Jane is packing up her belongings from her ex-boyfriend's apartment after they broke up. Her friend Sue helps her pack. Sue suggests they get revenge on the ex-boyfriend by making expensive international phone calls to China while he is away from home to run up his phone bill. Jane agrees and Sue dials a number to China as their act of revenge.
The document is a script for a play about Jane packing up her belongings from her ex-boyfriend's apartment after he left her for her sister. Her friend Sue helps her pack and encourages her to get revenge by making prank phone calls to China while the ex-boyfriend is away, in order to make him pay for his infidelity and hurt feelings. Though hesitant at first, Jane agrees to the phone calls, and Sue dials the number to begin their revenge scheme.
The document provides narratives and imagery from multiple songs. It describes a man who has lost someone close to him and is trying to go back in time to find them again or understand what happened. He regrets not learning more about the person when they were together. He finds it difficult to accept their loss and get over the shock.
First certificate lang prac grammar 1 3 - intromalenich1702
The document discusses the use of the present perfect tense in English grammar. It describes how the present perfect simple is used to describe recent events, where the event occurred in the past but has relevance to the present. It is also used to describe indefinite events, where no specific time is given. The present perfect can describe a series of actions over one's life up to now. It is contrasted with the past simple tense, which is used to describe events that have a definite time specified.
El documento discute los desafíos que enfrentan los docentes en la era digital. Citando a varios expertos, enfatiza la necesidad de que los docentes se mantengan actualizados y aprendan continuamente para poder enseñar efectivamente en un contexto de rápidos cambios tecnológicos y nuevas formas de aprendizaje. Finalmente, recalca que ser un buen maestro requiere no solo dar buenas clases, sino también estar comprometido con el aprendizaje permanente.
Christopher W. Smith has over 10 years of experience in packaging engineering, design, testing, and project management. He holds a Bachelor of Science in Packaging from Michigan State University and an Associate in Science and Arts from Northwestern Michigan College. His professional experience includes contract packaging engineering at Hollister Incorporated and student assistant roles at Pakala Consulting. He also has experience in music performance, education, and event coordination from his time with The Young Americans.
The potency of life refers to the economic value assigned to preventing death, which is an important concept in many disciplines including economics, healthcare, and environmental impact assessments. While human life is considered priceless in legal terms, limited resources require that trade-offs be made between saving different lives. The potency of life is a statistical term used to evaluate policies for reducing average deaths, not for comparing the value of individual lives.
Este documento presenta un resumen de la biografía, obra y época de Moliere. El objetivo es determinar los aspectos más relevantes de la vida y producción literaria de Moliere a través de la investigación en fuentes digitales. Los estudiantes trabajaron en grupos utilizando recursos en línea para elaborar diapositivas y realizar exposiciones que demostraron su capacidad de análisis e interacción.
презентація зі семінару "Гнівайтеся, але не грішіть. Як опанувати негативні емоції?", який організував Православний молодіжний веб-портал hram.lviv.ua 16 квітня 2013 р.Б. - http://hram.lviv.ua/2584-vidbuvsya-seminar-pro-gniv.html
The document is a script for a play about Jane packing up her belongings from her ex-boyfriend's apartment after he left her for her sister. Her friend Sue helps her pack and encourages her to get revenge by making prank phone calls to China while the ex-boyfriend is away, in order to make him pay for his infidelity and hurt feelings. Though hesitant at first, Jane agrees to the phone calls, and Sue dials the number to begin their revenge scheme.
The document provides narratives and imagery from multiple songs. It describes a man who has lost someone close to him and is trying to go back in time to find them again or understand what happened. He regrets not learning more about the person when they were together. He finds it difficult to accept their loss and get over the shock.
First certificate lang prac grammar 1 3 - intromalenich1702
The document discusses the use of the present perfect tense in English grammar. It describes how the present perfect simple is used to describe recent events, where the event occurred in the past but has relevance to the present. It is also used to describe indefinite events, where no specific time is given. The present perfect can describe a series of actions over one's life up to now. It is contrasted with the past simple tense, which is used to describe events that have a definite time specified.
El documento discute los desafíos que enfrentan los docentes en la era digital. Citando a varios expertos, enfatiza la necesidad de que los docentes se mantengan actualizados y aprendan continuamente para poder enseñar efectivamente en un contexto de rápidos cambios tecnológicos y nuevas formas de aprendizaje. Finalmente, recalca que ser un buen maestro requiere no solo dar buenas clases, sino también estar comprometido con el aprendizaje permanente.
Christopher W. Smith has over 10 years of experience in packaging engineering, design, testing, and project management. He holds a Bachelor of Science in Packaging from Michigan State University and an Associate in Science and Arts from Northwestern Michigan College. His professional experience includes contract packaging engineering at Hollister Incorporated and student assistant roles at Pakala Consulting. He also has experience in music performance, education, and event coordination from his time with The Young Americans.
The potency of life refers to the economic value assigned to preventing death, which is an important concept in many disciplines including economics, healthcare, and environmental impact assessments. While human life is considered priceless in legal terms, limited resources require that trade-offs be made between saving different lives. The potency of life is a statistical term used to evaluate policies for reducing average deaths, not for comparing the value of individual lives.
Este documento presenta un resumen de la biografía, obra y época de Moliere. El objetivo es determinar los aspectos más relevantes de la vida y producción literaria de Moliere a través de la investigación en fuentes digitales. Los estudiantes trabajaron en grupos utilizando recursos en línea para elaborar diapositivas y realizar exposiciones que demostraron su capacidad de análisis e interacción.
презентація зі семінару "Гнівайтеся, але не грішіть. Як опанувати негативні емоції?", який організував Православний молодіжний веб-портал hram.lviv.ua 16 квітня 2013 р.Б. - http://hram.lviv.ua/2584-vidbuvsya-seminar-pro-gniv.html
The sim is playing a game where their sim character is trapped in an asylum. They discuss the other sim characters' interactions and romances blossoming. Food and bills are a constant concern as the sims eat and complain constantly. Digging for objects and growing food are strategies for earning money to pay bills and restock the empty fridges.
This document provides an overview of the beginning of a Sims community called Uncanny Valley. The founder, Heaven Lindemann, brings the first settlers to an empty lot. At an initial welcoming party, several romantic pairings form spontaneously. Heaven begins a romantic relationship with Nabila. Kareema works to get electricity and plumbing set up for the town. Stephanie offers to help her with this project. The community is off to an interesting start with new dynamics and relationships unfolding between the settlers.
The document provides an introduction to a story that is already in progress. It describes a young lady who has a special day coming up and switches to discussing different characters and events in their lives. These include a new puppy that a girl is excited about, friends getting together, adoption of a new family member, and a wedding. The summary briefly connects some of these storylines without delving into details.
This document appears to be a collection of short dialogues in Spanish. It includes conversations about going to school, eating candy, getting married, borrowing a cellphone, apologizing, and working on homework problems. The dialogues range from 1-5 sentences and cover everyday topics between students and friends.
This document appears to be a collection of short dialogues in Spanish. It includes conversations about going to school, eating candy, getting married, borrowing a cellphone, apologizing, and working on homework problems. The dialogues range from 1-5 sentences and cover everyday topics between students and friends.
Jill gives birth to triplets named Renata, Carlisle, and Aro. Edward is doing homework that involves math with an ice cream cone and watermelon. Jill is no longer pregnant and enjoys using the pool slide. Bella crawls out of the doghouse on her birthday.
Xander and Jane welcomed a baby boy named Tyler into their Sims family. As the children grew, they had more kids including a daughter named Jennifer. The family experienced many typical Sims events like birthdays, proposals, pregnancies and deaths of other town Sims. The narrator provided colorful commentary on the family as they progressed through life stages in their Sims world.
The document is a script that summarizes the internal dialogue of emotions in a teenage boy's brain as he considers whether to go on a date. It depicts Common Sense leading a debate between emotions like Happiness, Sadness, Anger, Libido, and Intelligence on whether the boy should accept the date. After a tied vote, Intelligence casts the deciding vote in favor of the date. Common Sense then relays the decision back to the boy, who accepts the date.
The document discusses several aspects to consider when examining the rhetorical context and visual elements of images used in advertising, photography, and cartoons. These include the target audience, communication medium, and purpose. Key visual elements that convey messages include camera angle, distance, lighting, background, body positioning, eye contact, facial expressions, product placement, fonts, and word choices. Understanding how these visual rhetoric techniques are used can provide insight into the intended effect on viewers.
This document contains a collection of short bioslides from various students in an English composition class. Each slide includes 1-3 facts or details about the student, such as their name, major, hobbies and interests, family members, career goals, or other personal information. There are bioslides from over 20 different students, each 1-3 sentences in length.
The document discusses a parent with two young sons, a 2-year-old named Renner who loves his new guitar and has crazy hair, and a 1-year old named Reed. The family enjoys playing with bubbles for fun.
The narrator overhears their parents whispering cryptically about an abandoned building where something sick or tired was located. The narrator pieces together they were referring to an abandoned building in downtown St. Louis. Upon visiting, the narrator finds the building in disrepair with litter outside. Passing crime scene tape, the narrator discovers a sickly man curled up inside, clearly addicted to drugs. The man appears skeletal and is decorated with tattoos and medals, suggesting he was once a soldier. The narrator removes a board from a window to let the moonlight in before silently leaving the sad scene.
A student created a mock movie poster advertising a microwaveable film called "Loving & Hanging" that is coming soon to theaters, with the tagline "It's not Lean Cuisine. It's not last night's dinner. Whatever, it is still...microwaveable". The poster urges the reader to "Wake up. You're in for a surprise" and states the film is "In Theaters Now!".
The document discusses different approaches to analyzing urban legends through reader response criticism. It examines how urban legends have no inherent meaning until a reader interprets them, using the example of an ink blot. It also explores how urban legends often contain lessons or warnings, and how their content may reflect the cultural beliefs of their place of origin.
This digital portfolio discusses key elements of urban legends, including conveying lessons or warnings through fear, relying on stereotypes to make stories seem plausible, portraying women in dangerous or weak roles, and using emotion like fear to ensure legends are memorable and spread over time. It provides examples like "Call 911 or Die" that aim to shape behavior, and legends like "AIDs Mary" or "Bloody Mary" that fit women into stereotypical roles. Emotion is highlighted as central to why urban legends endure.
The sim is playing a game where their sim character is trapped in an asylum. They discuss the other sim characters' interactions and romances blossoming. Food and bills are a constant concern as the sims eat and complain constantly. Digging for objects and growing food are strategies for earning money to pay bills and restock the empty fridges.
This document provides an overview of the beginning of a Sims community called Uncanny Valley. The founder, Heaven Lindemann, brings the first settlers to an empty lot. At an initial welcoming party, several romantic pairings form spontaneously. Heaven begins a romantic relationship with Nabila. Kareema works to get electricity and plumbing set up for the town. Stephanie offers to help her with this project. The community is off to an interesting start with new dynamics and relationships unfolding between the settlers.
The document provides an introduction to a story that is already in progress. It describes a young lady who has a special day coming up and switches to discussing different characters and events in their lives. These include a new puppy that a girl is excited about, friends getting together, adoption of a new family member, and a wedding. The summary briefly connects some of these storylines without delving into details.
This document appears to be a collection of short dialogues in Spanish. It includes conversations about going to school, eating candy, getting married, borrowing a cellphone, apologizing, and working on homework problems. The dialogues range from 1-5 sentences and cover everyday topics between students and friends.
This document appears to be a collection of short dialogues in Spanish. It includes conversations about going to school, eating candy, getting married, borrowing a cellphone, apologizing, and working on homework problems. The dialogues range from 1-5 sentences and cover everyday topics between students and friends.
Jill gives birth to triplets named Renata, Carlisle, and Aro. Edward is doing homework that involves math with an ice cream cone and watermelon. Jill is no longer pregnant and enjoys using the pool slide. Bella crawls out of the doghouse on her birthday.
Xander and Jane welcomed a baby boy named Tyler into their Sims family. As the children grew, they had more kids including a daughter named Jennifer. The family experienced many typical Sims events like birthdays, proposals, pregnancies and deaths of other town Sims. The narrator provided colorful commentary on the family as they progressed through life stages in their Sims world.
The document is a script that summarizes the internal dialogue of emotions in a teenage boy's brain as he considers whether to go on a date. It depicts Common Sense leading a debate between emotions like Happiness, Sadness, Anger, Libido, and Intelligence on whether the boy should accept the date. After a tied vote, Intelligence casts the deciding vote in favor of the date. Common Sense then relays the decision back to the boy, who accepts the date.
The document discusses several aspects to consider when examining the rhetorical context and visual elements of images used in advertising, photography, and cartoons. These include the target audience, communication medium, and purpose. Key visual elements that convey messages include camera angle, distance, lighting, background, body positioning, eye contact, facial expressions, product placement, fonts, and word choices. Understanding how these visual rhetoric techniques are used can provide insight into the intended effect on viewers.
This document contains a collection of short bioslides from various students in an English composition class. Each slide includes 1-3 facts or details about the student, such as their name, major, hobbies and interests, family members, career goals, or other personal information. There are bioslides from over 20 different students, each 1-3 sentences in length.
The document discusses a parent with two young sons, a 2-year-old named Renner who loves his new guitar and has crazy hair, and a 1-year old named Reed. The family enjoys playing with bubbles for fun.
The narrator overhears their parents whispering cryptically about an abandoned building where something sick or tired was located. The narrator pieces together they were referring to an abandoned building in downtown St. Louis. Upon visiting, the narrator finds the building in disrepair with litter outside. Passing crime scene tape, the narrator discovers a sickly man curled up inside, clearly addicted to drugs. The man appears skeletal and is decorated with tattoos and medals, suggesting he was once a soldier. The narrator removes a board from a window to let the moonlight in before silently leaving the sad scene.
A student created a mock movie poster advertising a microwaveable film called "Loving & Hanging" that is coming soon to theaters, with the tagline "It's not Lean Cuisine. It's not last night's dinner. Whatever, it is still...microwaveable". The poster urges the reader to "Wake up. You're in for a surprise" and states the film is "In Theaters Now!".
The document discusses different approaches to analyzing urban legends through reader response criticism. It examines how urban legends have no inherent meaning until a reader interprets them, using the example of an ink blot. It also explores how urban legends often contain lessons or warnings, and how their content may reflect the cultural beliefs of their place of origin.
This digital portfolio discusses key elements of urban legends, including conveying lessons or warnings through fear, relying on stereotypes to make stories seem plausible, portraying women in dangerous or weak roles, and using emotion like fear to ensure legends are memorable and spread over time. It provides examples like "Call 911 or Die" that aim to shape behavior, and legends like "AIDs Mary" or "Bloody Mary" that fit women into stereotypical roles. Emotion is highlighted as central to why urban legends endure.
1. Mr. Taylor
Sample Play
The Long Distance Break-up/ The Lover’s Telephone Revenge
JANE: Packing up her belongings from ex-boyfriend’s
apartment.
SUE: Jane’s friend.
Setting: Ex-boyfriend’s apartment. Items thrown around the
room.
JANE
I can’t believe that jerk.
SUE
Well, I don’t want to say “I told you
so....”
JANE
So don’t.
SUE
I’m just saying, he left his last
girlfriend for you.
JANE
I know, I know. And now he left me for
someone else.
SUE
But did you have to move in with him? I
mean, it was just so fast.
JANE
Love works like that, I guess.
SUE
So do hormones.
JANE
What’s that supposed to mean?
SUE
Nothing.
2. JANE
Yeah, I’m sure. Are you going to help
me pack this up or not?
SUE
Um, not.
JANE
Guess again.
SUE
Um, sure?
JANE
I knew I could count on you.
SUE
What are friends for, if not to help
pack up their best friends belongings
after foolishly rushing into living
with a guy she barely knows.
JANE
I knew him. Or at least I thought I did.
SUE
Have you talked to your sister yet?
JANE
As far as I’m concerned she can rot.
SUE
Come on, she’s your sister.
JANE
And he was my boyfriend, but that
didn’t seem to stop them.
SUE
If it’s any consolation, they said they
were drunk.
JANE
That just the excuse they’re giving to
justify being jerks.
SUE
3. You could take her to Jerry Springer.
JANE
But then she’d get a free trip to
Chicago and stay at a nice hotel. And
they pay for everything.
SUE
Really?
JANE
Tonya went on there last year. She
partied all weekend, and they drove her
around in a limo. My sister doesn’t
deserve that.
SUE
A limo? Really? Man, they want to make
their guests feel comfortable. I wonder
if Oprah does that for her guests. It’s
probably better than the people who go
on Divorce Court. Maybe the People’s
Court or Judge Judy has better hotels.
JANE
Can we focus?!
SUE
Sorry, I just never thought that
Jerry’s guests would be treated so
nicely.
JANE
(sarcastically)
Yeah, it’s great. Now help me finish
loading up this box.
SUE
Fine. You know how to ruin all the fun
out of these things.
JANE
What things?
SUE
Break ups.
JANE
4. I didn’t think they were supposed to be
fun.
SUE
They can be. With the right motivation.
JANE
What’s that supposed to mean?
SUE
We could break his TV?
JANE
No, I wouldn’t feel right. He loves
that TV.
SUE
Like he loved your sister?
JANE
Still....
SUE
We could take a knife a cut up his
mattress.
JANE
Wouldn’t that be illegal?
SUE
We could microwave a DVD. That would be
fun. The sparks flying everywhere.
JANE
But that’s my microwave.
SUE
Oh.
JANE
Let’s not do anything. I just want to
get out of here.
SUE
We could call China.
JANE
5. China?
SUE
Yeah, China.
JANE
Who’s in China?
SUE
Who cares? Someone, I’m sure.
JANE
I don’t know.
SUE
Think about it. Why not make him pay
for every minute of his affair. You
were hurt, it’s time to hurt him.
JANE
Maybe.
SUE
You know you want to. It’s better than
Jerry Springer.
JANE
Okay, let’s do it.
Sue dials a number.
SUE
How long will he be gone?
JANE
Until tomorrow.
SUE
Perfect!
JANE
By the way, how do you know the number
to China?
SUE
I have a sister, too.