مرات مشاهدة الصفحة في الأسبوع الماضي

يتم التشغيل بواسطة Blogger.

المتابعون

مواقع صديقة

التعليقات

سلايدر

اشترك عبر البريد

Postcards from England














Postcards from England: five. Prospects for Whitby It's a lasting since i have been to Whitby, and climbed dozens of steps to the church, and accomplished that it can be reached rather more simply from the close abbey, and stood surprised at the extraordinary interior, with its a winning combination of medieval walls and Georgian pews and galleries, however I bear in mind the place with some tenderness. i used to be happy to envision, once wanting it up in Pevsner as a preliminary to inscribing this post, that the nice man precious it too which he a minimum of thought I got it right by approaching the building the exhausting way: It was assumed just that one would visit the church from and when the abbey. that's miscalculation. One ought to scrutinize it as a part of the fishing and shipping city and reach it from below, i.e. not by car, however by the winding 199 steps. There it's then, once the labor is over, in an exceedingly splendid position, low and spreading and battlemented, a beautiful jumble of medieval and Georgian once one walks spherical it, exhausting to believe and not possible to not love. My mailing-card shows a number of the tremendous jumble: the galleries that have colonized most of the higher areas, the Cholmondeley bench (the bit elevated on twisted columns) that cuts right across the bema arch, the picket ceiling that appears somewhat too low, the large podium rising through the center of it all. It should not work, however it will, somehow, from the finials on the pews to the curlicues on the podium, from the tortuous columns to the record the gallery front, mindful long sermons on winter evenings. Pevsner had his thoughts on alternative things than sermons once loving the box pews: they "positively invite games of hide and ask for," he wrote. It was definitely definitely worth the climb, and also the church stands magnificently on its geological formation high. however there is the rub. The yard, that options in Bram Stoker's Dracula, is geologic process away. Some a lot of chunks fell off recently, landing soil and bones on the beach below. "Whitby landslide exposes human bones at 'Draclua graveyard'," yelled BBC News, finding it unable to resist the Stoker association. The bones area unit regathered and reinterred. Engineers, apparently, area unit functioning on the matter of stabilizing the geological formation and also the church, for now, isn't same to be underneath threat. I hope the prospects stay sensible
8:43 ص | 0 التعليقات | أكمل قراءة الموضوع

اهم شي الاكل





/ Adsense Here
5:37 ص | 0 التعليقات | أكمل قراءة الموضوع

انظرو ماذا كان جواب الشاب المسلم



































An oil is any substance that is liquid at ambient temperatures and is hydrophobic but soluble in organic solvents. Oils have a high carbon and hydrogen content and are nonpolar substances. The general definition above includes compound classes with, and uses, including vegetable oils, petrochemical oils, and volatile essential oils. All oils can be traced back to organic sources

Etymology

First coined in English 1175, the word oil comes from Old French "oile", from Latin "oleum",[1] which in turn comes from the Greek "??????" (elaion), "olive oil, oil"[2] and that from "?????" (elaia), "olive tree".[3] The earliest attested form of the word is the Mycenaean Greek e-ra-wo, written in Linear b syllabic script

Mineral oil

Mineral oils, found in porous rocks underground, originated from organic material, such as dead plankton, accumulated on the seafloor in geologically ancient times. Through various geochemical processes this material was converted to mineral oil, or petroleum|diesel]], and such. These are classified as mineral oils because they do not have an organic origin on human timescales, and are instead derived from underground geologic locations, ranging from rocks, to underground traps, to sands.

Other oily substances can also be found in the environment; the most well-known of those is asphalt, occurring naturally underground or, where there are leaks, in tar pits.

Petroleum and other mineral oils (specifically labelled as petrochemicals) have become such a crucial resource to human civilization in modern times they are often referred to by the ubiquitous term of "oil" itself.

Organic oils

Organic oils are also produced by plants, animals, and other organisms through organic processes, and these oils are remarkable in their diversity. Oil is a somewhat vague term in chemistry; instead, the scientific term for oils, fats, waxes, cholesterol, and other oily substances found in living things and their secretions, is lipids.

Lipids, ranging from waxes to steroids, are somewhat hard to characterize, and are united in a group almost solely based on the fact that they all repel, or refuse to dissolve in, water, and are however comfortably miscible in other liquid lipids. They also have a high carbon and hydrogen content, and are considerably lacking in oxygen compared to other organic compounds and minerals

Synthetic oils

Synthetic oil is a lubricant, consisting of chemical compounds which are artificially made (synthesized) from compounds other than crude oil (petroleum). Synthetic oil is used as a substitute for lubricant refined from petroleum, because it generally provides superior mechanical and chemical properties than those found in traditional mineral oils.

Health advantages are claimed for a number of specific oils such as omega-3 oils, evening primrose oil, olive oil, and coconut oil. Trans fats, often produced by hydrogenating vegetable oils, are known to be harmful to health.

Hair

Oil is used on hair to give it a lustrous look. It helps to avoid tangles and roughness to the hair. It also helps the hair to be stabilized and grow faster.[citation needed] See Hair conditioner.

Fuel


Almost all oils burn in aerosol form generating heat, which can be used directly, or converted into other forms of fuels by various means. The oil that is pumped from the ground is then shipped via oil tanker to an oil refinery. There, it is converted from crude oil to diesel fuel (petrodiesel), ethane (and other short-chain alkanes), fuel oils (heaviest of commercial fuels, used in ships/furnaces), gasoline (petrol), jet fuel, kerosene, and liquefied petroleum gas.

Electricity generation

1:19 م | 0 التعليقات | أكمل قراءة الموضوع

شوفو الهبلة شو حكتلو


























An oil is any substance that is liquid at ambient temperatures and is hydrophobic but soluble in organic solvents. Oils have a high carbon and hydrogen content and are nonpolar substances. The general definition above includes compound classes with, and uses, including vegetable oils, petrochemical oils, and volatile essential oils. All oils can be traced back to organic sources

Etymology

First coined in English 1175, the word oil comes from Old French "oile", from Latin "oleum",[1] which in turn comes from the Greek "??????" (elaion), "olive oil, oil"[2] and that from "?????" (elaia), "olive tree".[3] The earliest attested form of the word is the Mycenaean Greek e-ra-wo, written in Linear b syllabic script

Mineral oil

Mineral oils, found in porous rocks underground, originated from organic material, such as dead plankton, accumulated on the seafloor in geologically ancient times. Through various geochemical processes this material was converted to mineral oil, or petroleum|diesel]], and such. These are classified as mineral oils because they do not have an organic origin on human timescales, and are instead derived from underground geologic locations, ranging from rocks, to underground traps, to sands.

Other oily substances can also be found in the environment; the most well-known of those is asphalt, occurring naturally underground or, where there are leaks, in tar pits.

Petroleum and other mineral oils (specifically labelled as petrochemicals) have become such a crucial resource to human civilization in modern times they are often referred to by the ubiquitous term of "oil" itself.

Organic oils

Organic oils are also produced by plants, animals, and other organisms through organic processes, and these oils are remarkable in their diversity. Oil is a somewhat vague term in chemistry; instead, the scientific term for oils, fats, waxes, cholesterol, and other oily substances found in living things and their secretions, is lipids.

Lipids, ranging from waxes to steroids, are somewhat hard to characterize, and are united in a group almost solely based on the fact that they all repel, or refuse to dissolve in, water, and are however comfortably miscible in other liquid lipids. They also have a high carbon and hydrogen content, and are considerably lacking in oxygen compared to other organic compounds and minerals

Synthetic oils

Synthetic oil is a lubricant, consisting of chemical compounds which are artificially made (synthesized) from compounds other than crude oil (petroleum). Synthetic oil is used as a substitute for lubricant refined from petroleum, because it generally provides superior mechanical and chemical properties than those found in traditional mineral oils.

Health advantages are claimed for a number of specific oils such as omega-3 oils, evening primrose oil, olive oil, and coconut oil. Trans fats, often produced by hydrogenating vegetable oils, are known to be harmful to health.

Hair

Oil is used on hair to give it a lustrous look. It helps to avoid tangles and roughness to the hair. It also helps the hair to be stabilized and grow faster.[citation needed] See Hair conditioner.

Fuel


Almost all oils burn in aerosol form generating heat, which can be used directly, or converted into other forms of fuels by various means. The oil that is pumped from the ground is then shipped via oil tanker to an oil refinery. There, it is converted from crude oil to diesel fuel (petrodiesel), ethane (and other short-chain alkanes), fuel oils (heaviest of commercial fuels, used in ships/furnaces), gasoline (petrol), jet fuel, kerosene, and liquefied petroleum gas.

Electricity generation

Oil and any of its more refined products have been used to create electricity. This can be done by means of a steam engine, or by means of a turbine driven by exhaust gases. A steam engine turns the thermal energy into rotary motion, which can then be transformed into electricity, by means of a generator. In an exhaust gas turbine, the combustion products from burning the fuel expand, thereby turning a turbine. The turbine is coupled to an electrical generator.
8:39 ص | 0 التعليقات | أكمل قراءة الموضوع

عبايات بعض البنات هالأيام



























Oil


An oil is any substance that is liquid at ambient temperatures and is hydrophobic but soluble in organic solvents. Oils have a high carbon and hydrogen content and are nonpolar substances. The general definition above includes compound classes with, and uses, including vegetable oils, petrochemical oils, and volatile essential oils. All oils can be traced back to organic sources

Etymology

First coined in English 1175, the word oil comes from Old French "oile", from Latin "oleum",[1] which in turn comes from the Greek "??????" (elaion), "olive oil, oil"[2] and that from "?????" (elaia), "olive tree".[3] The earliest attested form of the word is the Mycenaean Greek e-ra-wo, written in Linear b syllabic script

Mineral oil

Mineral oils, found in porous rocks underground, originated from organic material, such as dead plankton, accumulated on the seafloor in geologically ancient times. Through various geochemical processes this material was converted to mineral oil, or petroleum|diesel]], and such. These are classified as mineral oils because they do not have an organic origin on human timescales, and are instead derived from underground geologic locations, ranging from rocks, to underground traps, to sands.

Other oily substances can also be found in the environment; the most well-known of those is asphalt, occurring naturally underground or, where there are leaks, in tar pits.

Petroleum and other mineral oils (specifically labelled as petrochemicals) have become such a crucial resource to human civilization in modern times they are often referred to by the ubiquitous term of "oil" itself.

Organic oils

Organic oils are also produced by plants, animals, and other organisms through organic processes, and these oils are remarkable in their diversity. Oil is a somewhat vague term in chemistry; instead, the scientific term for oils, fats, waxes, cholesterol, and other oily substances found in living things and their secretions, is lipids.

Lipids, ranging from waxes to steroids, are somewhat hard to characterize, and are united in a group almost solely based on the fact that they all repel, or refuse to dissolve in, water, and are however comfortably miscible in other liquid lipids. They also have a high carbon and hydrogen content, and are considerably lacking in oxygen compared to other organic compounds and minerals

Synthetic oils

Synthetic oil is a lubricant, consisting of chemical compounds which are artificially made (synthesized) from compounds other than crude oil (petroleum). Synthetic oil is used as a substitute for lubricant refined from petroleum, because it generally provides superior mechanical and chemical properties than those found in traditional mineral oils.

Health advantages are claimed for a number of specific oils such as omega-3 oils, evening primrose oil, olive oil, and coconut oil. Trans fats, often produced by hydrogenating vegetable oils, are known to be harmful to health.

Hair

Oil is used on hair to give it a lustrous look. It helps to avoid tangles and roughness to the hair. It also helps the hair to be stabilized and grow faster.[citation needed] See Hair conditioner.

Fuel


Almost all oils burn in aerosol form generating heat, which can be used directly, or converted into other forms of fuels by various means. The oil that is pumped from the ground is then shipped via oil tanker to an oil refinery. There, it is converted from crude oil to diesel fuel (petrodiesel), ethane (and other short-chain alkanes), fuel oils (heaviest of commercial fuels, used in ships/furnaces), gasoline (petrol), jet fuel, kerosene, and liquefied petroleum gas.

Electricity generation

Oil and any of its more refined products have been used to create electricity. This can be done by means of a steam engine, or by means of a turbine driven by exhaust gases. A steam engine turns the thermal energy into rotary motion, which can then be transformed into electricity, by means of a generator. In an exhaust gas turbine, the combustion products from burning the fuel expand, thereby turning a turbine. The turbine is coupled to an electrical generator.

Lubrication




Due to their non-polarity, oils do not easily adhere to other substances. This makes oils useful as lubricants for various engineering purposes. Mineral oils are more suitable than biological oils, which degrade rapidly in most environmental conditions
11:07 ص | 0 التعليقات | أكمل قراءة الموضوع

ملكة جمال الصومال


9:42 ص | 1 التعليقات | أكمل قراءة الموضوع

Oil






























Oil



An oil is any substance that is liquid at ambient temperatures and is hydrophobic but soluble in organic solvents. Oils have a high carbon and hydrogen content and are nonpolar substances. The general definition above includes compound classes with, and uses, including vegetable oils, petrochemical oils, and volatile essential oils. All oils can be traced back to organic sources

Etymology

First coined in English 1175, the word oil comes from Old French "oile", from Latin "oleum",[1] which in turn comes from the Greek "??????" (elaion), "olive oil, oil"[2] and that from "?????" (elaia), "olive tree".[3] The earliest attested form of the word is the Mycenaean Greek e-ra-wo, written in Linear b syllabic script

Mineral oil

Mineral oils, found in porous rocks underground, originated from organic material, such as dead plankton, accumulated on the seafloor in geologically ancient times. Through various geochemical processes this material was converted to mineral oil, or petroleum|diesel]], and such. These are classified as mineral oils because they do not have an organic origin on human timescales, and are instead derived from underground geologic locations, ranging from rocks, to underground traps, to sands.

Other oily substances can also be found in the environment; the most well-known of those is asphalt, occurring naturally underground or, where there are leaks, in tar pits.

Petroleum and other mineral oils (specifically labelled as petrochemicals) have become such a crucial resource to human civilization in modern times they are often referred to by the ubiquitous term of "oil" itself.

Organic oils

Organic oils are also produced by plants, animals, and other organisms through organic processes, and these oils are remarkable in their diversity. Oil is a somewhat vague term in chemistry; instead, the scientific term for oils, fats, waxes, cholesterol, and other oily substances found in living things and their secretions, is lipids.

Lipids, ranging from waxes to steroids, are somewhat hard to characterize, and are united in a group almost solely based on the fact that they all repel, or refuse to dissolve in, water, and are however comfortably miscible in other liquid lipids. They also have a high carbon and hydrogen content, and are considerably lacking in oxygen compared to other organic compounds and minerals

Synthetic oils

Synthetic oil is a lubricant, consisting of chemical compounds which are artificially made (synthesized) from compounds other than crude oil (petroleum). Synthetic oil is used as a substitute for lubricant refined from petroleum, because it generally provides superior mechanical and chemical properties than those found in traditional mineral oils.

Health advantages are claimed for a number of specific oils such as omega-3 oils, evening primrose oil, olive oil, and coconut oil. Trans fats, often produced by hydrogenating vegetable oils, are known to be harmful to health.

Hair

Oil is used on hair to give it a lustrous look. It helps to avoid tangles and roughness to the hair. It also helps the hair to be stabilized and grow faster.[citation needed] See Hair conditioner.

Fuel


Almost all oils burn in aerosol form generating heat, which can be used directly, or converted into other forms of fuels by various means. The oil that is pumped from the ground is then shipped via oil tanker to an oil refinery. There, it is converted from crude oil to diesel fuel (petrodiesel), ethane (and other short-chain alkanes), fuel oils (heaviest of commercial fuels, used in ships/furnaces), gasoline (petrol), jet fuel, kerosene, and liquefied petroleum gas.

Electricity generation

Oil and any of its more refined products have been used to create electricity. This can be done by means of a steam engine, or by means of a turbine driven by exhaust gases. A steam engine turns the thermal energy into rotary motion, which can then be transformed into electricity, by means of a generator. In an exhaust gas turbine, the combustion products from burning the fuel expand, thereby turning a turbine. The turbine is coupled to an electrical generator.

Lubrication

Due to their non-polarity, oils do not easily adhere to other substances. This makes oils useful as lubricants for various engineering purposes. Mineral oils are more suitable than biological oils, which degrade rapidly in most environmental conditions


3:47 ص | 0 التعليقات | أكمل قراءة الموضوع

"فضيحة مجلجلة" تنتظر مدمني المواقع الإباحية في 2015 !!.




هام "روسيا اليوم" تحذير مهندس خبير في البرمجيات يدعى "بريت توماس"، من أن أي شخص يشاهد الأفلام الإباحية في عام 2015 سوف يكون معرضا لاختراق تاريخ مشاهداته لهذه الأفلام، كما أنه سيتم نشر هذا الأرشيف علنا إلى جانب اسمه.
وأوضح توماس أن الأمر لا يحتاج سوى اختراق بسيط لبيانات المستخدمين على هذه المواقع عن طريق بصمة المتصفح، مضيفا أنه "يمكن لأي مراهق مغامر يريد خلق الفوضى أن يقوم بهذا الأمر حاليا في منتهى السهولة".
ويعتقد توماس بأن أكبر أزمة ستواجه خصوصية الإنترنت خلال الفترة المقبلة هي تعرض المعلومات الشخصية المُحرجة للأشخاص للاختراق، ما يهدد بانعكاس ذلك بصورة سلبية على حياتهم الشخصية، وعلى علاقتهم بالآخرين.
ولفت توماس إلى خطوات حدوث هذا الاختراق من خلال "بصمة المتصفح"، فكل متصفح يترك بصمة مميزة عندما يزور موقعا ما، حتى في حالة المتصفح غير المعرّف.
وثانيا عن طريق "رقم التعريف الخاص بالجهاز (IP)، وهذا يربط بصمات المتصفح بعدد الزيارات للمواقع أو الزيارات السابقة للموقع ذاته، وإخفاء رقم التعريف يمكن أن يساعد، لكنه لا يوفر الحماية الكاملة.
وأخيرا "تتبع المستخدم"، فمن المهم بالنسبة لأصحاب المواقع أن يعرف من يزور صفحاتهم، لذلك فإنهم غالبا يتتبعون المستخدمين، ويحفظون معلومات عنهم لربط حساباتهم الشخصية ببصمة المتصفح.
يشار إلى أن بعض العلماء أرجعوا السبب في تقلص المادة الرمادية في المخ إلى بعض العادات السيئة مثل تعاطي المخدرات، وقلة النوم، وإدمان مشاهدة الأفلام الإباحية.
حيث يتكون المخ من مادة بيضاء وأخرى رمادية، وتشكل المادة الرمادية جزءا كبيرا من الجهاز العصبي المركزي، وتقع فيها غالبية الخلايا العصبية للمخ، التي تسمح بالتفكير والرؤية والسمع والتكلم والشعور والحركة.
وتعد المادة الرمادية مفتاح معالجة المعلومات بمجرد حملها على الألياف العصبية حتى تصل إلى وجهتها.
وبحسب "روسيا اليوم"، كشف علماء ألمان مؤخرا في دراسة أن الرجال الذين تتراوح أعمارهم بين 21 و 45 عاما، ويداومون على مشاهدة الأفلام الإباحية تقل لديهم بشدة مساحة المادة الرمادية داخل المخ.
وبحسب الباحثين، فإن النتائج تشير إلى أن الأشخاص الذين يداومون على مشاهدة الأفلام الإباحية لديهم سيطرة عقلية أقل وقدرات أضعف على اتخاذ القرارات الهامة والمصيرية من الأشخاص الطبيعيين.



Important "Russia Today" Warning expert in software called "Brett Thomas" engineer, that anyone watching pornographic films in 2015 will be an exhibition of the history of his observations to penetrate these films, and it will be published this archive publicly alongside his name.

Thomas explained that it needs only a simple breach of data users on these sites by imprint browser, adding that he "can any enterprising teenager wants to create chaos that this matter is currently in the breeze."

Thomas believes that the biggest crisis facing Internet privacy in the coming period is the exposure of personal information embarrassing to the people of the breakthrough, what threatens it in a negative reflection on their personal lives, and their relationship with others.

Thomas pointed to steps that penetration occurred through the "footprint browser", each leaves a distinctive imprint browser when visiting sites, even if the browser is defined.

And secondly by "the device identification number (IP), and the browser connects the hallmarks of the number of visits to the sites or previous visits to the site itself, and hide the identification number can help, but it does not provide full protection.

Finally, the "User Track", it is important for site owners to know who is visiting their pages, so they often keeping tabs on users, and keep information about them to connect their personal accounts footprint browser.

It is noteworthy that some scientists have attributed the reason for the reduced gray matter in the brain to some bad habits such as drug abuse, lack of sleep, addiction and watch pornographic films.

Where the brain consists of a white substance and the other gray, gray matter and form a large part of the central nervous system, located where the majority of the neurons of the brain, which allow thinking and vision, hearing, talking and feeling and movement.

Gray matter is the key to information processing once the nerve fibers carry on until it reaches its destination.

According to "Russia Today", recently German scientists in the study revealed that men aged between 21 and 45 years, and attending to watch pornographic films they have less strongly gray matter of the brain area.

According to the researchers, the results suggest that the people attending to watch pornographic films they have less mental and weaker capabilities to take important and fateful decisions of natural persons control.
11:50 م | 0 التعليقات | أكمل قراءة الموضوع

Oil


























Oil


An oil is any substance that is liquid at ambient temperatures and is hydrophobic but soluble in organic solvents. Oils have a high carbon and hydrogen content and are nonpolar substances. The general definition above includes compound classes with, and uses, including vegetable oils, petrochemical oils, and volatile essential oils. All oils can be traced back to organic sources

Etymology

First coined in English 1175, the word oil comes from Old French "oile", from Latin "oleum",[1] which in turn comes from the Greek "??????" (elaion), "olive oil, oil"[2] and that from "?????" (elaia), "olive tree".[3] The earliest attested form of the word is the Mycenaean Greek e-ra-wo, written in Linear b syllabic script

Mineral oil

Mineral oils, found in porous rocks underground, originated from organic material, such as dead plankton, accumulated on the seafloor in geologically ancient times. Through various geochemical processes this material was converted to mineral oil, or petroleum|diesel]], and such. These are classified as mineral oils because they do not have an organic origin on human timescales, and are instead derived from underground geologic locations, ranging from rocks, to underground traps, to sands.

Other oily substances can also be found in the environment; the most well-known of those is asphalt, occurring naturally underground or, where there are leaks, in tar pits.

Petroleum and other mineral oils (specifically labelled as petrochemicals) have become such a crucial resource to human civilization in modern times they are often referred to by the ubiquitous term of "oil" itself.

Organic oils

Organic oils are also produced by plants, animals, and other organisms through organic processes, and these oils are remarkable in their diversity. Oil is a somewhat vague term in chemistry; instead, the scientific term for oils, fats, waxes, cholesterol, and other oily substances found in living things and their secretions, is lipids.

Lipids, ranging from waxes to steroids, are somewhat hard to characterize, and are united in a group almost solely based on the fact that they all repel, or refuse to dissolve in, water, and are however comfortably miscible in other liquid lipids. They also have a high carbon and hydrogen content, and are considerably lacking in oxygen compared to other organic compounds and minerals

Synthetic oils

Synthetic oil is a lubricant, consisting of chemical compounds which are artificially made (synthesized) from compounds other than crude oil (petroleum). Synthetic oil is used as a substitute for lubricant refined from petroleum, because it generally provides superior mechanical and chemical properties than those found in traditional mineral oils.

Health advantages are claimed for a number of specific oils such as omega-3 oils, evening primrose oil, olive oil, and coconut oil. Trans fats, often produced by hydrogenating vegetable oils, are known to be harmful to health.

Hair

Oil is used on hair to give it a lustrous look. It helps to avoid tangles and roughness to the hair. It also helps the hair to be stabilized and grow faster.[citation needed] See Hair conditioner.

Fuel


Almost all oils burn in aerosol form generating heat, which can be used directly, or converted into other forms of fuels by various means. The oil that is pumped from the ground is then shipped via oil tanker to an oil refinery. There, it is converted from crude oil to diesel fuel (petrodiesel), ethane (and other short-chain alkanes), fuel oils (heaviest of commercial fuels, used in ships/furnaces), gasoline (petrol), jet fuel, kerosene, and liquefied petroleum gas.

Electricity generation

Oil and any of its more refined products have been used to create electricity. This can be done by means of a steam engine, or by means of a turbine driven by exhaust gases. A steam engine turns the thermal energy into rotary motion, which can then be transformed into electricity, by means of a generator. In an exhaust gas turbine, the combustion products from burning the fuel expand, thereby turning a turbine. The turbine is coupled to an electrical generator.

Lubrication

Due to their non-polarity, oils do not easily adhere to other substances. This makes oils useful as lubricants for various engineering purposes. Mineral oils are more suitable than biological oils, which degrade rapidly in most environmental conditions
10:27 ص | 0 التعليقات | أكمل قراءة الموضوع

فتاة ترقص مع شاب في حفلة زفاف .. شاهد ماذا فعل والدها عندما شاهدها !


قام والدها بالرقص معهما 


9:43 ص | 0 التعليقات | أكمل قراءة الموضوع

وهاي ضورة البنت وهي صابغة شعرها













Postcards from England: five. Prospects for Whitby It's a lasting since i have been to Whitby, and climbed dozens of steps to the church, and accomplished that it can be reached rather more simply from the close abbey, and stood surprised at the extraordinary interior, with its a winning combination of medieval walls and Georgian pews and galleries, however I bear in mind the place with some tenderness. i used to be happy to envision, once wanting it up in Pevsner as a preliminary to inscribing this post, that the nice man precious it too which he a minimum of thought I got it right by approaching the building the exhausting way: It was assumed just that one would visit the church from and when the abbey. that's miscalculation. One ought to scrutinize it as a part of the fishing and shipping city and reach it from below, i.e. not by car, however by the winding 199 steps. There it's then, once the labor is over, in an exceedingly splendid position, low and spreading and battlemented, a beautiful jumble of medieval and Georgian once one walks spherical it, exhausting to believe and not possible to not love. My mailing-card shows a number of the tremendous jumble: the galleries that have colonized most of the higher areas, the Cholmondeley bench (the bit elevated on twisted columns) that cuts right across the bema arch, the picket ceiling that appears somewhat too low, the large podium rising through the center of it all. It should not work, however it will, somehow, from the finials on the pews to the curlicues on the podium, from the tortuous columns to the record the gallery front, mindful long sermons on winter evenings. Pevsner had his thoughts on alternative things than sermons once loving the box pews: they "positively invite games of hide and ask for," he wrote. It was definitely definitely worth the climb, and also the church stands magnificently on its geological formation high. however there is the rub. The yard, that options in Bram Stoker's Dracula, is geologic process away. Some a lot of chunks fell off recently, landing soil and bones on the beach below. "Whitby landslide exposes human bones at 'Draclua graveyard'," yelled BBC News, finding it unable to resist the Stoker association. The bones area unit regathered and reinterred. Engineers, apparently, area unit functioning on the matter of stabilizing the geological formation and also the church, for now, isn't same to be underneath threat. I hope the prospects stay sensible
4:48 ص | 0 التعليقات | أكمل قراءة الموضوع

Postcards from England
































Postcards from England: five. Prospects for Whitby It's a lasting since i have been to Whitby, and climbed dozens of steps to the church, and accomplished that it can be reached rather more simply from the close abbey, and stood surprised at the extraordinary interior, with its a winning combination of medieval walls and Georgian pews and galleries, however I bear in mind the place with some tenderness. i used to be happy to envision, once wanting it up in Pevsner as a preliminary to inscribing this post, that the nice man precious it too which he a minimum of thought I got it right by approaching the building the exhausting way: It was assumed just that one would visit the church from and when the abbey. that's miscalculation. One ought to scrutinize it as a part of the fishing and shipping city and reach it from below, i.e. not by car, however by the winding 199 steps. There it's then, once the labor is over, in an exceedingly splendid position, low and spreading and battlemented, a beautiful jumble of medieval and Georgian once one walks spherical it, exhausting to believe and not possible to not love. My mailing-card shows a number of the tremendous jumble: the galleries that have colonized most of the higher areas, the Cholmondeley bench (the bit elevated on twisted columns) that cuts right across the bema arch, the picket ceiling that appears somewhat too low, the large podium rising through the center of it all. It should not work, however it will, somehow, from the finials on the pews to the curlicues on the podium, from the tortuous columns to the record the gallery front, mindful long sermons on winter evenings. Pevsner had his thoughts on alternative things than sermons once loving the box pews: they "positively invite games of hide and ask for," he wrote. It was definitely definitely worth the climb, and also the church stands magnificently on its geological formation high. however there is the rub. The yard, that options in Bram Stoker's Dracula, is geologic process away. Some a lot of chunks fell off recently, landing soil and bones on the beach below. "Whitby landslide exposes human bones at 'Draclua graveyard'," yelled BBC News, finding it unable to resist the Stoker association. The bones area unit regathered and reinterred. Engineers, apparently, area unit functioning on the matter of stabilizing the geological formation and also the church, for now, isn't same to be underneath threat. I hope the prospects stay sensible

2:04 ص | 0 التعليقات | أكمل قراءة الموضوع