Too Much of a Good Thing: How Four Key Survival Traits Are Now Killing Us
Dean of Columbia University's medical school explains why our bodies are out of sync with today's environment and how we can correct this to save our health. Over the past 200 years, human life-expectancy has approximately doubled. Yet we face soaring worldwide rates of obesity, diabetes, high blood pressure, mental illness, heart disease, and stroke. In his fascinating new book, Dr. Lee Goldman presents a radical explanation: The key protective traits that once ensured our species' survival are now the leading global causes of illness and death.
The multidisciplinary nature of marine sciences (Geology, Biology, Physics, Chemistry, and Oceanography) is reflected in this references 1,980 up-to-date, alphabetically listed keywords with illustrations. These keywords provide valuable time-saving assistance when studying marine scientific literature. The brief explanation of the concepts, terminology, and methods makes this book more valuable than a pure glossary or dictionary.
Assuming no prior knowledge, Understanding Syntax illustrates the major concepts, categories and terminology associated with the study of cross-linguistic syntax. A theory-neutral and descriptive viewpoint is taken throughout. Starting with an overview of what syntax is, the book moves on to an explanation of word classes (such as noun, verb, adjective) and then to a discussion of sentence structure in the world’s languages.
This volume presents the outcome of a workshop, held in Amsterdam in 1985, on the nature, even possibility, of explanation in Historical Linguistics: why changes take place and others do not, and why they occur at a particular time and place. The workshop, and this volume, aim to explore questions such as i) are the factors which explain the actuation of a change different from those that explain its implementation?; ii) is it possible to give a typology of changes?; iii) should linguistic explanation hope to meet the same requirements as explanation in the pure sciences?; iv) are all linguistic changes necessarily the product of variation?; ...
Added by: dhhn2007 | Karma: 0.00 | Black Hole | 7 July 2013
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Cambridge IELTS 8 - Reading Explanation
The guide is structured in the table format with different columns: Question, Key, Paragraph Evidence, Sentence Evidence and most importantly, Comment. Cambridge IELTS series is well known for its accuracy and relevance because it is claimed as past IELTS papers. However, it does not provide details of answer key to the Reading section, which causes a great deal of confusion to the reader. As such, the Evidence columns will serve as an essential guide, especially, for moderate-level students. In the Comment column, personal views regarding reading strategies, synonym, key vagueness or confusion will be presented.
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