> The brain runs on sugar, but how the brain uses sugar changes as people grow and age. Babies and children use some of their brain fuel in a process called aerobic glycolysis that sustains brain development and maturation. The rest of the sugar is burned to power the day-to-day tasks of thinking and doing.
> In adolescents and young adults, a considerable portion of brain sugar also is devoted to aerobic glycolysis, but the fraction drops steadily with age, leveling off at very low amounts by the time people are in their 60s.
> “The main finding of the study is that left-branching speakers were better at remembering initial stimuli across verbal and non-verbal working memory tasks, probably because real-time sentence comprehension heavily relies on retaining initial information in LB languages, but not in RB languages”
> paying special attention to the treatment of the wheels of barrels, trolleys, containers, and equipment by moistening them with a solution of disinfectant (isopropyl alcohol).
I need something instead of "moistening", something to get across the meaning "those wheels should be soaked in disinfectant by thorough wiping using disinfectant-soaked wipes"
If a worker has made a mistake and the plan is to give him an additional training session, which prepositions and phrases to use for describing this?
"Perform an unscheduled instruction of I. Ivanov (about? on the use of? on?) the Standard Operating Procedure “Rules of work in cleanrooms”."
A sun dog (or sundog) or mock sun, formally called a parhelion (plural parhelia) in meteorology, is an atmospheric optical phenomenon that consists of a bright spot to one or both sides of the Sun. Two sun dogs often flank the Sun within a 22° halo.
The sun dog is a member of the family of halos, caused by the refraction of sunlight by ice crystals in the atmosphere. Sun dogs typically appear as a pair of subtly colored patches of light, around 22° to the left and right of the Sun, and at the same altitude above the horizon as the Sun. They can be seen anywhere in the world during any season, but...
Nefteyugansk (Russian: Нефтеюга́нск) is a city in Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug, Russia, located south of the Ob River, close to the larger city of Surgut. Population: 122,855 (2010 Census); 107,830 (2002 Census); 93,930 (1989 Census).
== History ==
It was founded on October 16, 1967, after an oil field had been discovered on a small forest clearing in the middle of the taiga marshland in 1961. The main and the only big enterprise in the city, Yuganskneftegaz, was founded in February 1966. The name 'Yugansk' comes from the indigenous Khanty name of a small river near the city, neft' means oil in...
Warning picture showing dissected Russian Doll
My theory
I believe that Russian Dolls reproduce asexually. They are born pregnant. At the time of birth, the outer doll dies. What is now the outer doll grows until it reaches full size at which point it gives birth and dies. The birth process i...
To be honest, I tend to reword around some prepositions because the longer I think about them the less sure I get :) have you ever looked at a word and the more you look at it the more alien it gets?
Wow that’s brutal. The polar vortex brought serious cold to areas in the US not prepared to handle it, but the mountains protected my city from dropping below zero
in my undergraduate English courses, we seldom talk about English grammar or vocabulary, whether it's English conversation, English composition, English reading, or English listening. Our teachers just brought a featured nonprofessional topic each time to talk about as our course contents.
so in my feeling, English courses are just playing courses.
> Yet still, e’en here, content can spread a charm, Redress the clime, and all its rage disarm. Though poor the peasant’s hut, his feasts though small, He sees his little lot the lot of all.
@M.A.R.ಠ_ಠ I originally registered for English adjunct in the third year, but quit it midway because I didn't feel these playful courses would benefit me.
@CaptainBohemian A course that aims to better your English fluency does not necessarily operate as a linguistic course
@CowperKettle Dangit, the staircase never ends
In the meanwhile, could you preorder two kidneys for me? We have a fridge
@CaptainBohemian There might be some truth to feeling the courses were hardly ever more than a playground, especially if the other students were in no way as fluent as you are
and I feel being an English teacher is so easy; they just come across an arbitrary topic and ask students to have group discussion and make presentation every time. It's like they don't really make substantial preparation before the course. I don't really like that kind of course, so I quit.
The Langdale axe industry is the name given by archaeologists to specialised stone tool manufacturing centred at Great Langdale in England's Lake District during the Neolithic period (beginning about 4000 BC in Britain). The existence of a production site was originally suggested by chance discoveries in the 1930s, which were followed by more systematic searching in the 1940s and 1950s by Clare Fell and others. The finds were mainly reject axes, rough-outs and blades created by knapping large lumps of the rock found in the scree or perhaps by simple quarrying or opencast mining. Hammerstones have...
@CaptainBohemian Being a mediocre teacher in general is pretty easy, and due to the way English teaching is (mis)handled, especially in Asia, there is little incentive for most English teachers to be something out of ordinary.
If you struggle a reasonable number of times to formulate your sentence because you aim to be articulate among more fluent speakers, that's when you'll enhance your command of English
@M.A.R.ಠ_ಠ your pinging me make noise to me. It's strange that speaker is automatically unmused.
I don't know what you mean by fluency. I think as long as people can understand each other, nobody cares how you speak English. I have seen Korean or Japanese scientists make scientific presentation with very strange accents, but nobody protests.
@M.A.R.ಠ_ಠ the reason I feel that kind of course is like a playground is not because students don't speak fluent English, but the topic the teacher asks us to discuss is generally of playful feature, not a serious topic which can actually improve professional knowledge.
it's like a leisurely chat, rather than a serious course as other courses.
@Jasper In neurodegenerative disease, some growth factors and nutrients could be supplied directly into the brain via a system of biocompatible conduits.
This is already done in murine models.
For instance, in a mouse model of depression they feed Reelin into the brain and the mice become less depressed because the brain begins to create more new connections.
The frost will end on Friday.. but maybe I'll try to jog tomorrow.
Some folks were jogging even today in Yekaterinburg.
> Among them were Noona in New South Wales, where the temperature at night remained above 35.9°C on 17 January – the hottest night in Australia’s history.
Wow. I can barely function at temperatures above 25С
Must have been a horrible night.
Anonymous
17:58
The one about left branching versus right branching language speakers which shows a really tiny effect on working memory.
@CowperKettle They're not fishy, it's just my biggest pet peeve about these fields: The researches like to lie to themselves about the p numbers and overexaggerate the results so they look . . . hmm, sexy.
And the pseudo-scientific media causing an uproar every time one of these results grabs some attention isn't helping it
A while ago I read about a bunch of academics that gathered around as an effort to call to stop these fallacious appeals to consequences
Dunno how serious or widespread it was though. Or how serious researchers would take it to be