1.employer

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NAMA :AVELINA M.JUITA
NIM :2012001026
TUGAS 2:TIK
 TUGAS 1 : LINGVOSOFT.COM. INDONESIA - INGGRIS
1.PENGALAMAN
 N experience, school, incident, event, impression
2. PETUALANG
 N wanderer, adventurer, tramp, gadder, hobo, gadabout.
3. PENGHASILAN
 N production, manufacture, income, revenue, earnings, coming-in:
coming-ins, gainings, procreation
4. HIDUP
 N life, living, existence, space, world, head, scene, skin
 V live, exist, get along, subsist, tick, last, liven up
5.PECANDU
 N addict, habitue, votary
6. PANTANGAN
 N prohibition, taboo,
8. RINTANGAN
 ID fly: a fly in the ointment
 N obstacle, hindrance, block, cumber, encumbrance, hitch,
impediment, handicap, rub, barrier, hurdle, blockage, countercheck,
holdback, cramp, retarder, retardation, retardment, trammel, setback,
crab, traverse, ring-fence, stonewalling, block: stumbling block, crimp,
strike, marplot, trash, complication, hold-up, debarment
9. PERADILAN
 N justice
10. PENGECUALIAN
 N exclusion, exception, demurrer, exemption.
 LINGVOSOFT.COM INGGRIS – INDONESIA
1. DISCUSSION
 N pembicaraan, perundingan, rundingan, pembahasan, tukar pikiran,
permusyawarahan, musyawarah, permufakatan, mufakat, diskusi,
tanya jawab, bahasan, debat, pakat, penuturan.
2. COMPARISON
 N perbandingan, bandingan, pertandingan, tamsilan, persamaan
3. OPPOSITION
 N perlawanan, pertentangan, dahaga, tentangan, partai penentang,
golongan oposisi, pelawan, oposisi.
4.ADMIRE
 V mengagumi, memuji, memuji-muji, mendambakan
5. SUPPORT
 N sokongan, bantuan, pendukungan, pendukung, tunjangan, beking,
tiang, cagak, penunjang, penyokong, jaminan penghidupan, sandaran,
tumpuan, ganjal, andukan, pendatang, jagang, bantalan
 V menyangga, mengampu, menggalang, memperkalang, menghidupi,
membantu penghidupan, memberi nafkah, menaruh, menaruhkan,
menyokong, memberi sokongan, mendukung, menunjang, membantu,
membeking, menumpu, menyandari, memapah, membenarkan
6. EXPERIENCE
 N pengalaman, garam, keahlian
 V mengalami, menemui, merasakan
7. DEVELOPMENT
 N perkembangan, pengembangan, pembangunan, pembinaan,
eksploitasi
8. COMPREHENSION
 N pengartian, pemahaman, komprehensi, daya paham, daya
menanggapi sesuatu
9. VIEWE
 N pemandangan, tamasya, penglihatan, pandangan, pendirian,
pendapat, paham, gambaran, maksud, tujuan, rencana, kemauan,
kehendak, tinjauan
 V melihat, menengok, memandang, menganggap, menonton.
10. APPRECIATION
 N penghargaan, apresiasi, pengartian, pengetahuan
TUGAS 2.
 YOURDICTIONARI.COM THESAURUS.
1.EMPLOYER
owner,manager,proprietor,patron,management,head,director,executive,bo
ss,superintendent, supervisor,president,chief, capitalist, businessperson,
entrepreneur, manufacturer, corporation, company, business, firm,
organization, outfit, master,front office*, old man*, kingpin*, big shot*.
2.GAME
 Plucky
spirited adventuresome, ready and willing*; see brave 1.
 Lame
bad, injured, weak; see disabled
pastime, amusement, diversion, recreation, sport, play
3.JOURNALIST
reporter, commentator, columnist, member of the fourth estate; see
announcer, reporter, writer.
4.LINGUAGE
 A means of communication
speech, dialect, voice, utterance, expression, vocalization, phonation,
native tongue, mother tongue, articulation, meta-language, object
language, sense-datum language, thing-language, physical language;
language of diplomacy, language of chemistry, language of flowers, etc.;
accent, word, sign, signal, pantomime, gesture, facial gesture, vocabulary,
diction, idiom, local speech, broken English, pidgin English, lingo,
brogue, polyglot, patois, vernacular, lingua franca, trade language, jargon,
gibberish, debased speech, inscription, picture writing, hieroglyphics,
cuneiform, printing, writing, poetry, prose, song, style, phraseology,
lingo*; see also communication 1, conversation, speech 2.
 The study of language, sense 1
morphology, phonology, phonemics, morphemics, morphophonemics,
phonics, phonetics, semantics, semasiology, criticism, letters, linguistic
studies, history of language, etymology, dialectology, linguistic
geography, anthropological linguistics, sociolinguistics, lexicostatistics,
glottochronology, structural linguistics, descriptive linguistics, taxonomic
linguistics, historical linguistics, diachronic linguistics, comparative
linguistics, synchronic





linguistics, contrastive grammar, descriptive grammar, prescriptive
grammar, phrase-structure grammar, PS grammar, generative grammar,
immediate-constituent grammar, IC grammar, transformational grammar,
tagmemics, stratificational grammar, glossematics, Prague school of
linguistics, London school of linguistics, Firthian school of linguistics;
see also anthropology, etymology, grammar, linguistics, literature
1.Types of languages include: synthetic, inflectional, analytic, isolating,
distributive, incorporating, symbolic, fusional, polytonic, agglutinative,
computer, artificial, polysynthetic.
Families of language include: Indo-European, Finno-Ugric, Altaic,
Caucasian, Afro-Asiatic, Nilo-Saharan, Niger-Congo, Khoisan, MalayoPolynesian, Dravidian, Austro-Asiatic, Sino-Tibetan, Kadai, EskimoAleut, Athabaskan, Algonquian, Mosan, Iroquoian, Natchez-Muskogean,
Siouan, Penutian, Hokan, Uto-Aztecan, Mayan.
Indo-European languages include --- Greek: Modern Greek; Celtic:
Breton, Welsh, Scottish Gaelic, Irish Gaelic; Italic: Latin, Romanian,
Italian, Rhaeto-Romanic, French, Provençal, Spanish, Catalan,
Portuguese; Germanic: Swedish, Danish, Norwegian, Icelandic, Modern
High German, Yiddish, Afrikaans, Dutch, Flemish, Modern Low
German, Frisian, English; Slavic: Polish, Czech, Slovak, Bulgarian,
Slovenian, Serbo-Croatian, Ukrainian, Russian; Baltic: Latvian,
Lithuanian; Iranian: Persian, Pashto; Indo-Aryan: Bengali, Punjabi,
Hindi, Urdu, Marathi, Gujarati, Romany, Dard.
Other Eurasian languages include --- Uralic: Finnish, Estonian,
Hungarian, Samoyed; Altaic: Turkish, Mongolian; Georgian; Abkhasian,
Kabardian, Chechen; Basque; Etruscan.
African and Asian languages include --- Afro-Asiatic or Hamito-Semitic:
Akkadian, Assyro-Babylonian, Aramaic, Syriac, Phoenician, Talmudic,
Hebrew, Arabic, Amharic, Egyptian, Coptic, Tuareg, Somali, Hausa;
Sumerian; Niger-Congo: Wolof, Mande, Ewe, Yoruba, Ibo, Efik, Tiv,
Swahili, Kikuyu, Rwanda, Zulu, Xhosa, Swazi, Venda; Nilo-Saharan:
Songhai, Kanuri, Nilotic, Dinka, Nuer, Masai; Khoisan: Sandawe, Hatsa,
Bushman-Hottentot.
Asian and Malayo-Polynesian languages include --- Japanese, Ryukyu;
Korean; Sino-Tibetan: Burmese, Tibetan, Mandarin, Cantonese; Kadai:
Thai, Siamese, Laotian, Lao; Miao-Yao; Malayo-Polynesian: Malay,
Indonesian, Javanese, Balinese, Tagalog, Filipino, Malagasy,
Micronesian, Hawaiian, Tahitian, Samoan, Maori, Fijian; Papuan,
Australian; Tasmanian; Dravidian: Telegu, Tamil, Kanerese, Kannada,
Malayalam; Austro-Asiatic: Santali, Palaung, Mon-Khmer, Vietnamese.
 North, Central, and South American languages include --- Algonquian:
Massachusetts, Delaware, Mohegan, Penobscot, Pasamaquoddy, FoxSauk-Kickapoo, Cree, Menomini, Shawnee, Blackfoot, Arapaho,
Cheyenne; Wiyot, Yurok; Kutenai; Salishan: Tillamook, Lillooet;
Wakashan: Nootka, Kwakiutl; Muskogean: Creek, Choctaw-Chickasaw,
Seminole; Natchez, Chitimacha; Iroquoian: Cherokee, Huron, Wayondot,
Erie, Oneida, Mohawk, Seneca, Cayuga, Susquehanna, Conestoga;
Siouan: Biloxi, Dakota, Mandan, Winnebago, Hidatsa, Crow; Caddoan:
Caddo, Wichita, Pawnee; Yuchi; Aleut, Eskimo; Penutian: Tsimshian,
Maidu, Miwok, Klamath-Modoc; Zuni; Hokan: Karok, Shasta, Washo,
Pomo; Subtiaba-Tlapanec, Tequistlatec, Jicaque; Comecrudo, Tonkawa;
Mayan: Kekchi, Quiche, Tseltal-Tsotzil, Tojolabal, Yucatec; Totonac;
Mixe, Zoque, Vera Cruz; Huave; Zapotec, Chatino; Mixtec; Pueblo,
Popoluca; Otomi, Pame; Tarascan; Uto-Aztecan: Tubatulabal, Luiseño,
Tepehuan, Pima-Papago, Hopi, Huichol, Nahuatl, Aztec, Northern Paiute,
Paviotso, Mono, Shoshoni-Comanche, Southern Paiute-Ute, Chemehuevi;
Kiowa-Tanoan; Keresan; Na-Dené: Haida, Tlingit, Athabaskan,
Chipewyan, Apachean, Navaho, Hupa; Yukian; Quechua; Aymara;
Araucanian.
5.HISTORY
 A narrative
account, memoir, tale; see story.
 The systematic, documented account of the past
annals, records, archives, recorded history, chronicle, historical
knowledge, historical writings, historical evidence, historical
development. see also record 1, 2, social science.Specific divisions of the
study of history include: local, state, national, American, United States,
world, European, Asian, African, modern, medieval, classical, ancient,
Roman, Greek, literary, cultural, intellectual; narrative, folk, ethnic, oral,
genealogy;
 Past events
antiquity, the past, the old days, ancient times, the good old days*,
ancient history*; see also antiquity 3, past 1.
6.EMPTY
•To become empty
discharge, leave, pour out, flow out, ebb, run out, open into, converge, be
discharged, void, purge, release, exhaust, vomit forth, leak, spill, drain
off, rush out, escape.
ANTONYMS flow in, enter*, absorb.
•To cause to become empty
remove, pour out, spill out, dump, dip, ladle, decant, tap, void, let out,
deplete, exhaust, deflate, drain, shed, bail, bail out, clean out, clear out,
unload, unpack, unburden, evacuate, eject, expel, vacate, draw off, draw
out, disgorge, suck dry, clear, drink, consume, use up.
ANTONYMS pack, fill*, stuff.
7. LIFE
 The fact or act of living
being, entity, growth, animation, animate existence, endurance, survival,
presence, living, consciousness, subsistence, symbiosis, breath,
continuance, flesh and blood, animateness, viability, substantiality, mortal
being, reproduction, metabolism, vitality, vital spark; see also experience
1.
ANTONYMS death*, discontinuance, nonexistence.
 The sum of one's experiences
life experience, conduct, behavior, way of life, reaction, response,
participation, tide of events, circumstances, unhappiness, realization,
knowledge, enlightenment, attainment, development, growth, personality;
see also world 1.
 A biography
life story, memoir, memorial; see biography, journal 1, story.
 Duration
lifetime, one's natural life, longevity, actuarial expectancy, period of
existence, duration of life, endurance, continuance, span, history, career,
course, era, epoch, century, decade, days, generation, time, day, period,
life span, season, cycle, record, one's born days*; see also extent, length 3
 One who promotes gaiety
life-giver, spirit, animator, entertainer, invigorator, life of the party*,
master of ceremonies*; see also host 1, hostess 1, 3.
 Vital spirit
vital force, vital principle, lifeblood, élan vital (French); see
enthusiasm 1, excitement.
8. PRODUCTION
 The act of producing
origination, creation, authoring, reproduction, yielding, giving, bearing,
rendering, giving forth, increasing, augmentation, accrual, return,
procreation, occasioning, generation, engendering, fructification, fruiting,
blooming, blossoming; see also making.
 The amount produced
crop, result, stock; see product 2.
9. CAMPUS
 An example of a campus is the area around and buildings at Harvard
University.
 An example of a campus is Googleplex, which is the buildings of Google.
10.GLOBAL
 So pervasive and all-inclusive as to exist in or affect the whole world:
catholic, cosmic, cosmopolitan, ecumenical, pandemic, planetary,
universal, worldwide. See limited, specific
 Covering a wide scope:
all-around, all-inclusive, all-round, broad, broad-spectrum,
comprehensive, expansive, extended, extensive, far-ranging, far-reaching,
general, inclusive, large, overall, sweeping, wide-ranging, wide-reaching,
widespread. See specific
 YOURDICTIONARI.COM SENTENCE EXAMPLES
1.EMPLOYER
1. Collective bargaining with employers.
2. Compulsion ' the tuc has been at the forefront of those arguing for
compulsion on employers.
3. Compulsion for employers in contributing to their employees ' pension
funds.
4. Conservatism of science employers and thought that this might adversely
affect disabled students ' employment prospects.
5. You would need to continue to contribute and the overseas employer
would need to reimburse the institution for the employer's contribution.
6. Equal-opportunity employer, allowing no discrimination on grounds of
race, creed, or sex.
7. Employers ' federations - eg the federation of small businesses ( fsb ).
8. Inducement by an employer.
9. The inland revenue can however only pay spp from the first week of the
employer's insolvency.
10.Insolvency of the employer.
11.Internships with employers.
12.Lawful for the employer to count public holidays as part of the
entitlement.
12 Minefield for the unwary employer.
13 Are employers oblige">obliged to offer a pension scheme to their
employees?
14 When attending interviews at employers ' premises, seek only repayment
of reasonable expenses incurred.
15 Reasonable for the employer to do in the circumstances.
16 Recalcitrant employer might seek to argue that the union does not come
with clean hands.
17 Reimbursed by a large employer.
18 Reimbursed by a large employer.
19 Reluctance of employers to release workers for treatment.
20 Seekcoming business aware useful information on one of the key skills
sought by some graduate employers.
21 Stead with prospective employers for many years afterward.
22 Unlawful for an employer to operate blanket bans on the recruitment of
people with diabetes.
23 Absolve the employer from any vicarious liability.
24 Blacklisted by the building employers.
25 From this point onward, all of the money contributed toward these
benefits is, in essence, an employer contribution.
26 Compliance officers have no right to serve orders in respect of the wages
of workers no longer employed by the employed by the employer.
27 Exemplar employer of people with mental health problems ` .
28 Onus on the employer to provide a pension scheme.
29 Prized by employers.
30 Prized by employers.
31 He will succeed merely by showing that an employer's wrongdoing had
materially increased the risk of the claimant contracting the disease.
32 Finally, we would caution against wholesale employer compulsion given
the potential negative impact that this may have on smes.
33 Insolvent employer.
2.GAME
1. Adrift with twenty games to go - you boys have pulled off a minor
miracle.
2. Aficionados of the first class game.
3. Aggregative games are often best studied in the context of particular
applications.
4. Bookworm word building game.
5. Burnout game on the psp for that.
6. Cat-and-mouse game continues, he is sucked ever deeper into the serial
killer's world.
7. Catchup game.
8. Download every game cheat on the planet get cheats for every game ever
made!
9. Clarets in the 6-5 game.
10.Classis game of skill and accuracy for all the family to enjoy.
11.Common denominator between the two games is the absence of robert
page and the use of a makeshift defense.
12.Complexion of the game changed.
13.Conceded in four games.
14.Dogfight game.
15.Farce of a game in 1974 against leicester city having lost to newcastle in
the semi-final.
16.Four-handed games in about forty minutes, with each game throwing up a
three-way tie for the lead.
17.Free-for-all games, it plays a far more important role in teamplay games.
18.Gymkhana games and therefore open to all ages and abilities.
19.Hangman game?
20.Hide-and-seek game helps develop logic and memory skills.
21.Home computer game.
22.Intricacyely, we could write all day about this and still not fully convey
the game's intricacies.
23.I started the game contact Irene faster than state.
24.Legendry game fish the mahseer have thrilled generations of sportsmen,
and indeed will continue to do so.
25.Main memory of that game, apart from the header he scored, was the
amazing atmosphere.
26.Minesweeper game that you have on your computer.
27.Officiate in games and provide help and guidance.
28.Officiated the game.
29.Outrun games have always relied on the classic design principle of simple
to learn, but hard to master.
30.Patience games here ( including variations ), all in the one download.
3. JOURNALIST
1. Ego of a well-known industry journalist, joe pox represents his own
views independent of musictank.
2. Freelance journalist based in brussels.
3. Hard-bitten, cynical journalist.
4.LANGUAGE
2. Agglutinative language which accepts morphemes being added to other
morphemes.
3. Antedates language.
4. Antinomyclass="ex">language antinomies constitute the essence of
language, and hence must be studied from both linguistic and
philosophical points of view.
5. Applicative programming languages.
6. Bewitchment of language is the task of philosophy.
7. Bilingual in any language can have very positive effects on children and
their education.
8. Bon mot in the language.
9. A more recent specialist interest is in the field of child language
brokering.
10.Cadences of the language.
11.Communicateland, nicholas became an expert in communicating in chimp
language which proved vital.
12.Students wishing to take french will be required to take a simple language
competence entrance test.
13.Connectives in language, signaling combination, opposition, temporal
shift, and so on.
14.Conversant in the main language.
15.Converse in rational language before the seventh.
16.Cranny massive tutorial covers many of the nooks and crannies of the
language, which is of great value in the programming world.
17.Creole languages, all over the world.
18.Demotic language.
19.Diacritics in other languages have no effect on the filing of letters.
20.Disassociate language learning with risk taking.
21.Fluency in the french language to enable them to converse with french
people about subjects of mutual interest.
22.Fluent in a second language, he said.
23.Gibberish language, at random, to any tune.
24.These are questions that i ask about many english language haiku!
25.Ideographic language.
26.Idioms in a language is to read well-written code.
27.Incantation in a language unknown to me.
28.Indo-European languages and the big sister of greek and latin.
29.Inelegant language in which the gospel is written.
30.Intelligible language.
31.Isomorphism between language and reality.
32.Lexicon of a language consists of many kinds of signs other than simply
nouns.
33.Their theorem prover is written in the functional programming language
lisp which is also the language in which theorems are represented
34.Lisp like programming language with which one can actually tailor the
environment [ 16, 18 ] ).
35.Loanwords from that language.
36.Mangleologize to any native welsh speakers who are appalled by my
tortured mangling of this beautiful language.
37.In order to support that flexibility, the user has to write an import program
in the integrated modeling language mistral.
38.Negation in the languages of europe arts and humanities research council
award no.
39.Neuroscience of language.
40.Orthography of the language.
41.Orthography for a patois language, or: how should one spell pennsylvania
german?
42.Peculiarityrly days of radio in britain george bernard shaw was giving a
talk about the peculiarities of the english language.
43.Philology of individual languages is second to none in the country.
44.Chapter 8: acoustic phonetics the phonetics chapter is quite detailed and
informative for those wishing to know about the phonetics of the
language.
45.Phonology of a language is grounded in the ability of its speakers to
perceive, create and categorize sounds.
46.Profane language.
47.Proficient in a foreign language.
48.Programming language for example sql will used to interact with the
database.
49.Redrafted in plain language.
50.Thus, language relativity is not really any sort relativity of identity at all.
51.Scripting language.
5. HISTORY
1. Adage that history repeats itself, first as tragedy, and then as farce.
2. Airbrushed from the history of government reform.
3. Annals of history stalin's name will forever be recorded with the
infamous brand of cain!
4. Blip in the history of the university.
5. Blunder in the history of the english people.
6. Byways of naval history ' .
7. Compendious history of the cotton manufacture was published in 1823,
points up the problem.
8. Detour into russian history and the revolutionary democratic approach of
the bolsheviks.
9. Digression into the history of bolshevism.
10.Dustbin of history, the better.
11.Emeritus of french history, university of london.
12.Epoch in history will begin with you.
13.Facing history to meet the key stages 3 and 4 standards in history and
citizenship.
14.Footnote in the history of the game.
15.Gaffes in the history of modern pr.
16.Geopolitics history and the future palden jenkins 22.
17.Glove compartment history of the motorway service area ' ever.
18.Good Book on the history of the bridge, showing how the first peter
colechurch bridge was built.
6.EMPTY
1. She probably hadn't emptied a bedpan in twenty years.
2. Just as important are the people who empty the cesspits, the street
sweepers, refuse collectors and those who staff the car parks.
3. Dustbin emptied?
4. Enough space was cleared of dirt and debris to lay planks on top of empty
nail kegs, to seat possibly thirty persons.
5. An empty matchbox placed under the back edge of the interface solves
the problem.
6. Some are empty nesters who want to get out of the house.
7. Dirty water or empty pails were commonly punished by pinching or
lameness.
8. A stock of empty sandbags are stored at the stanley lane depot.
9. The default value is the empty string, which means no extension will be
appended to the filename in any case.
10.But when difference is relational, it is also an empty tautology.
11.Click on this to empty the trash to manage folders click on folders in the
top menu.
12.She watered the plants, emptied a wastebasket and hung up a towel to
dry.
13.He emptied the ashtray into a sheet of newspaper, then shoved it under
the bed.
14.All these supply empty calories which lead to weight gain cut back on
alcohol.
15.Don't throw out empty egg cartons, paper or plastic - they make excellent
seed trays.
16.People didn't want to spend the money emptying the cesspool and just put
a pipe in to run into the nearest dike.
17.The coming general election will be expensive, and we are starting with
rather empty coffers.
18.Dishwasher emptied, floor cleared, toys away.
19.An empty hive in your apiary containing drawn comb will often attract a
swarm - a bait hive.
20.What he said, if i remember, was that it was like being led through an
empty opera house.
21.Dumbo in line 3 of the entry insert " date unknown " in the empty
parenthesis.
22.Speak the word of god over the empty pews.
23.Sepulchreide their real tombs, many have found honorary and empty
sepulchers.
24.Drinking on an empty stomach also increase the effect.
25.You see, the empty tomb by itself would not be proof.
26.Waggonin had been engaged in the braking of empty wagons adjacent to
the colliery " scree.
27.The first wagon of the freight is an empty coal wagon from the gaerwen
yard.
28.The first job was to empty the kitchen waste bin into the compost bin on
the plot.
29.Tony had told us to bring empty bottles to get mineral water.
30.A system will be in place to swap empty gas canisters for a can of beer.
31.Ullage: waste beer left at the bottom of an empty cask or overflowing into
a drip tray.
32.There are now a number of genres within music, which exemplify the
empty conceit of muzak.
33.All their thoughts are spent in empty declamations and forms of satire or
anger, and these do not subdue affections.
34.Take the empty desolation of one day, all this will be fields.
7.LIFE
1. The mind boggles....!# unable to find /life!# abort / retry / fail?
2. Absurditylows you to see life's absurdities through his eyes and laugh
with him.
3. Accident insurancetoo much accident american company insurance life
diabetes uk quoting on big.
4. Actuality of life.
5. Adversitys the adversities of life, from relatively minor things to the
worst thing you can imagine.
6. Afflictions of life are about what goes on inside.
7. Be able to chuckle at life's minor aggravations.
8. Allegory of life itself so he needs stick it out.
9. Allegory for life?
10.Amortiser, they are subsequently amortized over the lives of the
contracts, which are typically considerably longer than four years.
11.Anecdotes about the private life of frederick ii.
12.Anecdotes of life as a young civil engineer working for a local authority.
13.Annuitants life.
14.Aspects of life in monmouthshire.
15.Meanwhile old mutual, the country's largest life assurer, is looking
outwards.
16.Bane of every holiday divers life is the air baggage allowance!
17.Boredom of married life in his local, the four feathers.
18.Bumbles through life killing the gorgons by accident.
19.Burly of city life and many are distinctly opulent.
20.Business cycle has first hand experience of the key areas of the business
continuity life cycle and using plans in anger.
21.Calamity deal with the calamities of this life.
22.Careless of the single life.
23.Chorister's life would be right for him.
24.Claustrophobia of rural life.
25.Clinging for dear life from a vertical rock face and you don't want to drop
a compass.
26.Colonists ' day-to-day lives were the relationships within which they
lived with one another.
27.Commercialism of modern life.
28.Conspired against a quiet life for the yorks.
29.Contented with life!
30.Contentment in the next life.
31.Contentment with life.
32.Cosseted life.
33.Crackled into life once more, only for us to discover they had still not
turned up at camp.
34.Dearer than life to me, and to god there was something more precious
than even the blood of his son.
35.Depreciated over the remaining useful life of the related asset.
36.Devaluethe loss of belief in the soul lead to the devaluing of human life?
37.Diarist's lives was continuing education in adulthood.
38.Dictator for life.
39.Disheartened with life.
40.Disruptive of family life than an epo.
41.Doldrums of life, that arab strap was born.
42.Drudgery of every day life.
43.Eccentricityat i have called guessing the hidden eccentricities of life.
44.End-all of life.
45.Epiphanyau's gift was the ability to seek out and capture, with humanity
and grace, those little epiphanies of everyday parisian life.
46.Everyday life can help avoid further damage.
47.The life expectancy of donkeys is low with only 11 % of donkeys
sampled being over the age of 15 years.
48.Extensity of life as its fullest intensity.
49.Fast lane of modern life.
50.Flinches away from life he takes it fully into his novels without becoming
gratuitous in any way.
51.Foibles of everyday life into a treasure trove of the eclectic.
52.Frailty of human life.
53.Gorgeous in real life - it's unbelievable.
54.Grandchildren's lives.
55.Grandma lives near chester, which is a very old roman town.
56.Grime of real life clogged its hinges.
57.Gritty of business life.
58.Hardscrabble life of an irish traveler family on the forlorn margins of
modern-day dublin.
59.Heroine's life, she comes through victorious and with a lot of class.
60.Holiness of life in the home.
61.Hospitable for life, is the home planet of the anunnaki.
62.Humdrum of married life, the bright young men of spain sought
adventure in the americas or east indies.
63.Hurly-burly of everyday corporate life.
64.Hustle of urban life.
65.Idiocy result, millions of country people have been liberated from
farming, landownership, self-employment, and other idiocies of rural life.
66.Idiosyncrasyovided interesting company talking about the idiosyncrasies
of canyon life.
67.Ill-prepared for an independent life in the community.
68.Ill-suited for modern life.
69.And see his good deeds springing from the wound, to sow the world with
life immortal!
8. .PRODUCTION
1.
2.
3.
4.
Adenocarcinoma with mucin production.
Anarchy in production.
Anarchy of production.
Antiserum production in support of ongoing requirements for reagent
antibody production, research and development.
5. Catfish production systems.
6. Cultivated for the production of fruit, such as apples, pears, plums and
cherries.
7. Feedstock for ethanol production in the united states.
8. Galleon's production of the white devil created a vulgar world of gaudy
images and suffocating misogyny.
9. Innovated the production only come from increase in the.
10.Musicology of production.
11.Off-Broadway stage production at theater de lys.
12.Phlegm production.
13.How does being a passenger in one of the fastest production powerboats
in the world sound?
14.Pullets for free range egg production across the country, supplying
around a million birds a year.
15.Spermatozoonarly it improves a man's spermatozoa production.
16.THC production ceases.
17.Understudy in amateur productions, there are no understudies.
18.Byproduct of copper production so the price doesn't have a major effect
on supply.
19.Calyx production occurs simultaneously with peak resin production is a
breeding goal not yet attained.
20.Circuit boards production equipment for small and large producers of
pcb's.
21.Coenzyme in the production of energy.
22.Decoupled from production
9. CAMPUS
1. Accommodation on campus and a wide variety of residences off campus.
2. Athens login off campus annals of global analysis and geometry, from
swets 97- access on and off campus.
3. Bookshop on campus.
4. You can buy books and stationery from our campus bookstore and
student union shops.
5. Cafeteria on campus.
6. Clifton campus in september.
7. Facility students, the bar facilities on campus are central to the social life
they enjoy at edge hill.
8. Athens login off campus Icarus, from sciencedirect 93- access on and off
campus.
9. Those more romantically inclined can be the campus slut.
10.The transition to the new arrangement is being overseen by a steering
committee with representatives of all the campus trade unions.
11.University campuses.
12.Parkland campus site would ever have come into being here is a
debatable point.
13.Where they buy 82 % of students had bought new books from the campus
bookshop.
10. GLOBAL
1. Failure to register its rdn may preclude an organization from joining the
public global dit without first changing its distinguished name.
2. The dangers ahead our global economy is becoming more dependent on
the internet.
3. The pilot episode and series enjoyed global exportation, but the program
has never commercially released in any format.
4. Click here global gangers have been sharing their wishes for the new
year.
5. During the cold war, immigration was more a question of global
geopolitics.
6. The global ecological footprint was 13.5 billion global hectares in 2001,
or 2.2 global hectares per person.
7. Inequityeve, as a labor government we must use our power to create the
global institutions that are needed to address global inequities.
8. Every kill earns the player a set amount of money, and final scores can be
sent to a global ranking leader board.
9. Em uncovers how english is changing and spotlights people, groups and
governments as they embrace and fight the global lingua franca.
10.Maharishi to address washington press on may 12 maharishi will hold his
next global news conferences on may 12 and 13.
11.Oligopolyactor that makes these global oligopolies nearly impenetrable to
newcomers are their extensive distribution systems.
12.For the last several years, a global oversupply of this coffee has kept
prices depressed.
“Masing-masing kata telah saya dengarkan dan saya menirukan sebanyak tiga
kali(3x)”
TUGAS 3.
 PARAGRAF REFLEKSI:
Tugas yang asik. Dengan tugas ini saya suda lebih banyak mendapat
pengetahuan. Jadi belajar lewat internet itu ternyata asik sekali.Pengetahuan
yang baru dan begitu menyenangkan.
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