Companies are turning their backs on Russia. Why, how, and does it matter? |
Economist and Nobel laureate Oliver Hart says firms are increasingly responsive to public sentiment, but that government remains a more potent force. |
It’s going to be a hot week in Paris, with temperatures due to hit 29°C / 84°F! In these conditions it’s important to stay hydrated.
Stay hydrated
Water and other hydrating foods and liquids naturally soften your stool by keeping it from becoming hard and dry.
To stay hydrated, try keeping a large, reusable water bottle filled and nearby throughout the day. Or consume hydrating foods and drinks, like milk, juice, tea or coffee (which may also stimulate the urge to defecate), or fresh fruits like melons or grapes.
In 1957 a doctor named Humphrey Osmond began observing the effects of environmental change on the interactions of patients in a mental hospital in Saskatchewan. From that research he eventually identified two major systems for patterning space. Sociofugal space (gridlike) tends to keep people apart and suppress communication while sociopetal space (radial) does just the opposite. It brings people together and stimulates interaction as routes merge and overlap.
印象中明信片上面有一組沙發。於是其中我寫了一句:這些沙發是sociofugal的排列。老師要講評的時候,嚇了一跳,因為她不認識這個單字。是啊,字典也查不到,這是環境心理學的專有名詞。
- (of a grouping of people) arranged so that each can maintain some privacy from the others
In Parched Nairobi, Politicians Blamed For Drought Crisis
NAIROBI, Aug. 21 -- Across East Africa, drought is again leaving millions of people in dusty countryside hungry, thirsty and dangerously dependent on food aid, the United Nations has warned. But as the weeks wear on, its effects -- less drastic but perhaps more politically potent -- are also...
(By Stephanie McCrummen, The Washington Post)
parched
IN BRIEF: Dried or dehydrated usually due to heat.
The summer heat parched the vegetable garden.
potent
adj.
- Possessing inner or physical strength; powerful.
- Exerting or capable of exerting strong physiological or chemical effects: potent liquor; a potent toxin.
- Exerting or capable of exerting strong influence; cogent: potent arguments.
- Having great control or authority: “The police were potent only so long as they were feared” (Thomas Burke).
- Able to perform sexual intercourse. Used of a male.
[Middle English, from Latin potēns, potent-, present participle of posse, to be able.]
potently po'tent·ly adv.potentness po'tent·ness n.
- radial
- [形]1 放射状の[に配置されている], 輻射(ふくしゃ)形の radial symmetry(ヒトデなどの)放射相称.2 半径方向の[に動く].3 《動物》放射構造の.4 《機械》星形の, 放...
発音記号[pétl]
[名]《植物》花弁, 花びら.
Pronunciation: /fjuːɡ
/
Definition of fugue in English:
NOUN
1Music A contrapuntal composition in which a shortmelody or phrase (the subject) is introduced by one part and successively taken up by others anddeveloped by interweaving the parts.
2Psychiatry A loss of awareness of one’s identity, often coupled with flight from one’s usualenvironment, associated with certain forms ofhysteria and epilepsy.
fugue[fugue]
発音記号[fjúːg]
[名]
1 《音楽》フーガ, 遁走(とんそう)曲.
2 追いかけっこ;交代.
3 [U]《精神医学》遁走, 徘回(はいかい)症.
Pronunciation: /ˈfjuːɡ(ə)l
/
Definition of fugal in English:
ADJECTIVE
Derivatives
FUGUE
(fyūg) pronunciation
n.
Music. An imitative polyphonic composition in which a theme or themes are stated successively in all of the voices of the contrapuntal structure.
Psychiatry. A pathological amnesiac condition during which one is apparently conscious of one's actions but has no recollection of them after returning to a normal state. This condition, usually resulting from severe mental stress, may persist for as long as several months.
[Italian fuga (influenced by French fugue , from Italian fuga), from Latin, flight.]
fugal fu'gal (fyū'gəl) adj.
fugally fu'gal·ly adv.
fugue fugue v.
fuguist fugu'ist (fyū'gĭst) n.
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