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The Adjective

All Question - (300)

Long-suffering
Horse -power
Washerman
Dull-grey
Parley
Parlamentation
Parliamentary
Parleyed

Ageing is a normal process of human development that takes place on several levels: biological, psychological and social although it is not certain what causes ageing, most gerontologists would agree that ageing is the result of a combination of both internal and external processes.  The  "wear-and-tear theory"   compares the human body to a machine that over time wears down from use. According to this theory,  bodily systems receive cumulative damage from both external forces, such as toxins, released as a result of metabolism. Cells become damaged and increasingly fail to reproduce or repair themselves.  They die off in larger numbers as we age. the  "combination theory" explains that influences such as stress and diet,  each person is born with a genetically predetermined life expectancy that cannot be exceeded  This interaction of external factors and internal programming  would account for individual variations in the life span. The mystery surrounding why we age is still a topic of numerous ongoing studies. Perhaps, one day we will truly  know why we age.

Probably no belief has been more tenaciously held among people of all times than the conviction that it is possible to judge an individual's mental characteristics by the way he is put together physically. Novelists describe the build, facial shape, coloring, and cloths of their characters in such a way as to accentuate the inner qualities which they assume are  'pooh-pooh' the idea of fortune -telling in general still feel that "there may be something in this palmistry or phrenology." Books explaining personality in terms of the glands obtain wide and enthusiastic acceptance. Employment interviewers develop their own systems of judging prospective employees by their appearance. Habits of thinking in such terms are ingrained in our language in such expressions as "high-brow," "long-headed," of "thin-skinned ."

There are some qualities of a sonnet which make it different from other verse forms. Its definite restrictions make it a challenge to the artistry of the poet and call for all the Technic skills at the poet’s command. The more or less set rhyme patterns occurring regularly within the short space of fourteen lines afford a pleasant effect:on the ear of the reader, and can create truly musical effects. The rigidity of the form precludes too great economy or too great prodigality of. words. Emphasis is placed on exactness and perfection of expression. The brevity of form favours concentrated
expression of ideas or passion.

Waiting is very annoying, exhausting, and time -consuming. Waitin to buy books at the college store is an example of a very long and tiresome task. I need to buy books, and so does everyone else. This causes the lines to be very long. Most of the time I find myself leaning against the wall daydreaming. Sometimes I even leave this and hope to come back when the store isn't extremely busy. But that never works because everyone sh=else seems to get the same idea. So I finally realize that I just have to wait. Another experience is waiting for a ride home from school or work. My ride always seems to be the last car to pull up in the parking lot. When I am for a ride, I wonder what it would be like to win a car or if would ever make it home. Waiting in line at a  fast -food restaurant is also annoying because, if it is fast ' I shouldn't have to wait. ut in But in reality it is never fast, I spend a good deal of my time to buy a burger or a chicken fry. By the time I am handed over the food, I feel hunger, or sometimes I find my appetite totally gone. Anyway, I shouldn't complain, because waiting just seems to be a part of life, so I might as well accept it. 

Many people must have been visited by a bat in their drawing  room or bedroom at one time or another, and if they have not been“to scared of it, they will have been fascinated by its swift, skilful flight and the rapid twists and turns with which it avoids all. obstacles, including objects like shoes and towels that are hurled at it. Now despite the old saying. bats are not blind. They have perfectly good eyes, but these are so tiny that they are not easily detected. Their eyes are certainly not good enough for them to perform some of the extraordinary flying, stunts in which they indulge. It was an italian naturalist called Spallanzani. in the eighteenth century who first started to investigate the flight of bats and by the unnecessarily cruel method of blinding several bats. he found that they could still fly about unhampered, avoiding obstacles as though they were uninjured. But how they managed to do this he could not guess.