, and keeping them there until the eels, by frequent shocks, have exhausted their stored-up electricity upon them, when, becoming even more helpless than other fishes, they are readily captured.


615. They covered the courtyard in thin granite, which reflects sound well, and intentionally made the surface uneven to reflect the sound waves in all directions.


616. ''Then they would respond, 'Yes, that's true.'"


617. So, when you eat, think about how much virtual water is spent to make your food.


618. And the house he put them in became Kansong Art Museum, which was named after his pen name.


619. He attended University College London, where he studied physics, graduating with a Bachelor of Science degree in 1937.


620. According to the underlying myth of modern science, this progression is always replacing the smaller knowledge of the past with the larger knowledge of the present, which will be replaced by the yet larger knowledge of the future.


621. The painting could have stayed there unnoticed had it not been for head of arts Angela Hill, who spotted it hanging on the wall during a routine meeting.


622. In 1947, when the Dead Sea Scrolls were discovered, archaeologists set a finder's fee for each new document.


623. They perform better in endurance exercises, like long-distance running, which require slow, steady muscle activity.


624. Preteen children, who used more textisms while writing text messages, were also able to read more words on a vocabulary test relative to children who used fewer textisms in their text messages.


625. Among other things, that means that in everything you do, you need to be sufficiently upstanding so that your conduct doesn't keep you up worrying late at night.


626. Both humans and rats have evolved taste preferences for sweet foods, which provide rich sources of calories.


627. Thus we create artifacts, which form an important aspect of technologies.


628. The great explosion of scientific creativity in Europe was certainly helped by the sudden spread of information brought about by Gutenberg's use of movable type in printing and by the legitimation of everyday languages, which rapidly replaced Latin as the medium of discourse.


629. If the relationship with the mother is disrupted through separation or loss, the child will experience great sadness and distress, which can have long-lasting and even lifelong impact, depending on the severity of the loss.


630. During its first half century, games were not played at night, which meant that baseball games, like the traditional work day, ended when the sun set.


631. It is precisely the artificiality created by the rules, the distinctive problem to be solved, that gives sport its special meaning.


632. This approach has given birth to a new branch of science: biomimetics, which means the imitation of living things in nature.


633. "Louise and her siblings were always puzzled about the specifics of how their mother would actually accomplish such a task, which, thankfully, she never attempted.


634. In 1927, he traveled to Munich, Germany, where some of the most accomplished artists of the period were working.


635. Then, in the 1980s, came MTV, which became the second way to create a hit.


636. Just imagine yourself deep in thought, hearing the perfect sequence of notes in your head, when suddenly, your finger touches the actual piano key, and it doesn't sound exactly like you imagined.


637. Their resemblance to the rat is exaggerated by their thin tail, which is much longer than their overall body length.


638. If you ask her what her mother, who's waiting outside, will think is in the packet once it's been reclosed, she'll say, "Gum," because she knows her mother hasn't seen the pencil.


639. For example, José Henríquez, a religious man, tried to keep morale up, and Yonni Barrios, who had had some medical training, helped other miners with their health problems.


640. Well, when your brain is loaded with too many decisions to make, it may go on "autopilot.


641. 2- Finally, which of the following letters doesn’t belong?


642. Similarly, when famine and civil war threaten people in sub-Saharan Africa, many African-Americans are reminded of their kinship with the continent in which their ancestors originated centuries earlier, and they lobby their leaders to provide humanitarian relief.


643. They found that the tips smooth the flow of air, which helps them conserve energy when flying.


644. It is important to remember, however, that this new way of painting was challenging to its public not only in the way that it was made but also in what was shown.


645. "Puzzled, the heroine asks Miss Maudie, her kind and clever neighbor, why she should not kill a mockingbird.


646. The prominent ear tufts, which are so characteristic, are present only in winter.


647. Both humans and rats dislike bitter and sour foods, which tend to contain toxins.


648. The mine was renovated to become the vault, which can bear extreme climate changes and nuclear explosions.


649. A lady named Christine at Toms River, New Jersey, where the hurricane hit hard, was lucky enough to escape from her house before the storm hit.


650. At the Leipzig Zoo in Germany, 34 zoo chimpanzees and orangutans participating in a study were each individually tested in a room, where they were put in front of two boxes.


651. No one could deny, once they've given it any thought at all, that women are responsible for the majority of consumer purchases.


652. For example, when Alex was shown two red blocks and three green blocks and asked, 'How many red blocks' he could correctly answer, 'Two'.


653. Thomas Jefferson, who had an enduring interest in democracy, came to a similar conclusion.


654. Originating from African slaves on southern plantations, Hoppin' John is cooked mainly with black-eyed peas and rice, which represent coins.


655. However, concerns have been raised that cookies, which can track what people do online, may be violating privacy by helping companies or government agencies accumulate personal information.


656. But if your potential boss strongly prefers that you start as soon as possible, that's a valuable piece of information.


657. Incidentally, if you find yourself in this circumstance, think about it this way — if you need advice about how to go in a new direction successfully, whom should you take it from?


658. Frustrated, Harrison decided to show King George III H5, which he had begun working on while H4 was being evaluated by the Board of Longitude.


659. Socrates said that 'No man is voluntarily wicked', that one is wicked through ignorance of the good, that furthermore, the good is neither pleasure nor power and that one cannot be master of anything, whatever it is, unless one is first master of oneself.


660. If you do choose to put off discussion about a conflict, remember to take it up later, during a time of ease and sweet connection, when it can be most productive.


661. Well, that's all the time we have for today.


662. For example, when a party guest gives an elaborate description of the last time he or she went out for dinner, the listener does not need to store all the details (e.g., that the guest made a reservation, that the waitress escorted them to the table, that she brought the menu, etc.).


663. It is no wonder, then, that common subjects often appear in the paintings by both artists.


664. Oil showed the biggest decrease in electricity generation, which fell from 20.9% in 1971 to 5.6% in 2007.


665. Consequently, it would not be surprising if preverbal infants had some basic understanding of other people's emotional, nonverbal communications, which research has indicated is indeed the case.


666. In fact, one good thing about conflict is that while it is happening, neither party is left unoccupied, which suggests that, like these two children, people sometimes create conflict when they are feeling bored.


667. Water has no calories, but it takes up a space in your stomach, which creates a feeling of fullness.


668. When he was just going to move off to get into his car, Justin stopped, turned to the old man, and asked, "Tell me, sir, why did you have to call on all those names before giving Old Warrick the instruction to pull the car out of the ditch?


669. Such an approach releases too much adrenaline, which makes you nervous and unfocused.


670. However, when we share the good that we see, we let our children or our partner know that we have recognized their strengths.


671. These biological rhythms, which we experience as internal time, are probably older than sleep, developed over the course of millions of years of evolution.


672. The most powerful of fishes is the electric eel of the marshes and rivers of Brazil and Guyana, which possesses an electric apparatus sufficient, it is said, when advantageously disposed to paralyze the largest animals.


673. Most of the children, who ranged in age from 4 to 8, chose to wait, but the strategies they used differed significantly.


674. For example, Majorie Agosin documented the case of the Chilean arpilleristas, who told the story of political oppression on scraps of cloth.


675. And it is this usually imprecise psychological clock, as opposed to the time on one’s watch, that creates the perception of duration that people experience.


676. Now, there is even a new approach called biomimicry, which specifically focuses on copying things found in nature to solve human problems.


677. If you're writing to the senior vice president of marketing, who is not familiar with software applications, then you will need to "walk" that reader through your message.


678. Rather, because Kenge had lived his entire life in a dense jungle that offered no views of the horizon, he had failed to learn what most of us take for granted, namely, that things look different when they are far away.


679. This process of taking an experience from the person's " inner-self' and putting it out into the world as a physical object helps the individual become distant to the experience, which in turn makes him or her feel safer about talking about what he or she has made.


680. Near the surface, where the water is clear and there is enough light, it is quite possible for an amateur photographer to take great shots with an inexpensive underwater camera.


681. For instance, when issues arise that touch on women's rights, women start to think of gender as their principal identity.


682. By making these unique symbols and metaphors, the patient is able to now define these images on their own terms, which is an important part of recovery and self-discovery.


683. Using a new word means that you must define it, which takes attention away from your main point.


684. He is, therefore, that much more removed from the adults of his society.


685. Driving every diversion, from international warfare to international tourism, is the promise of escaping boredom at home, said Pascal in his day: "I have discovered that all the unhappiness of men arises from one single fact, that they cannot stay quietly in their own chamber."


686. The theory is that the smiles and nods of a listener signal interest and agreement, which in turn encourage the speaker to share more personal insights.


687. Examples of industry practices that have become public issues are the aggressive marketing of cigarettes overseas, where restrictions on such marketing are limited or nonexistent, as well as the marketing of cigarettes to young people in this country (for example, through advertisements that featured the controversial ‘Joe Camel’).


688. However, when the instructor suggested to students that they think about the second problem in relation to the first, 80 percent of the student participants were able to solve it.


689. She asked her mother, who just said she'd learned to do it from her own mother.


690. It must be emphasized, however, that tradition was not static, but constantly subject to minute variations appropriate to people and their circumstances.


691. Serotonin is an organic compound, found in the brain, which makes you feel good.


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301. During its first half century, games were not played at night, which meant that baseball games, like the traditional work day, ended when the sun set.


302. When we hear a story, we look for beliefs that are being commented upon.


303. They will be called upon to perform complicated tasks that will be too dangerous for humans.


304. There is also a direct effect on airline marketing techniques in the sense that these are frequently oriented to selling the total product rather than selling a particular airline.


305. She had just moved into a nice condo with her children when she was laid off and her youngest son was diagnosed with autism.


306. Some time later, they were asked to estimate the percentage of the population who would agree with each of these statements.


307. It can be composed from vignettes, or a vignette can begin or end the portrait.


308. It was divided into 500 states in AD 1500, got down to a minimum of 25 states in the 1980s, and is now up again to over 40.


309. In seconds it was gone.


310. Yet, when all six were allowed into the enclosure after the leader had been shown food, the group headed straight for the food.


311. After looking around, we walked out to see many people lined up in front of a small store where green apple gelato was served.


312. It was viewed as too informal and unprofessional in a German business setting.


313. Thus, while climate change may not impact these resources, oil and gas reserves and known or potential resources could be affected by new climate conditions, since climate change may affect access to these resources.


314. Eventually, the brokers for these large companies moved their business into a building, and the New York Stock Exchange on Wall Street was born.


315. Bad dreams, however, are caught in the net during the night and disappear as the sun rises.


316. In science, where alone something approximating to genuine knowledge is to be found, men's attitude is temporary and full of doubt.


317. Thus, infrasonic receivers need to be large and tend to be found on the large animals able to generate infrasound.


318. Also, using the Internet excessively for a long time causes the size of the thinking part of the brain to be reduced.


319. Teflon, an extremely slippery synthetic substance employed as a coating on cooking utensils, was invented in 1938, but it didn't coat its first pan till 1954.


320. New media can be defined by four characteristics simultaneously: they are media at the turn of the 20th and 21st centuries which are both integrated and interactive and use digital code and hypertext as technical means.


321. Names of products are repeated and remembered in this way.


322. In the summer of 1972, the actor Anthony Hopkins was signed to play a leading role in a film based on George Feifer's novel The Girl from Petrovka.


323. Christopher Wakling's What I Did is narrated by a six-year-old boy.


324. A nurse on the floor repeatedly suggested that the twins be kept together in one incubator.


325. Still others may have an interest in the product but do not have any money, while others might be aware of the product but are not yet interested; others might be interested but do not at present have a need for the product, and so forth.


326. One way to measure this impact is known as a carbon footprint.


327. Teacher support, in the form of administration, must become more evident in schools so that the school structure will not be strained right from the top.


328. Scientific experiments should be designed to show that your hypothesis is wrong and should be conducted completely objectively with no possible subjective influence on the outcome.


329. Policymaking is seen to be more objective when experts play a large role in the creation and implementation of the policy, and when utilitarian rationality is the dominant value that guides policy.


330. Some of us enjoy the thrill that it gives us while others are driven crazy by the constant pressure and feel that their lives are speeding up to an unacceptable degree.


331. 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.


332. This rain is known as "artificial rain."


333. They are usually made out of stone or wood, and often come in a male-female pair.


334. Here are some of Gaudi's greatest works, all of which are found in the city of Barcelona.


335. Normally, the channels were built underground, but Romans had to build them across valleys and mountains with bridges to get water from far away.


336. Thanks to the cat, his life was saved!


337. The other group was given sugar cubes.


338. The idea behind the rule is simple ― the larger fish are assumed to be older.


339. Certainly no culture is composed of herds of clones who have been defined by their environment; nevertheless, each culture is fashioned by pervading and prevailing tenets - whether they are conscious or subconscious , spoken or tacit.


340. The project was started to open the small theaters again.


341. The pull effect of a destination can be positively influenced by the introduction and reinforcement of pro-tourism policies that make a destination more accessible.


342. The novel is an allegory, meaning that the characters and objects all have a symbolic significance that is used to convey the novel's central themes and ideas.


343. And he used his canoe to bring food and water to a man who was stranded.


344. He passed on to his followers not only his answers but also the process of thinking rationally, together with an idea of what kind of explanations could be considered satisfactory.


345. The answers to these questions depend on variables that cannot be predicted in advance.


346. Rather, most SMS communications are largely composed of conventional words and phrases that are peppered with textisms here and there.


347. Some people are worried about there being fewer jobs.


348. They were permitted to look at each photo as long as they liked and then were asked to say whether it was old or new.


349. What laws can be laid down about books?


350. Today this phenomenon is known as the Benjamin Franklin effect.


351. And it's not just our efficiency that is reduced.


352. Engaging in acts that would be considered inconsequential in ordinary life also liberates us a bit, making it possible to explore our capabilities in a protected environment.


353. Blue, on the other hand, was found to increase people's creativity.


354. The first step to eliminate bias is to understand yourself and what bias you have, so that you can recognize when you are stifling creative thought and disrupt that pattern.


355. Humans are so averse to feeling that they're being cheated that they often respond in ways that seemingly make little sense.


356. If they worked in a well-organized environment for any length of time, they would be surprised at how much more productive they were.


357. That's because many of the traditional clues about identity ― someone's physical appearance and presence ― are replaced by machine-based checking of "credentials".


358. All exhibits are for sale, and all money raised will be donated to charity.


359. Millions of dollars and thousands of hours are spent each year trying to teach managers how to coach their employees and give them effective feedback.


360. Merely having goals clearly defined is not sufficient, for one must also know, moment by moment, what precisely needs to be done.


361. While 20 years ago the first steps toward climbing were taken almost exclusively on natural rock surfaces — on crags, also called climbing gardens — nowadays the beginner uses mainly an indoor-climbing gym: available at all times and in any weather, always safe but still exciting.


362. Eventually, the ants found their way from the sugar to their hole, so this new trail was being used more and more, while the old trail was being used less and less.


363. When a principle is part of a person's moral code, that person is strongly motivated toward the conduct required by the principle, and against behavior that conflicts with that principle.


364. The psychological effects of warm and cool hues seem to be used effectively by the coaches of the Notre Dame football team.


365. It was loaned to the NT Chief Minister's Office in the late 1970s, and that's where it was last seen.


366. Today, the honor is given every four years to one man and one woman.


367. This evidence includes proofs of the type presented in text books, but may also involve numerical calculations, already solved special cases, geometrical pictures, consistency with one's intuition about the field, parallels with other fields, wholly unexpected consequences which can be verified, etc.


368. I have therefore no wish to leave the firm but on the other hand I cannot afford to tum down the present offer unless some improvement in my present salary can be arranged.


369. Morgan Freeman, the famous American actor, was once asked how much happier he was after winning an Academy Award.


370. In much of social science, evidence is used only to affirm a particular theory ― to search for the positive instances that uphold it.


371. Edison is called "the father of invention" while Tesla is often known as "the man who invented the twentieth century."


372. Our descriptions of emotional experiences tend to be highly differentiated at the negative end of the spectrum with many more words to describe them.


373. Finally, although interest on traditional bank loans is generally compounded, all interest on loans from the Grameen Bank is simple.


374. If language is based on genes and is the key to cultural evolution, and Neanderthals had language, then why did the Neanderthal toolkit show so little cultural change?


375. For early societies, the answers to the most basic questions were found in religion.


376. Before he would agree to make the appearance, he carefully arranged for nearly one thousand paid applauders to be scattered throughout the audience to applaud his entrance on the platform.


377. As a result, they are usually motivated to use a lot of strategies to reduce risk.


378. In the other kind of spinning ― sometimes called throwing to prevent confusion with the first kind ― two or more fibers are twisted together to form a thread.


379. The recorded observations related to various electrical events and facts are found dating back to the fifth century BC・ The lightning in a stormy night, or the attraction between a rubbed amber and cat's fur has always provoked human curiosity.


380. As it is filled, the bladder expands.


381. One of his most frequently performed piano works, Pictures at an Exhibition, was composed in his efforts to capture what he felt about the paintings of an artist friend named Viktor Hartmann, who died at the early age of 39.


382. Today, this pricing strategy is being tried out at colleges and universities all over the nation.


383. You have to be equally skilled at both.


384. At this stage, the call appears to be an innate possible-danger-above signal because it is given as a response to any large flying object, dangerous or otherwise.


385. For instance, deciding whether to spend Saturday afternoon relaxing with your family or exercising will be determined by the relative importance that you place on family versus health.


386. Another share will be invested in the shift from coal to more expensive fuels, like conventional gas.


387. Most readers of reports and papers are reading the documents because they are interested in, and know something about, the subject.


388. To most people, keys are common tools that are used to unlock a door or start a car.


389. Who we are, the nature of our character, is revealed in how we live and how we make decisions about what we do.


390. Health is linked to ideas of agency, capability, freedom and possibility, standard entries in the roll-call of human flourishing.


391. When a company is sold, there is often a fee for transferring the company name to the new owner.


392. Between 1989 and 2007, 201 prisoners in the United States were proven innocent on the basis of DNA evidence.


393. Unfortunately, such people tend to be regarded as [desirable / undesirable] interaction partners by those with greater social skills.


394. As far as I'm concerned, my generation has worked very hard to mess up society and our planet, and now it's finally your chance to try to fix everything up.


395. Tradition and folklore define a culture over time and give the workforce a sense that they belong to something that is publicly recognized as valuable.


396. In experimental research by Arpan and Roskos-Ewoldsen, stealing thunder in a crisis situation, as opposed to allowing the information to be first disclosed by another party, resulted in substantially higher credibility ratings.


397. For example, it is documented that if people are asked to bet on whether a coin toss is heads or tails, most bet larger amounts if the coin is yet to be tossed.


398. Most commonly this is accomplished by adding chlorine.


399. For example, a long line of developmental literature shows that parental over-permissiveness is related to negative behaviors such as impulsivity and aggressiveness.


400. That is, under increasing population pressure and growing demands for cultivable land, the conversion of forest into cultivated terraces means a much higher productivity can be extracted from the same area.


401. The game soaked up the mental attention that might have otherwise moved those horrific memories to long-term memory, and so they were stored imperfectly or not at all.


402. Numbers with this special property are called perfect numbers (the first four perfect numbers are 6, 28, 496, 8128).


403. The September date has remained unchanged, even though the government was encouraged to adopt May 1 as Labour Day, the date celebrated by the majority of the world.


404. If they are allowed realistic freedom to make some of their own decisions, they tend to develop a positive orientation characterized by confidence in their ability to initiate and follow through.


405. During 2009-2010, nearly 40 percent of federal expenditures were financed by borrowing.


406. He was shocked to see that it was a map of the Pyrenees Mountains that border Spain and France, not the Swiss Alps.


407. When the user pulls the lever, the water is released and the automation refills the basin.


408. Sadness in our culture is often considered an unnecessary and undesirable emotion.


409. "Betty was hurt but wasn't particularly surprised.


410. The Post-it note was built on the back of some not-very-good glue.


411. Each trip represents a triumph of such anticipated benefits over costs, although for the many trips that are made out of habit this complicated weighing of costs and benefits does not occur before each and every trip.


412. What disturbs me is the idea that good behavior must be reinforced with incentives.


413. In German, the word mist means dirt or manure, so Country Mist makeup and the nasal spray Primatene Mist had to be renamed for the German market.


414. Minsu was very impressed by the bookmark.


415. "All the students were surprised.


416. Every day promptly at 6 p.m., everyone's desks are raised to the ceiling by iron cables, and the space is then transformed into either a dance floor or yoga studio open for free to the community.


417. Despite the fact that his first teacher told him he would never learn to draw, he was determined to succeed.


418. But even if the possibility of closing could be ruled out with certainty, it is doubtful that a store would find it advantageous to purchase doors without locks.


419. Not everything is taught at school!


420. For a woman starting pregnancy, the outcome may be compromised if she begins with too much or too little body fat.


421. The transformation of such protolanguage into language required the evolution of grammar― rules that define the order in which a finite number of words can be strung together to create an infinite number of utterances, each with a specific meaning.


422. Yet, I didn't know that the film was based on his comic book.


423. In an experiment, when people were asked to count three minutes in their heads, 25-year-olds were quite accurate, but 65-year-olds went over on average by 40 seconds.


424. Lord of the Flies is written in a very plain writing style, one which deliberately avoids highly poetic language, lengthy description, and philosophical passages.


425. Work is scheduled to begin during April 2017.


426. Under these circumstances, exchanges involving long-term commitments are hampered, and the smooth operation of markets is undermined.


427. The water that is embedded in our food and manufactured products is called "virtual water.


428. Walls were replaced by glass, and the carpets were replaced by light hardwood flooring.


429. Today visitors are fascinated by this new way of viewing animals.


430. In fact, by the time the introductions were over, he looked at his friend Bobby Wilson, and he said, "Bobby, when I get to six grade, they're going to announce my name, and I'm going to run out in the spotlight to the middle of that basketball floor.


431. Slowly the trapezoid becomes thinner and thinner, and all that is projected on the retina is a vertical line, which is the thickness of the door.


432. The great explosion of scientific creativity in Europe was certainly helped by the sudden spread of information brought about by Gutenberg's use of movable type in printing and by the legitimation of everyday languages, which rapidly replaced Latin as the medium of discourse.


433. In fact, seeds with thinner coats were preferred as they are easier to eat or process into flour, and they allow seedlings to sprout more quickly when sown.


434. We all knew from the start that e-mail was meant to be a communication mechanism, but we didn't think it would become another demanding part of our job.


435. Problems can be distinguished according to whether they are reasonable or unreasonable.


436. "If a satellite were destroyed, we would face serious problems.


437. The narratives that people create to understand their landscapes come to be viewed as marketable entities and a source of income for residents.


438. Later, as the dog learns, the spoken word can be eliminated.


439. This was demonstrated by having participants complete a recognition memory test after just viewing a sequence of 16 photographs.


440. 'Over 300 years ago La Rochefoucauld went a step further when he said: "Perfect courage is to do unwitnessed what we should be capable of doing before all men.


441. There’s no doubt that certain things, such as two and two adding up to four, must be taught as absolutely true, but the manner in which the truth is taught can vary over a wide range of methods.


442. Unfortunately, your brain is still influenced by ancient-brain thinking and may perceive going for periods of time without food (like when you skip meals) as times of famine.


443. A lucky bag is believed to bring good luck in Korea.


444. As her name was called, Gabby became more afraid of speaking before a large audience.


445. Search engines check the entire Internet to find sites that are related to the words you enter into them.


446. Through the use of the scientific method to determine the facts of any given policy situation, the power of social constructions is supposedly diminished, and solutions to social problems are discovered in an objective way.


447. As of 2018, about 380 million tons of plastic is produced worldwide each year.


448. The funnier a particular cartoon is rated by a participant, the more strongly these parts of the brain are activated.


449. Because a great deal of science fiction is rooted in science, it can be used to bring literature out of the English classroom and into the science classroom.


450. It is named after the scientist Charles Keeling.


451. When regions can no longer produce food, people will be forced to move to other areas, making them "climate refugees."


452. Inferences are conclusions based on reasons, facts, or evidence.


453. As an engineer, he was convinced that clock mechanics could solve the problem.


454. And he was known for his intensely busy and stressful lifestyle.


455. During the Japanese occupation of Korea, many Korean artworks were destroyed or taken by the Japanese.


456. Something powerful happens inside most people when they are listened to.


457. Its origin is not clear, but many say it is related to old customs.


458. Firm reminders and warnings are best conducted privately and individually (it reduces embarrassment or threat to the student and minimises the spectator effect, both of which can fuel a challenge or counter-attack).


459. We look both ways before crossing the road despite thinking about a rather depressing holiday we took in Brazil, and we put oven gloves on before reaching into the oven despite being preoccupied about whether the cabbage is overcooked.


460. For instance, one of the characteristics of normal aging is that neurons die and are not replaced.


461. Empathy should be avoided as you need to adopt a more detached approach.


462. Thus, the cylinder, which requires a little more aluminum than a sphere but stays still, is used!


463. Funding is provided by public granting agencies, like the NSF or NIH in the United States, as well as private institutes and corporations, each with their own agendas and responsibilities.


464. Some people mistakenly know that ABS(anti-lock braking system) is engaged every time the driver touches the brake pedal.


465. For example, participants were asked whether it would be more moral for AVs to sacrifice one passenger rather than kill 10 pedestrians.


466. Should the fig trees disappear, most of the fruit-eating vertebrates would be eliminated.


467. This marketing technique is called demand creation.


468. Those who interacted with others reduced their concerns by 55 percent over time, but those who were left on their own showed no improvement.


469. Raden Adjeng Kartini, a pioneer in the area of education for girls and women's rights for Indonesians, was born in Japara, the northern coastal area of Central Java, when Indonesia was under Dutch colonization.


470. This art form was first introduced in 1965 at the exhibition The Responsive Eye at the Museum of Modern Art, New York.


471. The mournful howls of wolves could be heard in the distance.


472. The housewives were asked to describe the woman who had written each list.


473. It is created with things that most people would throw away.


474. Just as it is misguided to offer your child false praise, it is also a mistake to reward all of his accomplishments.


475. All the cups and saucers were broken.


476. The machine was based on technology that even then was twenty years old, but it was not until 1930 that such a machine actually was marketed.


477. Someone might cry when they get an award because they are filled with joy.


478. So, a team of reviewers was made to provide better information on restaurants.


479. When a group of psychologists asked people to estimate how far away a bottle of water was, those who were thirsty guessed it was closer than nonthirsty people did.


480. His debut as a soloist came in 1819, and by 1828 he was made conductor of the Musical Lyceum.


481. If their choices are ridiculed, however, they tend to experience a sense of guilt and ultimately to withdraw from taking an active stance.


482. 'We veiled our own names... because ―without at the time suspecting that our mode of writing and thinking was not what is called feminine... we noticed how critics sometimes use for their chastisement the weapon of personality, and for their reward, a flattery, which is not true praise.'


483. For example, a child who is unable to cut with scissors may benefit from tearing paper or crunching newspaper.


484. It is vitally important that wherever we go and whatever we do the body temperature is maintained at the temperature at which our enzymes work best.


485. This prize is given each year to a work that "illuminates a significant and complex subject, demonstrating mastery of the subject, lucid writing and clear presentation."


486. When you are telling an employee, lawn service worker, your teenager, or anyone else, what it is that you want them to do, you may just have to repeat the order and instructions several times before the receiver really gets what it is you want done.


487. The surprised loggers fled, but White was shocked.


488. A small exploratory hole was drilled on August 22, and the camera captured a message that said, "We are still alive.


489. The problem with the controlled system is that whenever conscious control is relaxed, the automatic system is still watching for cues and may therefore flood the mind with them.


490. He was exiled to the island of Elba.


491. 8:00 pm / Fri. 7:00 pm Prices: A Seats - $120 / B Seats - $90 Running Time: 2 hours Minimum Age: Children under 7 will not be admitted.


492. Photosynthesis is considered by many to be the most important biological process on Earth.


493. Few Roman coins of any type are found after the death of Marcus Aurelius in AD 180.


494. Yet a little creature that came to be called Babel Fish evolved that, when placed in the ear, would automatically and clearly translate what a person was saying into the listener's own language.


495. Furthermore, red was found to be more effective when it comes to improving our attention to detail.


496. Then they were sold for a higher price to the people in the country.


497. Amy was too surprised to do anything but nod.


498. Walking to the bus stop used to provide at least some movement, but now most public transportation is limited, so suburban people drive everywhere.


499. The best moments usually occur when a person's body or mind is stretched to its limits in a voluntary effort to accomplish something difficult and worthwhile.


500. Having been founded to tackle this problem on a local scale, the online platform, "foodsharing∙de" allows extra food in your fridge or cupboard to be distributed to neighbors.

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201. According to the terms of the contract you signed with PEOPLEFIND, you are now legally required to take care of your financial obligation to PEOPLEFIND.


202. Then, the degree of emotional bonding in these friendships was assessed both by asking how people felt and watching how they behaved toward each other.


203. All these goods are shared and a spirit of community makes all participants happier.


204. Airplane Winglets If you look at an airplane's wings, you can sometimes see that the tips are turned upwards.


205. The view the wearer of some special device sees is projected on the screen behind him.


206. Whenever the organs are moved, the memories go with them.


207. After days of hard work, however, I was pleased that I had been part of such a worthy project as preserving the remains of the ancient Inca civilization.


208. In the nutrition industry, articles are often written discussing a new nutrient under investigation.


209. What happened was that the poster they were unable to keep was suddenly ranked as the most beautiful.


210. In martial arts, this sense of looking freshly at something is known as 'beginner's mind.


211. While the first premise may be true and while I may have 200 data items, my conclusion cannot be said to be valid or true.


212. It is more limited because the citizenry no longer meet to decide every action by a show of hands.


213. The nerves are connected to the brain and help you feel things, like temperature and pain.


214. You are seen as someone who is not only helpful, but is also a valuable resource.


215. At the actual event, however, I was surprised to meet many people who knew about my country - not only the drought and war, but the long and ancient history of Ethiopia and its multiethnic and multicultural society."


216. Later, it was given to the Tsar of Russia as a gift.


217. People feel happy when they are engaged in such activities.


218. At the end of the twentieth century, it was reopened as a tourist attraction.


219. This dynamic can be illustrated with the example of parents who place equal value on convenience and concern for the environment.


220. For example, if a student, who has a habit of submitting his assignments late, seems well liked by peers and professors but is clearly treated harshly by one of the professors, then the student seems to cause a distinctive reaction from this professor.


221. In the early 19th century, football was divided into two major categories in British public schools.


222. The teacher asks the pupil to show how these answers were obtained and notices that in doing the addition of 3 to 7, the pupil counts 'seven, eight, nine', while turning up three fingers in turn.


223. Eddie Adams was born in New Kensington, Pennsylvania.


224. Basically, those who never make mistakes are perceived as being less attractive and "likable" than those who make occasional mistakes.


225. The next message is from a girl who is worried about her shy personality.


226. But the eye sockets and the nose are not connected.


227. He tried to have a father and son relationship, but his father was not interested in him.


228. However, when your nose is stuffed, the smell cannot reach the nerve cells because of the mucus.


229. In the 1940s, however, the layers of varnish were removed and the colors were restored to their original condition.


230. Gifted children of almost any age show longer attention spans — in the things they are interested in at the moment, not necessarily in what others think they should be interested in.


231. Looking directly at him, the photographer said, "Yes, and my mother will be more than interested.


232. Traditionally, people were declared dead when their hearts stopped beating, their blood stopped circulating and they stopped breathing.


233. Early excavations were hunts for buried treasure rather than attempts to understand the past.


234. When the sheriff arrives, he discovers that Ewell was stabbed to death during the fight.


235. To celebrate Halley's great work, the comet was named after him.


236. The efficiency of this natural design is now being tested for incorporation into missions in space.


237. HP had a breakthrough with a super-accurate thermometer that was created in the HP Labs.


238. When we are the ones who need help, we are simply not attuned to the motivation others have to help us.


239. He is known to have been born in Bristol.


240. The U.S・ Constitution, the supreme law of the United States, was adopted in 1787 by representatives of the 13 newly formed states.


241. Infrasound has the special characteristic of traveling well in the ground or water; in fact, the waves of an earthquake can be thought of as a form of infrasound.


242. Gollum was created with amazing computer technology.


243. The concept, that we are allowed to experiment and make mistakes, is crucial in the development of self-esteem.


244. For this reason, the vault was nicknamed the "doomsday vault."


245. My dear Harriet, I was so delighted to receive your letter and to learn that you have been accepted to Royal Holloway.


246. This same concept was echoed by Kelly Johnson."


247. Napoleon had to be defeated.


248. Animals that had previously spent large parts of the year outdoors were now confined to indoor facilities.


249. So I really don't see why there is this heartfelt concern for how killers are executed.


250. As he made better and better spyglasses, which were later named telescopes, Galileo decided to point one at the Moon.


251. Similarly, a round coin is seen as round even when viewed from an angle at which, objectively, it should appear elliptical.


252. The answer to that can be found in the human brain.


253. Research literature on the transfer of knowledge suggests that when people acquire knowledge in one context they can seldom apply this knowledge to situations in related contexts that look superficially different from the original context, but which are related by the major idea that could be applied to solve or analyze them.


254. It is easy to blame the 'sound of a stranger' on 'poor electronics,' but this is only partly justified.


255. I was surprised to see trainers on their lunch hour sunbathing in a pile with their sea lions.


256. Some companies are mainly identified by initials.


257. When there are multiple witnesses to an event, they are not allowed to discuss it before giving their testimony.


258. The tiny house sits on wheels so it can be moved every 72 hours to comply with city law.


259. Plus there's no promo code needed; the discount will be applied automatically at the checkout.


260. It was much better than burning ropes for sure, but more importantly, it taught the students that once time was gone, it could never be recovered.


261. Those who give small amounts to many charities are not so interested in whether what they are doing helps others ─ psychologists call them warm glow givers.


262. Newly hired Indian and Pakistani assistants in a staff cafeteria at Heathrow Airport were often perceived as rude or uncooperative by their supervisors and the airport staff, while the Indian and Pakistani women complained of discrimination.


263. Hello, Mr∙ Solutions, My dream is to become a cook.


264. We are often taught to put more value in actions than words, and for good reason.


265. When we set a plan, we are very excited about it.


266. Ms・ Baker was convinced by Jean's improvement that her new teaching method was a success.


267. Richard's Lion Lights are now being used all over Kenya.


268. Instead, they will use the information that can easily be brought to mind.


269. Hence, social contracts of reciprocity ─ "I share my food with you today, and you return the favor tomorrow" ─ could not be reinforced.


270. In truth, we tend to stay the same when we are criticized.


271. It was another way of saying that he was bored.


272. However unnoticeably, maps do indeed reflect the world views of either their makers or, more probably, the supporters of their makers, in addition to the political and social conditions under which they were made.


273. "Over-hard" is fried until the white and the yolk are fully cooked.


274. "Clams are not happy when the water is low because they can easily be seen and be picked up by people.


275. So some cultural changes may be adopted quite quickly by a whole population.


276. In some cases, performance is decreased, even to the point of non-existence.


277. In Germany alone, around eleven million tons of food are wasted every year.


278. Once everyone is calm and enjoying themselves again, however, these conversations are often forgotten or put off indefinitely.


279. And yet, you can still wake up in the morning and be amazed at everything you have and everything you have achieved.


280. In Antarctica, almost everything is covered with ice and snow.


281. He was involved in India's struggle for freedom from the British rule and was even arrested in 1908.


282. ∙Taking photos is allowed inside the exhibition hall.


283. Consequently, the worker would be more prepared to respond to that unsafe scenario by having practiced the response during the mental rehearsal.


284. They are even powered by the sun and wind.


285. Such a strategy works well in holiday resorts and similar establishments which are often visited by tour or conference groups.


286. Since then, the district has been called Jangseungbaegi, and later the name was given to the station.


287. He was given a full scholarship to a university, but spent all of his time studying mathematics.


288. Ole Bull was born in Bergen, Norway, in 1810.


289. My name is Mohamed Rahman.


290. She said this practice is called "daylight savings time" or "summer time."


291. The typical plot of the novel is the protagonist's quest for authority within, therefore, when that authority can no longer be discovered outside.


292. When parents are pressed to explain their individual styles of interaction with their children, each gives equally strong rationales.


293. Like many other great things, they were invented by accident!


294. In a recent review of television policy, the Federal Communications Commission concluded that the "evidence clearly points to one conclusion: the V-Chip is of limited effectiveness in protecting children from violent television content."


295. Because it vibrates faster than the color of violet light, it is named so.


296. The Braille system, as it came to be known, made it possible to place all the world's literature at the fingertips of blind readers.


297. Why does the "pure" acting of the movies not seem unnatural to the audience, who, after all, are accustomed in real life to people whose expression is more or less indistinct?


298. We are frequently astonished when terrible misfortunes occur many years after a misunderstanding of another person.


299. Space that was constructed to accommodate business and consumer needs at the peak of the cycle remains, so vacancy rates climb and the downward trend becomes more severe.


300. People who live in the middle of the United States (in states such as Kansas, Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska, Indiana, and Wisconsin) are often referred to as “Midwesterners.” People who live in Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut are called “New Englanders.” Both Midwesterners and New Englanders have their own unique way of looking at things, but the two regions also share a great deal in common — namely, pragmatic thinking and an independent spirit.

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101. What’s more, I was surprised by how delicious they were!


102. In 1903, n-rays were supposedly discovered.


103. So, when you eat, think about how much virtual water is spent to make your food.


104. Kolam patterns are based on dots and lines.


105. In 1965, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for this work.


106. The students were told that the researchers wanted to test how well the headphones worked while they were in motion.


107. The success of this application of color can be noted in the records set by Notre Dame football teams.


108. Let's say a product, even if it has been out there for a while, is not advertised.


109. Jemison was born in Decatur, Alabama, and moved to Chicago with her family when she was three years old.


110. This right is not distributed in equal pieces but is rather conditional and restricted (citizens below the minimum age are excluded).


111. The fact that information is conveyed in this high-tech manner somehow adds authority to what is conveyed, when in fact the Internet is a global conveyer of unfiltered, unedited, untreated information.


112. And if necessary, a staff could be readily used as a weapon.


113. Frustrated, Harrison decided to show King George III H5, which he had begun working on while H4 was being evaluated by the Board of Longitude.


114. According to the underlying myth of modern science, this progression is always replacing the smaller knowledge of the past with the larger knowledge of the present, which will be replaced by the yet larger knowledge of the future.


115. So, other ingredients are added to make low fat foods taste good.


116. One of them (we'll call him the "leader") was introduced alone into an enclosure and shown either a hidden source of food or a stuffed snake.


117. Chimpanzees like chocolate chips, and thus they were faced with the problem of determining which tray had more chips on it.


118. When the twins were brought into contact with each other, the healthy twin immediately put his arms around his sick brother.


119. As a result, we are still guessing at what early tools were used for as well as what early art forms might have meant for the people who produced them, even when such drawings, often animals, are very recognizable.


120. As protective charms, hamsas are commonly used in jewelry and wall hangings often with an eye symbol in the center of an open hand.


121. The Central Institute of Restoration was founded in l939 to conserve and restore artworks and archaeological findings using scientific technology.


122. From the standpoint of evolutionary theory, altruism may be seen as part of our genetic nature, as it may have helped enable ancestral humans who carried our genetic code to survive a harsh and dangerous environment.


123. State department of education ratings of cyberschools in 2011 – 12 showed that more than 70 percent were rated as academically unacceptable.


124. When a child of 8 gets a new pair of sport shoes, each part of the shoe, from the laces to the logo, is carefully examined and compared to the features of other shoes.


125. The responses of even the most well-meaning subjects are going to be filtered by all kinds of factors usually involved in self-perception, not to mention the additional problems that can occur when an individual is anxious, angry, suspicious, or mentally ill.


126. The trucks are filled with dry ice to prevent the ice cream from melting.


127. That, however, would have brought another problem, for lions are the top tourist attraction in Kenya and are protected by law.


128. This phenomenon can be modeled by exploiting a variant of the commonly cited safety rule that drivers should stay 2 – 3 seconds behind the vehicles they follow.


129. Scientific discoveries are being brought to fruition at a faster rate than ever before.


130. In the classical fairy tale the conflict is often permanently resolved.


131. Would my money be better spent on something else?


132. People who are stuck and want you to stay stuck, or people who have successfully moved forward in their lives?


133. Particularly in the United States, a substantial portion of our identities is connected with the organizational memberships we claim.


134. Do you know why this match is called a derby?


135. Frequently checked out books, that is, popular books (ex, the Dan Brown blockbusters), will be made available in special spaces near the entrance of the library to make it easy for members to find them.


136. In early autumn, the skies in the South of France are filled with people flying!


137. All reflective men today are joined as citizens of the world."


138. Batteries were required and had to be replaced, and the shaky hand movements of a nervous lecturer were shown in the sudden motion of the glowing red dot.


139. Active, energetic, rambunctious boys are not bad boys and should not be made to feel so.


140. If language is viewed as any system of communication, the answer is "Yes."


141. These huge increases in investment would not come about if investment was left to the market.


142. Her signs were usually limited to two or three sign combinations, such as "PLAY ME NIM" or "GIVE ORANGE ME," and they were restricted to the topics of eating, drinking, and playing.


143. It is known as the smallest state in the world.


144. At first it was believed that this was caused by a decrease in the sun's brightness.


145. These additional costs might be thought of as a metaphorical 'low ball' that the salesperson throws the consumer.


146. Plastics can also be used as vehicles for chemical contaminants such as persistent organic pollutants and heavy metals.


147. If some people work harder at school, pass their exams, and get into medical school, then at least part (but not necessarily all) of their higher salary as a doctor can be attributed to effort.


148. In the United States, it is estimated that residential mothers and fathers now spend 50 percent more time with their children than they did in 1975.


149. We are sure that you will be satisfied with our well-experienced tutors.


150. Most preservation is spent on these species.


151. Consumers like a bottle of wine more if they are told it cost ninety dollars a bottle than if they are told it cost ten.


152. They are battery powered and remote controlled.


153. Beautiful and interesting sounds can be made, assuming you know how to make them - or, more precisely, how to make other musicians make them.


154. The system's methods remain evident so that even if Tom were tempted to trust it, the silence and secrecy promotes distrust, just as top-down business decisions made without collaboration are distrusted.


155. If he uses a different form of gesture, he is recognized as an enemy and can be eaten by his partner.


156. Today such tragedies are seen live on television in vivid color.


157. Mathematics may be considered a communication skill of the highest type, frictionless so to speak; and at the opposite pole from mathematics, the fruits of science show the practical benefits of science without the use of words.


158. There has been a qualitative shift from earlier eras in which specific tools and techniques were developed through the freely chosen creativity of human beings to meet specific, limited objectives.


159. Because there is still so much we do not know about nature, there is still much left to discover.


160. In one study, children in grades one through four were separated randomly into two groups and presented with the same fictional story.


161. So how are canned meat and email connected?


162. The longer we stay actively engaged in complex thinking and meaningful work, the more energized the brain is and the more cognitive reserves are being built.


163. Innovation can be induced by other things - ranging from social norms to tax credits to prizes!


164. Nora disappears out of the front door and we are left with many unanswered questions such as "Where did Nora go␦" and "What will happen to her?"


165. As agriculture becomes less dependent upon human muscular power, the difference in labor productivity between the two genders might be expected to narrow.


166. A security guard came under immediate suspicion because the blaze broke out in an area where he was assigned.


167. Traditionally, art was created only for wealthy, intellectual people.


168. It is called a fennec fox.


169. The Stranglers undoubtedly made one another suspect that they were unqualified to write, and in time they became convinced of it.


170. It is no accident that fish have bodies which are streamlined and smooth, with fins and a powerful tail.


171. The Board of Longitude, however, was not impressed by his idea.


172. When the same individuals had to report their happiness in a different context later on, more positive ratings were obtained if they had been induced to think about positive events and more negative ratings if they had been induced to think about negative events.


173. If a forest of this size is cut, 15,000 tons of CO² are released into the air.


174. "Frederick was so pleased with this response that he handed his own watch over to the man, saying, "Take this so you may be able to tell the hour also."


175. Some studies suggest that variations in residents’ feelings about tourism’s relationship to environmental damage are related to the type of tourism, the extent to which residents feel the natural environment needs to be protected, and the distance residents live from the tourist attractions.


176. Paderewski was relieved.


177. On October 9, a rescue hole was finally drilled through to the miners in their shelter.


178. Human beings are driven by a natural desire to form and maintain interpersonal relationships.


179. Once you are registered, we will match you with a perfect tutor and contact you to arrange your schedule.


180. Even if it is correct to say that we express and represent our thoughts in language, it may be a big mistake to suppose that there are structural similarities between what is doing the representing and what is represented.


181. However, you may be surprised by the special meanings of keys in other cultures.


182. It is supposed that these animals effectively call out their "name" when they emit their signature-whistle and thereby broadcast their identity and give away their location.


183. Obviously, technology that produces pollution is generally cheaper, but now that it has been decided that cleaner cars are wanted, less polluting cars will be produced; cars which scarcely pollute at all could even be made.


184. But if there is plenty of blue-colored wild flora nearby, bees may prefer the blue flowers to mustard.


185. We were surprised when some of the shop owners greeted us in Korean.


186. Fish advisories have been issued for many lakes in the United States; these recommend limits on the number of times per month particular species of fish should be consumed.


187. Many years ago, a Hungarian military patrol was caught by a fierce snowstorm in the Swiss Alps.


188. These coffeehouses sprouted all over London and came to be called “Penny Universities.” So popular did they become that the amount of small change minted was inadequate for the demand and the coffeehouses and the houses had to issue tokens that were generally acceptable within the immediate area.


189. Similarly, when purchasing my home, I discovered that the seller was very interested in closing the deal as soon as possible.


190. When you walk into a store, you are besieged by information.


191. It is brightly colored, with distinctive markings on its body.


192. Before the bridge was built, there were two old bridges.


193. A cow is usually raised for three years for its meat.


194. Children with African origins typically are more advanced in motor development than children with European origins: they throw farther, balance better, and run better.


195. It appears that most freshwater life did not originate in fresh water, but is secondarily adapted, having passed from ocean to land and then back again to fresh water.


196. 'More than 20 words to say what can be said in one.


197. Moreover, the experience would be ruined if people were to behave in such a way.


198. Those charged with increasing tourism must still develop a promotional strategy, but it will be based on encouraging visitors to co-brand along with the professionals.


199. And so it was done.


200. Much to her delight, Masami was invited in.



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From The Number of Sents: 21483

TARGET: w


1. He can never learn to control his energy if he is not allowed to experience the fullness of its power.


2. Some of the most extensive research on the subject of success was conducted by George and Alec Gallup.


3. Students are encouraged to read further.


4. For example, in a factory, the temperature was maintained at 72℉ and the walls were painted a cool blue-green.


5. A moment later, the tree was struck by lightning.


6. To build a hydroelectric dam, a large area must be flooded behind the dam.


7. However, certain features are commonly found.


8. Ever since the first scientific opinion polls revealed that most Americans are at best poorly informed about politics, analysts have asked whether citizens are equipped to play the role democracy assigns them.


9. Strong influence on traffic jams and pollution can be felt from Toronto to New York, as each shared vehicle replaces around 10 personal cars.


10. Cats were sold at a low price, but pigs were not.


11. In any case, it is assumed that the existing set of conditions is much less satisfactory and that a new set of conditions would be desirable.


12. Qat is used as a mild stimulant, similar to tea or coffee.


13. Once a hand or gripper has been directed to an object by reaching, it can be grasped.


14. Doctors are human, health care is complex, and time spent with each patient is restricted.


15. I chose a small but heavy one that was wrapped in shiny silver foil and a red ribbon.


16. In fact, many animals decrease their activity in the heat and increase it in the cold, and people who are allowed to choose levels of physical activity in hot or cold environments adjust their workload precisely to body temperature.


17. Since there was no electricity where the phone needed to be placed, the device had to be able to power itself.


18. On the other hand, halfhearted individuals are seldom distinguished for courage even when it involves their own welfare.


19. Few people laugh first thing in the morning, so broadcast comedy programs are scheduled for the relaxing parts of the day.


20. More accurate techniques have since been devised to read further back into geological time, so that events can be arranged in the order of their occurrences (age) and for specific spans of time.


21. In contrast to the diversity it is applied to, the meaning of this term continues to be mostly based on Western views and values.


22. Various media outlets report stories of people tying themselves to trees in order to save spotted owls, or of large-scale construction projects that are halted because an endangered frog's habitat might be in jeopardy.


23. Both taxi and bus drivers use a part of their brain called the hippocampus to navigate routes that can sometimes be very complicated.


24. The bridge was built with giant arches made of stones.


25. After "testing the headsets," the students were asked to fill out a questionnaire about not only the headsets, but also the university's tuition.


26. But in countries where popular opinion is taken into consideration, no mutually acceptable solution has been found.


27. In addition, certain shapes in his paintings were associated with particular feelings.


28. Human tears are made up mostly of water.


29. But then, you realize that mostly there's something you may find odd about the way English is used there.


30. Group 1 was asked by the researcher to return some of the prize money.


31. But it might be truer to say that our existence is characterized by dependence and affliction.


32. The basic economic argument for congestion charges is well established.


33. It was originally built in the home of the first King of Prussia.


34. Language skills, like any other skills, can be acquired only through practice.


35. For example, there is the myth that older consumers are fixed on certain products and are unwilling to try new alternative products.


36. Therefore, the restoration and protection of the nation' cultural heritage is guaranteed by the Italian Constitution.


37. By early afternoon, working in the heat and the thin air, I was exhausted.


38. The first Everesters were obliged to trek 400 miles from Darjeeling across the Tibetan plateau to reach the foot of the mountain.


39. It was named the Piri Reis Map.


40. "The professor could see that I was determined.


41. They were usually placed at the entrance of villages.


42. This is one very good reason why friends and close associates should be chosen carefully, not simply encountered and accepted.


43. Today, some of the world's most famous Mayan archaeological sites are found in the northern parts of the country.


44. As new ways of controlling the environment are achieved, motor development provides the infant with a growing sense of competence and mastery, and it contributes in important ways to the infant's perceptual and cognitive understanding of the world.


45. His wish was granted, and he was exuberant until he touched his beloved daughter, who turned into a gold statue.


46. Since all people have a biological need for food in order to survive, this need may be seen as being independent of any social standard — but only if a person is considered simply to be a biological organism.


47. When given these instructions, people are quite good at repeating the words that were spoken to that ear.


48. Acrylamide is found in burnt starchy foods, and studies have shown that it can damage our DNA.


49. Having reminded her students many times that composers like Wagner depended on the listeners' remembering the earlier theme to recognize its later use, she was determined to make her students understand that themes recur throughout a piece.


50. You may be surprised by the answer.


51. The main food crop was the wild mongongo nut, millions of which were harvested every year.


52. Afraid of the world that is portrayed on TV, people stay in their homes with close family and do not build bonds with their neighbors.


53. In an otherwise boring world, stimulation and arousal are sought through new and novel consumption experiences.


54. They are interested in hearing about you — your academic plans, activities, and career goals, as well as what this scholarship means to you.


55. The principle of distinctiveness suggests that we make attributions about people based on whether their particular characteristics and actions are associated with specific outcomes unique to the situation.


56. Now they are gone!


57. Consequently, it would not be surprising if preverbal infants had some basic understanding of other people's emotional, nonverbal communications, which research has indicated is indeed the case.


58. Any errors by the referees were viewed as part of the game.


59. In a modern world that often values technology over nature, it's interesting that some of the most creative design ideas were taken from the natural world.


60. This increased frequency of negative (compared to positive) descriptors is evidenced in a study which asked participants to rate an exhaustive list of emotion words, over 550 in total.


61. Even though many people know that these analogies are not based on science, the expressions do not easily disappear in the language.


62. At the end of the round of introductions, the students were asked to write down the names of as many other students as they could remember.


63. The more denim was washed, the softer it would get, eventually achieving that worn-in, made-just-for-me feeling you probably get with your favorite jeans.


64. When food is scarce, as it usually is in their native desert habitat, locusts are born with coloring designed for camouflage and lead solitary lives.


65. Balance can be kept when your center of gravity (COG) is over your base of support (BOS).


66. "This point is well illustrated by the number of low­budget movies that have succeeded with little or no advertising ― and by the number of big­budget flops.


67. I was disappointed to find out the fare to ride the Grand Canal by myself was so expensive that I could not afford it.


68. Externalization is the foundation from which many narrative conversations are built.


69. The one area in which the Internet could be considered an aid to thinking is the rapid acquisition of new information.


70. The kitchen was packed with wives, all of them laughing and talking loud, none of them being helpful except for Lois from next door, who was pulling bowls out of the refrigerator.


71. I have always taught my children that politeness, learning, and order are good things, and that something good is to be desired and developed for its own sake.


72. A defense is required against any suggestion that political disagreement is not the normal state of things.


73. Relaxation enables us to go inward, to make connections that might go unrecognized when we are mentally distracted or experiencing stress.


74. Many significant changes were triggered by the arrival of Christopher Columbus in the Americas in 1492.


75. If he tried to carve it out of stone, the weight of the body would make it break off at the legs long before it was finished.


76. That is why he traveled to London to buy a copy of the book.


77. Many are not even connected to the electrical panel.


78. Boo is known as a "Monster" for stabbing his father in his leg when he was a boy, but no one actually witnessed the accident.


79. It can be made using a strong piece of paper, a microlens, a small light, and a watch battery.


80. The ancient distaff and spindle are examples that were replaced by the spinning wheel in the Middle ages.


81. If differences in well-being are determined by circumstances lying outside of an individual's control, they are unjust.


82. In a study of army tank crews, one set of tank commanders was told that some members of their assigned crews had exceptional abilities while others were only average.


83. Residents commonly have positive views on the economic and some sociocultural influences of tourism on quality of life, but their reactions to environmental impacts are mixed.


84. On October 13, 2010, thirty three Chilean miners who had been buried inside the San José mine for 69 days were finally rescued.


85. They point out that even infants who are born blind and deaf, who have had no chance to learn these gestures, express themselves in the same way.


86. A bias occurs when what the scientist expects changes how the results are viewed.


87. At the close of the Ice Age the entire region was submerged beneath a lake of meltwater, and overflow from the lake flowed into the Pacific Ocean through the Snake and Columbia rivers.


88. In television advertisements many airlines try to interest the viewer in a particular destination, and only as an afterthought do they suggest the airline which might be used.


89. Under Hardy's guidance, Ramanujan's genius was finally allowed to fully develop.


90. In the Netherlands, for example, where one fourth of its land area is located below sea level, an interesting form of shoes developed as a way of getting around the muddy roads.


91. Orphaned when his parents died during World War II, he was raised by his relatives.


92. Unfortunately, while he was gone, the arsonists entered the area he should have been guarding and started the fire.


93. From a correlational observation, we conclude that one variable is related to a second variable.


94. Some architects have decided to respond to what they perceive to be the potentially formless and anonymous nature of the city by creating buildings that are obviously strange and are intended to become urban landmarks.


95. When the man's wife enters the room, she is surprised by the delicious aroma of the outstanding dinner he has prepared.


96. If an administration's position is not supported by the data, it may ask for further studies rather than  accept /uncover what is offered.


97. But they were convinced the devices were also quite dangerous.


98. The rights to the names, Indian Motorcycles and Pan Am Airlines, were sold years after those companies went bankrupt.


99. Obviously, a third variable is related to both—perhaps preference for risk.


100. They are more technically called cleptoparasites.

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 🎤 단어의 의미 


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[1803H1-18]
 What is the topic sentence? 🚡

(1) We are excited to announce the opening of the newest Sunshine Stationery Store in Raleigh, North Carolina! (2) As you know, the Sunshine Stationery Store has long been the industry standard for quality creative paper products of all kinds, and we couldn't have picked a better location for our next branch than the warm and inviting city of Raleigh. (3) We are thrilled to welcome you to the Grand Opening of the Raleigh store on March 15, 2018. (4) The opening celebration will be from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. ― a full 12 hours of fun! (5) We would love to show you all the Raleigh store has to offer and hope to see you there on the 15th! 

[1803H1-19]
 What is the topic sentence? 🏯

(1) One day I caught a taxi to work. (2) When I got into the back seat, I saw a brand new cell phone sitting right next to me. (3) I asked the driver, "Where did you drop the last person off␦" and showed him the phone. (4) He pointed at a girl walking up the street. (5) We drove up to her and I rolled down the window yelling out to her. (6) She was very thankful and by the look on her face I could tell how grateful she was. (7) Her smile made me smile and feel really good inside. (8) After she got the phone back, I heard someone walking past her say, "Today's your lucky day!" 

[1803H1-20]
 What is the topic sentence? 🏯

(1) Serene tried to do a pirouette in front of her mother but fell to the floor. (2) Serene's mother helped her off the floor. (3) She told her that she had to keep trying if she wanted to succeed. (4) However, Serene was almost in tears. (5) She had been practicing very hard the past week but she did not seem to improve. (6) Serene's mother said that she herself had tried many times before succeeding at Serene's age. (7) She had fallen so often that she sprained her ankle and had to rest for three months before she was allowed to dance again. (8) Serene was surprised. (9) Her mother was a famous ballerina and to Serene, her mother had never fallen or made a mistake in any of her performances. (10) Listening to her mother made her realize that she had to put in more effort than what she had been doing so far. 

[1803H1-21]
 What is the topic sentence? 🚏

(1) Many people think of what might happen in the future based on past failures and get trapped by them. (2) For example, if you have failed in a certain area before, when faced with the same situation, you anticipate what might happen in the future, and thus fear traps you in yesterday. (3) Do not base your decision on what yesterday was. (4) Your future is not your past and you have a better future. (5) You must decide to forget and let go of your past. (6) Your past experiences are the thief of today's dreams only when you allow them to control you. 

[1803H1-22]
 What is the topic sentence? 🚖

(1) Storyteller Syd Lieberman suggests that it is the story in history that provides the nail to hang facts on. (2) Students remember historical facts when they are tied to a story. (3) According to a report, a high school in Boulder, Colorado, is currently experimenting with a study of presentation of historical material. (4) Storytellers present material in dramatic context to the students, and group discussion follows. (5) Students are encouraged to read further. (6) In contrast, another group of students is involved in traditional research/report techniques. (7) The study indicates that the material presented by the storytellers has much more interest and personal impact than that gained via the traditional method. 

[1803H1-23]
 What is the topic sentence? 

(1) Experts advise people to "take the stairs instead of the elevator" or "walk or bike to work." (2) These are good strategies: climbing stairs provides a good workout, and people who walk or ride a bicycle for transportation most often meet their needs for physical activity. (3) Many people, however, face barriers in their environment that prevent such choices. (4) Few people would choose to walk or bike on roadways that lack safe sidewalks or marked bicycle lanes, where vehicles speed by, or where the air is polluted. (5) Few would choose to walk up stairs in inconvenient and unsafe stairwells in modern buildings. (6) In contrast, people living in neighborhoods with safe biking and walking lanes, public parks, and freely available exercise facilities use them often — their surroundings encourage physical activity. 

[1803H1-24]
 What is the topic sentence? 🎡

(1) How can we teach our children to memorize a broad range of information? (2) Let me prove to you that all people are potential geniuses, with brains designed to store, control, and remember large amounts of information through memorization by repetition. (3) Imagine the grocery store where you shop the most. (4) If I asked you to tell me where the eggs are, would you be able to do so? (5) Of course you could. (6) The average grocery store carries over 10,000 items, yet you can quickly tell me where to find most of them. (7) Why? (8) The store is organized by category, and you have shopped in the store repeatedly. (9) In other words, you've seen those organized items over and over again, and the arrangement by category makes it easy for you to memorize the store's layout. (10) You can categorize 10,000 items from just one store. 

[1803H1-28]
 What is the topic sentence? 

(1) Mae C. Jemison was named the first black woman astronaut in 1987. (2) On September 12, 1992, she boarded the space shuttle Endeavor as a science mission specialist on the historic eight-day flight. (3) Jemison left the National Aeronautic and Space Administration (NASA) in 1993. (4) She was a professor of Environmental Studies at Dartmouth College from 1995 to 2002. (5) Jemison was born in Decatur, Alabama, and moved to Chicago with her family when she was three years old. (6) She graduated from Stanford University in 1977 with a degree in chemical engineering and Afro-American studies. (7) Jemison received her medical degree from Cornell Medical School in 1981. 

[1803H1-29]
 What is the topic sentence? 🏯

(1) The first underwater photographs were taken by an Englishman named William Thompson. (2) In 1856, he waterproofed a simple box camera, attached it to a pole, and lowered it beneath the waves off the coast of southern England. (3) During the 10minute exposure, the camera slowly flooded with seawater, but the picture survived. (4) Underwater photography was born. (5) Near the surface, where the water is clear and there is enough light, it is quite possible for an amateur photographer to take great shots with an inexpensive underwater camera. (6) At greater depths — it is dark and cold there — photography is the principal way of exploring a mysterious deep-sea world, 95 percent of which has never been seen before. 

[1803H1-30]
 What is the topic sentence? 🗼

(1) Honesty is a fundamental part of every strong relationship. (2) Use it to your advantage by being open with what you feel and giving a truthful opinion when asked. (3) This approach can help you escape uncomfortable social situations and make friends with honest people. (4) Follow this simple policy in life — never lie. (5) When you develop a reputation for always telling the truth, you will enjoy strong relationships based on trust. (6) It will also be more difficult to manipulate you. (7) People who lie get into trouble when someone threatens to uncover their lie. (8) By living true to yourself, you'll avoid a lot of headaches. (9) Your relationships will also be free from the poison of lies and secrets. (10) Don't be afraid to be honest with your friends, no matter how painful the truth is. (11) In the long term, lies with good intentions hurt people much more than telling the truth. 

[1803H1-31]
 What is the topic sentence? 🎡

(1) Since a great deal of day-to-day academic work is boring and repetitive, you need to be well motivated to keep doing it. (2) A mathematician sharpens her pencils, works on a proof, tries a few approaches, gets nowhere, and finishes for the day. (3) A writer sits down at his desk, produces a few hundred words, decides they are no good, throws them in the bin, and hopes for better inspiration tomorrow. (4) To produce something worthwhile — if it ever happens — may require years of such fruitless labor. (5) The Nobel Prizewinning biologist Peter Medawar said that about four-fifths of his time in science was wasted, adding sadly that "nearly all scientific research leads nowhere." (6) What kept all of these people going when things were going badly was their passion for their subject. (7) Without such passion, they would have achieved nothing. 

[1803H1-32]
 What is the topic sentence? 🎡

(1) Within a store, the wall marks the back of the store, but not the end of the marketing. (2) Merchandisers often use the back wall as a magnet, because it means that people have to walk through the whole store. (3) This is a good thing because distance traveled relates more directly to sales per entering customer than any other measurable consumer variable. (4) Sometimes, the wall's attraction is simply appealing to the senses, a wall decoration that catches the eye or a sound that catches the ear. (5) Sometimes the attraction is specific goods. (6) In supermarkets, the dairy is often at the back, because people frequently come just for milk. (7) At video rental shops, it's the new releases. 

[1803H1-33]
 What is the topic sentence? 

(1) The good news is, where you end up ten years from now is up to you. (2) You are free to choose what you want to make of your life. (3) It's called free will and it's your basic right. (4) What's more, you can turn it on instantly! (5) At any moment, you can choose to start showing more respect for yourself or stop hanging out with friends who bring you down. (6) After all, you choose to be happy or miserable. (7) The reality is that although you are free to choose, you can't choose the consequences of your choices. (8) It's a package deal. (9) As the old saying goes, "If you pick up one end of the stick, you pick up the other." (10) Choice and consequence go together like mashed potatoes and gravy. 

[1803H1-34]
 What is the topic sentence? 🛳

(1) Just think for a moment of all the people upon whom your participation in your class depends. (2) Clearly, the class requires a teacher to teach it and students to take it. (3) However, it also depends on many other people and organizations. (4) Someone had to decide when the class would be held and in what room, communicate that information to you, and enroll you in that class. (5) Someone also had to write a textbook, and with the assistance of many other people — printers, editors, salespeople, and bookstore employees — it has arrived in your hands. (6) Thus, a class that seems to involve just you, your fellow students, and your teacher is in fact the product of the efforts of hundreds of people. 

[1803H1-35]
 What is the topic sentence? 🏯

(1) Suppose that you are busy working on a project one day and you have no time to buy lunch. (2) All of a sudden your best friend shows up with your favorite sandwich. (3) He tells you that he knows you are busy and he wants to help you out by buying you the sandwich. (4) In this case, you are very likely to appreciate your friend's help. (5) However, if a stranger shows up with the same sandwich and offers it to you, you won't appreciate it. (6) Instead, you would be confused. (7) You would likely think "Who are you, and how do you know what kind of sandwich I like to eat?" (8) The key difference between these two cases is the level of trust. (9) You trust your best friend so much that you won't worry about him knowing you too well, but you certainly would not give the same level of trust to a stranger. 

[1803H1-36]
 What is the topic sentence? 🚔

(1) If you start collecting and analyzing data without first clarifying the question you are trying to answer, you're probably doing yourself more harm than good. (2) You'll end up drowning in a flood of information and realize only later that most of that research was a waste of time. (3) To avoid this problem, you should develop a problem-solving design plan before you start collecting information. (4) In the design plan, you clarify the issues you are trying to solve, state your hypotheses, and list what is required to prove those hypotheses. (5) Developing this plan before you start researching will greatly increase your problem-solving productivity. (6) In addition, putting your plan down on paper will not only clarify your thoughts. (7) If you're working in a group, this plan will also help your team focus on what to do and provide the starting point for your group brainstorming. 

[1803H1-37]
 What is the topic sentence? 

(1) The philosopher GA Cohen provides an example of a camping trip as a metaphor for the ideal society. (2) On a camping trip, he argues, it is unimaginable that someone would say something like, "I cooked the dinner and therefore you can't eat it unless you pay me for my superior cooking skills." (3) Rather, one person cooks dinner, another sets up the tent, another purifies the water, and so on, each in accordance with his or her abilities. (4) All these goods are shared and a spirit of community makes all participants happier. (5) A camping trip where each person attempted to gain the maximum rewards from the other campers in exchange for the use of his or her talents would quickly end in disaster and unhappiness. (6) Moreover, the experience would be ruined if people were to behave in such a way. (7) So, we would have a better life in a more equal and cooperative society. 

[1803H1-38]
 What is the topic sentence? 🗼

(1) In the classical fairy tale the conflict is often permanently resolved. (2) Without exception, the hero and heroine live happily ever after. (3) By contrast, many present-day stories have a less definitive ending. (4) Often the conflict in those stories is only partly resolved, or a new conflict appears making the audience think further. (5) This is particularly true of thriller and horror genres, where audiences are kept on the edge of their seats throughout. (6) Consider Henrik Ibsen's play, A Doll's House, where, in the end, Nora leaves her family and marriage. (7) Nora disappears out of the front door and we are left with many unanswered questions such as "Where did Nora go␦" and "What will happen to her?" (8) An open ending is a powerful tool, providing food for thought that forces the audience to think about what might happen next. 

[1803H1-39]
 What is the topic sentence? 🎠

(1) In 2006, 81% of surveyed American shoppers said that they considered online customer ratings and reviews important when planning a purchase. (2) Though an online comment — positive or negative — is not as powerful as a direct interpersonal exchange, it can be very important for a business. (3) Many people depend on online recommendations. (4) And young people rely heavily on them and are very likely to be influenced by the Internet when deciding what movie to see or what album to purchase. (5) These individuals often have wide-reaching social networks and communicate regularly with dozens of others — with the potential to reach thousands. (6) It has been reported that young people aged six to 24 influence about 50% of all spending in the US. 

[1803H1-40]
 What is the topic sentence? 🏕

(1) Crows are a remarkably clever family of birds. (2) They are capable of solving many more complex problems compared to other birds, such as chickens. (3) After hatching, chickens peck busily for their own food much faster than crows, which rely on the parent bird to bring them food in the nest. (4) However, as adults, chickens have very limited hunting skills whereas crows are much more flexible in hunting for food. (5) Crows also end up with bigger and more complex brains. (6) Their extended period between hatching and flight from the nest enables them to develop intelligence. 

[1803H1-4142]
 What is the topic sentence? 🚍

(1) Think of the most famous scientists you know — Isaac Newton, Louis Pasteur, Albert Einstein, Thomas Edison, Pierre and Marie Curie, Stephen Hawking, and so on. (2) What do all these people have in common? (3) Well, for one thing, they're all very smart. (4) In some cases they even taught themselves most of what they knew about their particular subject. (5) In fact, Sir Isaac Newton had to invent a new branch of mathematics (calculus) just to solve the problems he was trying to do in physics. (6) There is something else they all had in common that set them apart from the other smart people of their time — their ability to ask questions. (7) Just having a good brain isn't always enough. (8) To be a great scientist, you need to be able to look at a problem that hundreds, maybe even thousands, of people have already looked at and have been unable to solve, and ask the question in a new way. (9) Then you take that question and come up with a new way to answer it. (10) That is what made Newton and the others so famous. (11) They coupled intelligence with a curiosity that said, "I want to know the answer to this." (12) After coming up with the right questions, they discovered ways of answering those questions and became famous for their discoveries. 

[1803H1-4345]
 What is the topic sentence? 🏟

(1) When Patsy McLeod took freshly washed clothes to her former master Ben Wilson's house, her nine-year-old daughter Mary went along. (2) When they arrived at the big house, the McLeods walked to the rear entrance used for blacks. (3) In 1884 there was sharp segregation between the races in Mayesville, South Carolina. (4) While her mother went inside the house, Mary wandered over to a children's playhouse and looked inside. (5) Two white girls about her age sat among a lot of dolls. (6) Hello, Mary! (7) Do you want to come in? (8) One of them called out. (9) Mary happily went into the playhouse. (10) The white child handed a doll to the black girl, saying "You can watch the baby while I have tea with my friend." (11) While Mary walked the doll around the room, her eyes fell upon a book; she picked it up in awe. (12) Her parents had a Bible in their cabin, but no one could read it. (13) Unexpectedly the white girl grabbed the book. (14) Put that down, she yelled. (15) You don't know how to read. (16) Feeling shameful, Mary handed the doll back to the white child and rejoined her mother. (17) On the walk back to their farm, she wondered why white people had all kinds of nice things and why, above all, they could read while black people couldn't. (18) She decided to learn to read. (19) At home the little girl asked her father to let her go to school, but he told her calmly, "There isn't any school." (20) One day, however, a black woman in city clothes changed that. (21) Emma Wilson came to the McLeod cabin, explaining that she would open a new school in Mayesville for black children. (22) The school will begin after the cotton-picking season, she said. (23) Mary's parents nodded in agreement. (24) Mrs. McLeod also nodded toward her daughter. (25) Young Mary was very excited. (26) I'm gonna read? (27) Miss Wilson? (28) She smiled at Mary. 


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1803H2 | Since 2005 위스마트, 임희재 | WAYNE.TISTORY.COM | +821033383436 | 제작일 181015 14:52:14



1803H2 | Since 2005 위스마트, 임희재 | WAYNE.TISTORY.COM | +821033383436 | 제작일 181015 14:52:14


 🎤 단어의 의미 


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 🎟 글의 주제 


[1803H2-20]
 What is the topic sentence? 🛳

(1) You are far more likely to eat what you can see in plain view. (2) Organize the foods in your kitchen so the best choices are most visible and easily accessible. (3) It also helps to hide poor choices in inconvenient places. (4) An even better idea is to simply get rid of anything with low nutritional value that you may be tempted to eat. (5) Put fruits, vegetables, and other healthy options at eye level in your refrigerator, or leave them out on the table. (6) Even when you aren't hungry, simply seeing these items will plant a seed in your mind for your next snack. (7) Also consider taking small bags of nuts, fruits, or vegetables with you when you are away from home. (8) That way, you can satisfy a midafternoon craving even if no good options are available. 

[1803H2-21]
 What is the topic sentence? 🗼

(1) Playing any game that involves more than one person teaches kids teamwork, the consequences of cheating, and how to be a good team player whether they win or lose. (2) It's not hard to see how those skills make it into the daily lives of kids. (3) But like all things we hope to teach our children, learning to cooperate or to compete fairly takes practice. (4) Humans aren't naturally good at losing, so there will be tears, yelling, and cheating, but that's okay. (5) The point is, playing games together helps kids with their socialization. (6) It allows them a safe place to practice getting along, following rules, and learning how to be graceful in defeat. 

[1803H2-22]
 What is the topic sentence? 🏕

(1) The public growth of the Internet began in the 1990s, as increasing numbers of computers came into homes and workplaces. (2) The first online newspaper was published in the US and the Chicago-based Tribune was among the first titles to put its content online, in 1991. (3) As the decade progressed, software developments made the task of creating online content quicker and cheaper — between 1995 and 1998, the number of US dailies on the web grew from 175 to 750. (4) Newspapers in the UK followed the same pattern: in 1994, the Sunday Times became the UK's first newspaper to have an online edition and a few months later the Daily Telegraph launched the Electronic Telegraph, Europe's first online daily. 

[1803H2-23]
 What is the topic sentence? 

(1) Each spring in North America, the early morning hours are filled with the sweet sounds of songbirds, such as sparrows and robins. (2) While it may seem like these birds are simply singing songs, many are in the middle of an intense competition for territories. (3) For many birds, this struggle could ultimately decide whom they mate with and if they ever raise a family. (4) When the birds return from their winter feeding grounds, the males usually arrive first. (5) Older, more dominant males will reclaim their old territories: a tree, shrub, or even a window ledge. (6) Younger males will try to challenge the older ones for space by mimicking the song that the older males are singing. (7) The birds that can sing the loudest and the longest usually wind up with the best territories. 

[1803H2-25]
 What is the topic sentence? 🚏

(1) Grant Wood grew up on a farm and drew with whatever materials could be spared. (2) Often he used charcoal from the wood fire to sketch on a leftover piece of brown paper. (3) He was only ten when his father died, and his mother moved the family to Cedar Rapids, Iowa, where Wood went to school. (4) He studied part-time at the State University of Iowa and attended night classes at the Art Institute of Chicago. (5) When he was 32, he went to Paris to study at the Académie Julian. (6) In 1927, he traveled to Munich, Germany, where some of the most accomplished artists of the period were working. (7) While there, he saw German and Flemish artworks that influenced him greatly, especially the work of Jan van Eyck. (8) After that trip, his style changed to reflect the realism of those painters. 

[1803H2-28]
 What is the topic sentence? 🚏

(1) Although sports nutrition is a fairly new academic discipline, there have always been recommendations made to athletes about foods that could enhance athletic performance. (2) One ancient Greek athlete is reported to have eaten dried figs to enhance training. (3) There are reports that marathon runners in the 1908 Olympics drank cognac to improve performance. (4) The teenage running phenomenon, Mary Decker, surprised the sports world in the 1970s when she reported that she ate a plate of spaghetti noodles the night before a race. (5) Such practices may be suggested to athletes because of their real or perceived benefits by individuals who excelled in their sports. (6) Obviously, some of these practices, such as drinking alcohol during a marathon, are no longer recommended, but others, such as a high-carbohydrate meal the night before a competition, have stood the test of time. 

[1803H2-29]
 What is the topic sentence? 🏯

(1) Although instances occur in which partners start their relationship by telling everything about themselves to each other, such instances are rare. (2) In most cases, the amount of disclosure increases over time. (3) We begin relationships by revealing relatively little about ourselves; then if our first bits of self-disclosure are well received and bring on similar responses from the other person, we're willing to reveal more. (4) This principle is important to remember. (5) It would usually be a mistake to assume that the way to build a strong relationship would be to reveal the most private details about yourself when first making contact with another person. (6) Unless the circumstances are unique, such baring of your soul would be likely to scare potential partners away rather than bring them closer. 

[1803H2-30]
 What is the topic sentence? 🚡

(1) Jack stopped the cycle of perfectionism that his son Mark was developing. (2) Mark could not stand to lose at games by the time he was eight years old. (3) Jack was contributing to Mark's attitude by always letting him win at chess because he didn't like to see Mark get upset and cry. (4) One day, Jack realized it was more important to allow Mark some experience with losing, so he started winning at least half the games. (5) Mark was upset at first, but soon began to win and lose with more grace. (6) Jack felt a milestone had been reached one day when he was playing catch with Mark and threw a bad ball. (7) Instead of getting upset about missing the ball, Mark was able to use his sense of humor and commented, "Nice throw, Dad Lousy catch, Mark." 

[1803H2-31]
 What is the topic sentence? 🎢

(1) Most importantly, money needs to be scarce in a predictable way. (2) Precious metals have been desirable as money across the millennia not only because they have intrinsic beauty but also because they exist in fixed quantities. (3) Gold and silver enter society at the rate at which they are discovered and mined; additional precious metals cannot be produced, at least not cheaply. (4) Commodities like rice and tobacco can be grown, but that still takes time and resources. (5) A dictator like Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe could not order the government to produce 100 trillion tons of rice. (6) He was able to produce and distribute trillions of new Zimbabwe dollars, which is why they eventually became more valuable as toilet paper than currency. 

[1803H2-32]
 What is the topic sentence? 🚘

(1) In one experiment, children were told they could have one marshmallow treat if they chose to eat it immediately, but two treats if they waited. (2) Most of the children, who ranged in age from 4 to 8, chose to wait, but the strategies they used differed significantly. (3) The 4-year-olds often chose to look at the marshmallows while waiting, a strategy that was not terribly effective. (4) In contrast, 6- and 8-year-olds used language to help overcome temptation, although in different ways. (5) The 6-year-olds spoke and sang to themselves, reminding themselves they would get more treats if they waited. (6) The 8-year-olds focused on aspects of the marshmallows unrelated to taste, such as appearance, which helped them to wait. (7) In short, children used "self-talk" to regulate their behavior. 

[1803H2-33]
 What is the topic sentence? 🏯

(1) The desire for fame has its roots in the experience of neglect. (2) No one would want to be famous who hadn't also, somewhere in the past, been made to feel extremely insignificant. (3) We sense the need for a great deal of admiring attention when we have been painfully exposed to earlier deprivation. (4) Perhaps one's parents were hard to impress. (5) They never noticed one much, they were so busy with other things, focusing on other famous people, unable to have or express kind feelings, or just working too hard. (6) There were no bedtime stories and one's school reports weren't the subject of praise and admiration. (7) That's why one dreams that one day the world will pay attention. (8) When we're famous, our parents will have to admire us too. 

[1803H2-34]
 What is the topic sentence? 🏰

(1) When the late Theodore Roosevelt came back from Africa, just after he left the White House in 1909, he made his first public appearance at Madison Square Garden. (2) Before he would agree to make the appearance, he carefully arranged for nearly one thousand paid applauders to be scattered throughout the audience to applaud his entrance on the platform. (3) For more than 15 minutes, these paid hand-clappers made the place ring with their enthusiasm. (4) The rest of the audience took up the suggestion and joined in for another quarter hour. (5) The newspaper men present were literally swept off their feet by the tremendous applause given the American hero, and his name was emblazoned across the headlines of the newspapers in letters two inches high. (6) Roosevelt understood and made intelligent use of personal promotion. 

[1803H2-35]
 What is the topic sentence? 🚔

(1) In addition to controlling temperatures when handling fresh produce, control of the atmosphere is important. (2) Some moisture is needed in the air to prevent dehydration during storage, but too much moisture can encourage growth of molds. (3) Some commercial storage units have controlled atmospheres, with the levels of both carbon dioxide and moisture being regulated carefully. (4) Sometimes other gases, such as ethylene gas, may be introduced at controlled levels to help achieve optimal quality of bananas and other fresh produce. (5) Related to the control of gases and moisture is the need for some circulation of air among the stored foods. 

[1803H2-36]
 What is the topic sentence? 

(1) Studies show that no one is "born" to be an entrepreneur and that everyone has the potential to become one. (2) Whether someone does or doesn't is a function of environment, life experiences, and personal choices. (3) However, there are personality traits and characteristics commonly associated with entrepreneurs. (4) These traits are developed over time and evolve from an individual's social context. (5) For example, people with parents who were self-employed are more likely to become entrepreneurs. (6) After witnessing a father's or mother's independence in the workplace, an individual is more likely to find independence appealing. (7) Similarly, people who personally know an entrepreneur are more than twice as likely to be involved in starting a new firm as those with no entrepreneur acquaintances or role models. 

[1803H2-37]
 What is the topic sentence? 

(1) According to the consulting firm McKinsey, knowledge workers spend up to 60 percent of their time looking for information, responding to emails, and collaborating with others. (2) By using social technologies, those workers can become up to 25 percent more productive. (3) The need for productivity gains through working harder and longer has a limit and a human toll. (4) The solution is to enable people to work smarter, not just by saying it, but by putting smart tools and improved processes in place so that people can perform at enhanced levels. (5) Think of it as the robot-assisted human, given superpowers through the aid of technology. (6) Our jobs become enriched by relying on robots to do the tedious while we work on increasingly more sophisticated tasks. 

[1803H2-38]
 What is the topic sentence? 

(1) Two major kinds of age-related structural changes occur in the eye. (2) One is a decrease in the amount of light that passes through the eye, resulting in the need for more light to do tasks such as reading. (3) As you might suspect, this change is one reason why older adults do not see as well in the dark, which may account in part for their reluctance to go places at night. (4) One possible logical response to the need for more light would be to increase illumination levels in general. (5) However, this solution does not work in all situations because we also become increasingly sensitive to glare. (6) In addition, our ability to adjust to changes in illumination, called adaptation, declines. (7) Going from outside into a darkened movie theater involves dark adaptation; going back outside involves light adaptation. (8) Research indicates that the time it takes for both types of adaptation increases with age. 

[1803H2-39]
 What is the topic sentence? 🎡

(1) By acting on either natural or artificial resources, through techniques, we alter them in various ways. (2) Thus we create artifacts, which form an important aspect of technologies. (3) A clay pot is an example of a material artifact, which, although transformed by human activity, is not all that far removed from its natural state. (4) A plastic cup, a contact lens, and a computer chip, on the other hand, are examples of artifacts that are far removed from the original states of the natural resources needed to create them. (5) Artifacts can serve as resources in other technological processes. (6) This is one of the important interaction effects within the technological system. (7) In other words, each new technology increases the stock of available tools and resources that can be employed by other technologies to produce new artifacts. 

[1803H2-40]
 What is the topic sentence? 🎠

(1) Despite all the talk of how weak intentions are in the face of habits, it's worth emphasizing that much of the time even our strong habits do follow our intentions. (2) We are mostly doing what we intend to do, even though it's happening automatically. (3) This probably goes for many habits: although we perform them without bringing the intention to consciousness, the habits still line up with our original intentions. (4) Even better, our automatic, unconscious habits can keep us safe even when our conscious mind is distracted. (5) We look both ways before crossing the road despite thinking about a rather depressing holiday we took in Brazil, and we put oven gloves on before reaching into the oven despite being preoccupied about whether the cabbage is overcooked. (6) In both cases, our goal of keeping ourselves alive and unburnt is served by our automatic, unconscious habits. 


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From The Number of Sents: 18826
TARGET: hvhp

1. Without the ice age, North America might have remained unpopulated for thousands of years more.

2. It stands for the short, meaningless nature of life, and the artist must have painted the skull to remind us that we will, one day, die.

3. While diving into undesirable tasks first thing, imagine how good it will feel to have gotten over that hurdle and still have a whole day ahead of you.

4. For instance, your mom might have told you to make a beeline home after school.

5. This may have influenced Alfred Nobel's decision not to found a prize in mathematics.

6. Each time he stroked the canvas with his brush, he might have intended to turn a series of musical notes into visual forms.

7. "If he had not disrupted their sleeping routines and allowed them to experience their customers' discomfort, the workshop may have ended without any noteworthy changes.

8. Their discoveries could not have happened unless centuries of technological development of the telescope and evolving knowledge of the universe had come before them.

9. We can infer, for example, that the more fluently we retrieve an item from memory, the more often we must have encountered it in the past.

10. Perhaps they would have seen opportunities that they otherwise missed; they would own all the airlines today.

11. Empathy can help us better understand what may have contributed to current behavior, but it does not mean we have to excuse that behavior.

12. Most people would have sniffed, "Not my problem," perhaps even hoping the ice-cream vendor's misfortune would mean more customers for them.

13. "The emotion was so strong that the brain rejected evidence of the continued existence of normal, everyday life that might have eased it.

14. However, if ‘blueberry’ had referred only to the specific thing I just picked and no more, the sound would have slipped away silently, devoid of further application.

15. Not knowing that the product exists, customers would probably not buy it even if the product may have worked for them.

16. Far too often we lose patience with the process and quit too soon, missing out on what we could have gained.

17. Now, they think they may have found the source of this unexpected heat—Jupiter’s Great Red Spot.

18. He must have seen the ghost, too!"

19. Any one of a number of things might have prevented the disaster; the iceberg itself was so nearly avoided at the last moment that perhaps only a few more feet would have made all the difference.

20. We could not imagine how the Inca could have built such a large city on top of a high mountain.

21. Such skilled workers may have used simple tools, but their specialization did result in more efficient and productive work.

22. Some of them may have traveled by small boat along the coast, but many walked.

23. "I think I may have misled you.

24. I think Hammer and Shaw would have agreed with me that nothing can replace hard work in life.

25. This may have triggered the process of domestication of certain plants and animals.

26. Some people may be on the verge of buying the product, whereas others may never have heard of it.

27. Your toddler might have decided that drawing on the walls with a black marker is a wonderful idea, and be very upset when you attempt to prise it from his fingers.

28. However much the ancient Egyptians may have looked down upon foreigners as culturally inferior peoples or as dangerous agents of chaos, Egyptian society was on many levels deeply entangled with those of its neighbors.

29. 'Traveling salespeople, for example, may say they want a smaller cell phone, but they may not have thought about how hard that tiny phone will be to use.

30. Many thieves may have escaped because of the slow camel.

31. While Mussorgsky was writing the melodies, he must have wanted to translate the stories in the paintings into his musical language.

32. It is a fact: People have contact with and are affected by other peoples around the world to a degree that no one could have imagined a hundred years ago.

33. If everything had gone as planned, he would have gotten through the entire flight without having to learn either of those interesting tidbits.

34. But if someone in the group had taken the initiative to be nurturing instead of negative, maybe another Hemingway, Faulkner, or Fitzgerald would have emerged and given the world another library of masterpieces.

35. Sacrificing one's interests for the sake of the group may have helped close relatives or other kinfolk who carried similar genes to survive.

36. Rather, there is a complex chain of events that all contribute to the result; if any one of the events would not have occurred, the result would be different.

37. As the brain evolved, people who saw distances to goals as shorter might have gone after what they wanted more often.

38. No doubt you can think of many additional examples of feelings that, if followed, would have caused you pain or misfortune.

39. The painting could have stayed there unnoticed had it not been for head of arts Angela Hill, who spotted it hanging on the wall during a routine meeting.

40. As a result, we are still guessing at what early tools were used for as well as what early art forms might have meant for the people who produced them, even when such drawings, often animals, are very recognizable.

41. The artist, however, may not have wanted to frighten the viewers with too direct an image and hid the message.

42. You may have noticed that your children seem far more comfortable with being sarcastic or insulting one another.

43. Without such passion, they would have achieved nothing.

44. These nymphs should have taken a further two years to emerge as adults, but in fact they took just one year.

45. At the outset of their journeys, few immigrants could have foretold exactly when and how they would achieve economic success in the new world, yet they set out for the "land of opportunity" nevertheless.

46. From the standpoint of evolutionary theory, altruism may be seen as part of our genetic nature, as it may have helped enable ancestral humans who carried our genetic code to survive a harsh and dangerous environment.

47. By the time a child reaches age 18, they will have witnessed some 200,000 acts of televised violence, of which 16,000 will have been murders.

48. Then, to interpret those finds, they had to learn Russian, Bulgarian, and Romanian, without which they would never have learned the true nature of the site.

49. The peasant's ancient ancestor, the forager, may have eaten berries and mushrooms for breakfast; fruits and snails for lunch; and rabbit steak with wild onions for dinner.

50. These interactions between artists can have unexpected results, producing works of art that have strong visual, auditory or emotional influences on people.

51. The designer may look like a savant for having "anticipated" the popular color, but if he had picked white or lavender instead, the same process might have unfolded.

52. Ray Jackendoff, a cognitive scientist, suggests that simple rules such as 'agent-first' (that is, the man killed the bear) might have reduced the potential ambiguity.

53. It could have offered the team time off, or a bonus, or the chance to work at home one day a week for a month — anything, really, to show their appreciation and gratitude.

54. If I had not volunteered, I would never have got an inside look at their way of life.

55. Loud music at the dentist's office and the "slap and stab" method a nurse may have used to give you an injection are other examples of how distraction can reduce or eliminate the pain experience.

56. As you know, the Sunshine Stationery Store has long been the industry standard for quality creative paper products of all kinds, and we couldn't have picked a better location for our next branch than the warm and inviting city of Raleigh.

57. With some areas being clearly preferred, a pressure may have built up to increase the food supply.

58. Although the Egyptians themselves seemingly maintained an extremely "Egyptocentric" worldview, the glory of the pharaohs would not have existed such as it did without the resources and influence of the societies around them.

59. I worked for very little pay, so I must have enjoyed cleaning the park."

60. Few countries, however, can claim to have produced a great architect.

61. Moreover, genes would undoubtedly have changed during the human revolution after 200,000 years ago, but more in response to new habits than as causes of them.

62. That, however, would have brought another problem, for lions are the top tourist attraction in Kenya and are protected by law.

63. Some thought it likely that, were there a Nobel Prize in mathematics, he would have received it.

64. As you may have observed, they make irregular twists and turns in their flight.

65. Even the old-timer at the boomerang game never fails to experience it; he may have made a thousand boomerangs, yet each time he throws a new one and it works perfectly just as he planned that it should, he feels a surge of pride and satisfaction that is worth many times over the effort required for the making.

66. Well, Tom should have thought twice.

67. The bottom line is that sales attract customers that might not have made purchases at the regular price, and they motivate customers to spend because their money can now buy more.

68. If so, it may have reminded you of a highway packed with cars.

69. We could have seen something many times before, but as the result of having new skills or competence, we discover new or different aspects of that object.

70. Had the woman lawyer insisted on participating, she would have spoiled the deal and destroyed her credibility.

71. If Ernest Hamwi had taken that attitude when he was selling zalabia, a very thin Persian waffle, at the 1904 World's Fair, he might have ended his days as a street vendor.

72. Had I been alone, I would have walked away feeling sad for that poor gull.

73. Several years later, policymakers began to wrestle with the problem of what would be done to dismantle nuclear plants when they were obsolete, something those who originally built them may never have considered.

74. You may have heard or read that Laurence Olivier was widely believed to be the greatest actor of the past century.

75. If Dante and Shakespeare had died before they wrote those works, nobody ever would have written them.

76. He must have seen the ghost, too" said Otto.

77. Many teachers shy away from using contemporary art in their teaching because they do not feel comfortable with their own level of knowledge and are reluctant to introduce their students to anything they may not have mastered themselves.

78. The vanguard of such a migration must have been small in number and must have traveled comparatively light.

79. I wished I could have stayed longer.

80. Don't hire people with experience at another airline unless you're sure that they can unlearn what they've learned there.

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