ellauri030.html on line 264: Vanha joutuu luopumaan isoista bileistä, notkuvista pöydistä ja moniaista kupeista. Niin, mutta luopuupa samalla hassuttelusta, ruuansulatusvaivoista, ja krapulaunista. Niin niin! Sitä juuri tarkoitan! Joutuu luopumaan kaikista noista! Tää Sisero on todella tampio. Mixei se ryömi saman tien laatikkoon ja vedä kantta kiinni perässä. Siellähän on tosi seijasta, ei vaivaa enää mikään. No ei, vaitiskaan kyllä näille vanhuxille maistuu vielä digestiivikexi ja pieni kalja, ja mielellään ne kokoontuvat rotariklubeihin kuuntelemaan omia puheita. Mulle kyllä tulee ruuansulatusvaivoja ja krapula jo yhdestä kaljasta ja digestiivikexistä.
ellauri033.html on line 1108: Atteint d´un cancer des voies digestives lors de l´hiver 1888-1889, Villiers ne peut plus travailler, et Mallarmé doit ouvrir une « cotisation amicale » parmi ses amis pour subvenir à ses besoins et à ceux de sa famille. Le 12 juillet 1889, il est transféré à la clinique des Frères Saint-Jean-de-Dieu, rue Oudinot, à Paris. Se sentant à l´article de la mort, il rédige, le 12 août, un testament où il reconnaît son fils Victor et épouse in extremis Marie Dantine, le 14 août, afin de légitimer son fils. À noter que, juste avant de mourir, il aurait eu ces derniers mots passés à la postérité : « Eh bien, je m´en souviendrai de cette planète ! »
ellauri048.html on line 748: The most painful to read was Mr Sammler´s Planet, which "I find very hard to digest: Sammler approves of all the obedient children and disapproves of the rebellious ones. I was a rebellious son, that´s tough."
ellauri107.html on line 302: Maureen ei laittanut mitenkään huonoa ruokaa, mutta se vaati sexiä. Pepulta se sai vain vanhussexiä joka oli kuin imeskelis digestiivikexiä. Susanilta Puo sai parempaa torttua kuin edes äidiltä. Mikä sitä viehättää noissa harmaasilmäisissä shixoissa? Onxe jotain kostoa? Onxne helpompia kusettaa kuin rebekat?
ellauri109.html on line 747: Later generations considered Dryden's absence of sensibility a fault. He was dry like a digestive bisquit.
ellauri143.html on line 1320: If, what you ate before digested well, you eat again.
ellauri144.html on line 566: Edible. Good to eat and wholesome to digest, as a worm to a toad, a toad to a snake, a snake to a pig, a pig to a man, and a man to a worm.
ellauri182.html on line 334: digest.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/4327755105124.jpg" height="250px" />
ellauri197.html on line 176: Clifton's three books of poetry were published by Duckworth. The first was Dielma and Other Poems in 1932 and then followed Flight in 1934. One commentator has said that “Clifton was particularly adroit at poems honouring – and marvelling at – women” and the Times Literary Supplement stated that “His lyrics are a gracious tribute to the beauty of women”. These were fairly conventional poems unlike his final work Gleams Britain's Day published in 1942. The Spectator described it as “expressing in a sort of prophetic certitude opinions upon religion, patriotism, love, art, war and peace, which he puts in unconventional verse”. The reviewer stated that the book was “the product of a curious, whimsical mind, full of energy, squandering it on half-digested ideas”. W B Yates dedicated his poem, Lapis Lazuli, to Clifton who had given him a valuable Chinese lapis lazuli carving.
ellauri222.html on line 95: He also worked for a time at the Encyclopædia Britannica, on the fifty-two-volume “Great Books of the Western World,” under the editorship of Mortimer J. Adler. Bellow was in charge of editing part of the “Syntopicon,” a two-volume digest of the Great Ideas composed by Adler. He had taken one of Adler’s courses at the University of Chicago and had concluded that it was “tomfoolery,” but he seems to have liked the job.
ellauri223.html on line 84: Capt. Their food consists of flesh, butter, honey, cheese, garden herbs, and vegetables of various kinds. They were unwilling at first to slay animals, because it seemed cruel; but thinking afterward that is was also cruel to destroy herbs which have a share of sensitive feeling, they saw that they would perish from hunger unless they did an unjustifiable action for the sake of justifiable ones, and so now they all eat meat. Nevertheless, they do not kill willingly useful animals, such as oxen and horses. They observe the difference between useful and harmful foods, and for this they employ the science of medicine. They always change their food. First they eat flesh, then fish, then afterward they go back to flesh, and nature is never incommoded or weakened. The old people use the more digestible kind of food, and take three meals a day, eating only a little. But the general community eat twice, and the boys four times, that they may satisfy nature. The length of their lives is generally 100 years, but often they reach 200.
ellauri223.html on line 88: Among them there is never gout in the hands or feet, nor catarrh, nor sciatica, nor grievous colics, nor flatulency, nor hard breathing. For these diseases are caused by laughing, indigestion and flatulency, and by frugality and exercise they remove every humor and spasm.
ellauri264.html on line 554: The Mishna (Berachos 51b) relates that after eating bread, one must belch before the bread is digested. This time frame is known as "k´dei ichul" (the time it takes for digestion to occur.) How does a person know if digestion occurred?
ellauri382.html on line 527: Psychosomatic symptoms and physical ailments such as headaches, chronic cough and digestive issues
xxx/ellauri075.html on line 474: A few years later, Wallace laid into “American Psycho” in an interview with Larry McCaffery, saying it “panders shamelessly to the audience’s sadism for a while, but by the end it’s clear that the sadism’s real object is the reader itself… You can defend ‘Psycho’ as being a sort of performative digest of late-eighties social problems, but it’s no more than that.”
xxx/ellauri199.html on line 1061: Writing in The Guardian, the political journalist Gaby Hinsliff described Strange Death as "gentrified xenophobia" and "Chapter after chapter circles around the same repetitive themes: migrants raping and murdering and terrorising; paeans to Christianity; long polemics about how Europe is too ´exhausted by history´ and colonial guilt to face another battle, and is thus letting itself be rolled over by invaders fiercely confident in their own beliefs", while also pointing out that Murray offers little definition of the European culture he claims is under threat. Pankaj Mishra´s review in The New York Times described the book as "a handy digest of far-right clichés". In The Intercept, Murtaza Hussain criticized the "relentlessly paranoid tenor" of Murray´s work and said that its claims of mass crime perpetuated by immigrants were "blinkered to the point of being propaganda", while noting the book´s appeal to the far right. In Middle East Eye, Georgetown professor Ian Almond called the book "a staggeringly one-sided flow of statistics, interviews and examples, reflecting a clear decision to make the book a rhetorical claim that Europe is doomed to self-destruction".
xxx/ellauri200.html on line 283: Very good for digestion.
xxx/ellauri261.html on line 631: The field of secular theology, a subfield of liberal theology advocated by Robinson somewhat combines secularism and theology. Recognized in the 1960s, it was influenced both by neo-orthodoxy, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Harvey Cox, and the existentialism of Søren Kierkegaard and Paul Tillich. Robinson, along with Douglas John Hall and Rowan Williams, see that Secular theology had digested modern movements like the Death of God Theology propagated by Thomas J. J. Altizer or the philosophical existentialism of Tillich and eased the introduction of such ideas into the theological mainstream and made constructive evaluations, as well as contributions, to the problems caused by the demise of out heavenly father.
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