CD1: Good morning • A.B.C. • Lightly row • Color song • Long long ago • Ten little Indians • Are you sleeping • Five little ducks • The world is small • This old man • My baby dog • Sail on little boat • Days of a week • This is the way • Ten little kittens • Sunday, Sunday • Stand up • Jolly, Jolly • Greensleeves • Can you tell me what it is • Hide and seek • A little shopping song • The rainbow song • Goodnight fellows
The essays in this book are based on researches the author has
undertaken on a wide range of topics, some using equipment no more
elaborate than what one can find in an ordinary kitchen, others making
elegant use of sophisticated experimental apparatus. Presenting a
personal odyssey in physics, Silverman investigates processes for which
no visualizable mechanism can be given, or that seem to violate
fundamental physical laws (but do not), or that appear to be well
understood but turn out to be subtly devious. Written in an engagingly
personal style, the essays will be of interest to students of physics
and related disciplines as well as professional physicists. Though they
deal with subtle concepts, the discussions use little mathematics, and
anyone with a little college physics will be able to read the book with
pleasure. Silverman's researches deal with in quantum mechanics, atomic
and nuclear physics, electromagnetism and optics, gravity,
thermodynamics, and the physics of fluids, and these essays address
.such questions as: How does one know that atomic electrons move? Would
an "anti-atom" fall upward? How is it possible for randomly emitted
particles to arrive at a detector preferentially in pairs? Can one
influence electrons in London by not watching them in New York? Can a
particle be influenced by a magnetic field through which it does not
pass? A basketball is not changed by turning it once around its axis,
but what about an electron? Can more light reflect from a surface than
is incident upon it? "A Universe of Atoms" is the second edition of
Silverman's "And Yet It Moves"; each essay in the earlier collection
has been revised and updated, and some new essays on the uncommon
physics of common objects have been added.
Tom Dalzell, Terry Victor “Sex Slang"
Are you a beaver cleaver or the office bike? Would you rather pack fudge or munch carpet? Do you content yourself with paddling the pickle as youre still a cherry boy?
Sex Slang not only gives you 3,000 new words to talk about your favourite pastimes but will also open your eyes to practices you didnt even know existed. This naughty little book, infused with humour, will give you a spectacular sexual vocabulary from all over the English speaking world, as well as hours of reading pleasure.
A selection of youngsters' favorite nursery rhymes includes "Hey Diddle Diddle," "Little Bo Peep," "Humpty Dumpty," "Little Miss Muffet," and "Wee Willie Winkle" This is a collection of much-loved nursery rhymes, set in that magical land where a cat can go to look at the Queen, and a cow can jump over the moon. The full-colour illustrations make this a beautiful book for a child to grow up with.