Radio script: Speaker’s corner. Jeremy Vine: Good afternoon and welcome to Hell FM‚ I’m Jeremy Vine and you are listening to Speaker’s Corner. That was the lovely Beyonce’s “Drunk in Love”. Today’s guest is Adrian who will be talking about that lovely subject- rubbish. Adrian : Thank you Jeremy. Do you‚ like me feel we are living in a rubbish bin? Where ever you go‚ whatever you do‚ you see rubbish everywhere. But not only once in a blue moon‚ always! And where did the the rubbish came from? They
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Ladies and Gentlemen‚ may I request you to please stand/rise as the Academic Procession consisting of Smt. Aarthy Sampathy‚ Chairperson‚ S.P. Sampathy’s **** ****** Educational Society and President and Chief Executive ‚ S.P.Sampathy’s **** ****** Group of Institutions‚ the Presiding Officer of the 16th Convocation‚ the Chief Guest Sri D.K.Jain‚ President & Chairman‚ LuxorGroup‚ and Guest of Hounour ‚ Padmashri. Dr. Pritam Singh‚ Professor of Eminence‚ Management Development Institute‚ Gurgaon‚ have
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Motte 1 Carley Motte Ms. Murphy Speech 2A 24 March 2015 Audience Analysis: My audience is a class of freshmen students‚ and my speech teacher‚ at the International Academy of Macomb. General Purpose: To demonstrate. Specific Purpose: To teach my peers how to make paper flowers. Central Idea: To share a new craft with the class. How to Make a Paper Flower I. Introduction A. Anonymous once said‚ “the earth without ‘art’ is just ‘eh’.” B. The kind of art that I’ll be sharing with you today requires two pieces of paper or
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"A bitter pill" | A situation or information that is unpleasant but must be accepted. | "Ace in the hole" | A hidden or secret strength‚ or unrevealed advantage. | "Achilles’ heel" | A metaphor for a fatal weakness in spite of overall strength.[note 1] | "Add insult to injury" | To further a loss with mockery or indignity; to worsen an unfavorable situation. | "All ears" | Listening intently; fully focused or awaiting an explanation. | "All thumbs" | Clumsy‚ awkward. | "At the drop of
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Journal Entry 1 Chapter 1 July 14th 1-20 Characters: Narrator: He’s Afraid‚ Nervous‚ Determined‚ Dreadful‚ Reflective Finny: He is almost Cocky‚ Confident‚ Persuasive Events: Narrator visits the marble staircase Jumping from the tree Questions: Why Is the Narrator visiting the school? Why visit the marble stairs? What happened at the tree that would make the Narrator revisit it again? Quotable Quotes pg.14: plus c’est la même chose‚ plus ça change – The more things remain
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APPRECIATE THE SOUND EFFECTS OF STOPPARD’S LANGUAGE IN ARCADIA BY ANALYSING THREE CHOICE PHRASES Jade Hope Tom Stoppard generates an aristocratic hauteur in the voice of Lady Croom‚ due to the indignation‚ imperiousness and intolerance of differing opinions of those around her. Her line ‘my hycacinth dell is become a haunt for hobgoblins’ can compared to the drippingly sarcastic famous words of Edith Evans in The Importance of Being Earnest‚ ‘A handbag?’. This allows us to imagine that when
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I believe the Poem‚ The Last Word‚ by Peter Davidson is about the slaughtering of an innocent animal by a novice butcher. The reluctance of the action expressed in the poem makes it obvious that the killer is inexperienced with killing animals because they still have a hard time committing the action. And we are going off of the idea that no man is innocent‚ the one executed would have to be some kind of animal. The animal in the story most likely grew up in captivity and had its spirit broken
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At the beginning of A Song of Ice and Fire‚ three raiders of the Night’s Watch‚ Ser Joyce‚ Gared and Will‚ search for the Wildlings in the woods separately. When Will finds the Wildlings are dead‚ he gets back to inform his accompanies. And the prologue begins from here. Snippet 1: [1](Gared says) “We should start back‚” […] [2](Gared says) “The Wildlings are dead.” […] [3] Ser Waymar Royce (says) “Do the dead frighten you?” […] [4]Gared […] was an old man‚ past fifty‚ […] “Dead is dead‚” […] “We
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The song This Isn’t the End by Owl City is the first song I thought of. The chorus goes as follows “When the rain falls down‚ when it all turns around‚ when the light goes out‚ this isn’t the end.” I believe this part of the song portraits my reaction to the holocaust because I wish I could tell all the victims these simple words. Even if it was the end for them‚ it would have been better if I‚ or someone else‚ could have comforted them. Although this song has different context than the holocaust
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Figurative Language in the Tortilla Curtain In T.C. Boyle’s the Tortilla Curtain‚ Delaney Mossebacher is at a property owners association meeting and notes how a wife “leaned into her husband like a sapling leaning into a rock ledge” (42). In this simile‚ Boyle compares the wife to a sapling and the husband to the rock that she is leaning on. During the meeting‚ Delaney describes the husband as a man “in his forties‚ with the hips and shoulders of a college athlete” (42). With the build of a college
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