Goodfather, My wife and I want a divorce.We're going to get a divorce. It's been a long time coming and we are both okay with it. But we also love our four-year-old and don't want to divorce
Choose the best answer: I can't stand it when people criticize me in public. I can't stand it when people criticize me in public. A. People can't criticize me in public. B. When people criticize me in public I don't stand there. C. I can't stand in public when people criticize me . D.
2 They're jealous of you. This one is kinda sad actually. I also used to be that person who was jealous of anyone who was prettier, smarter, more popular, richer, you name it, I was jealous. Jealousy is very ugly. Some of the reasons people may be jealous of you may even surprise you.
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This line was spoken by Linus Van Pelt in the November 12, 1959 comic strip of Peanuts, written and drawn by Charles Schulz (1950-2000). In some ways, Peanuts is the most important piece of American philosophy in the 21st century with its musings on reality, the futility of existence, and the good life. Its comedy doesn't just come from Charlie
Currently I live in the US and he's in the UK until he can get his Visa. Since we got married, I spent a little over a month in the UK, and before that he was in the US with me for three months, so we have spent plenty of time together. He was diagnosed with agoraphobia and severe anxiety a few years ago. Since meeting me, his agoraphobia is
HNEyLv. Ces exemples peuvent contenir des mots vulgaires liés à votre recherche Ces exemples peuvent contenir des mots familiers liés à votre recherche Suggestions Really. I can't stand that. You know I can't stand... Honestly, I can't stand russell. I can't stand those girls. I can't stand being ridden. I can't stand weird people. I can't stand those that sacrifice others. I can't stand animals being mistreated. I can't stand this disgusting scene. I can't stand their cheap wine. I can't stand that pretty-boy quarterback. I can't stand those old gossipers. I can't stand this unfair treatment. I can't stand raving lunatics. I can't stand them plotting. I can't stand these guys. I can't stand the suffering. I can't stand the marriage. Aucun résultat pour cette recherche. Suggestions qui contiennent I can't stand Résultats 1991. Exacts 1991. Temps écoulé 195 ms.
you, he, etc. can't stand somebody/something redirected from I can't stand can't stand someone or somethingCannot tolerate someone or something due to an aversion or a strong sense of disgust or dislike. Ugh, I can't stand obnoxious guys who always have to dominate the conversation. I could never be a doctor or nurseāI just can't stand the sight of blood. Now I'm just waiting to hear if I got into my first-choice school, and the uncertainty is killing me. I can't stand it!Farlex Dictionary of Idioms. Ā© 2022 Farlex, Inc, all rights he, etc. canāt Ėstand somebody/something, you, he, etc. canāt Ėstand the sight/sound of somebody/something informal you, he, etc. dislikes or hates somebody/something or seeing/hearing somebody/something If you canāt stand the sight of blood, you wonāt make a very good nurse! ⢠I canāt stand the sight of her. OPPOSITE think the world of somebody/somethingFarlex Partner Idioms Dictionary Ā© Farlex 2017See alsocan't abide someone or somethinghate onhate on someone or somethinga fire extinguishercan't do something to save one's lifea lot, not much, etc. in the way of somethingback at itback at it againate up with someone or somethingate up with someone/something
Rune Abro, 41; lives in Copenhagen, and flying there Hi, weāre from Haaretz. Ah, once I published a photograph of the Vertigo dance troupe in your paper. Are you a photographer? Among other things. Itās not polite to say that I am too intelligent to just have one profession, so Iāll just say I have serious attention deficit order, and Iām not capable of doing only one thing at a time. I teach philosophy and performance, I am a photographer, I have a company that does video art installations for museums and large festivals. Thereās always a mixture of things. What brought you to Israel? This time I didnāt come for professional reasons, I went to Dahab [in the Sinai Peninsula], out of love. I fell in love with a Ukrainian dancer I met at a retreat a year ago; she fled from the war to Dahab. I went there for tranquility and to pursue a relationship, but she didnāt want to join the pursuit. So on the spot I came to Israel. I have family here, and friends, and I wanted to see them. Where do you live? In Copenhagen. I lived a few years in Kiryat Tivon [near Haifa], I was married to an Israeli dancer. Iām half from here and half from Copenhagen. My father lives near Jerusalem. Iām always on the move. The myth behind the rescue of Denmark's Jews from the Holocaust Did you grow up here? No. The short version of the story is A girl goes to kibbutz to learn dancing... Is there anyone in your life who doesnāt dance? Not really. Itās a pattern. My mother went to Kibbutz Dalia in order to learn the hora; today she makes a living from teaching it in Copenhagen. Sheās involved in the Jewish community center there. You know, Israelis who move abroad suddenly donāt laugh at the hora anymore, they just want more of it. In short, she was at Dalia, she met my father, they lived together in Israel for 10 years. He was a little like me ā a kind of odd, philosopher type who couldnāt really make a commitment. She went to Denmark to have a baby, and then he left her. He called and told her there was no reason for her to come back, that he was with another woman at the kibbutz. So my mother and I stayed on in Denmark and lived there. Do you have brothers or sisters? I have two half-brothers in Israel who donāt want to talk to me. Fifteen years ago, I came to meet my father, and something strange happened. Heās a bit screwed up. He had to collect body parts of friends of his [who had fought and died] in the Golan Heights; heās one of those who never completely came back from there. He didnāt agree to do a blood test in order to prove that I am his son, so I had to sue him in a Haifa court just so I would be able to do a DNA test and prove Iām an Israeli [to get citizenship here]. But by the time I got my citizenship, my wife and I had split up. Two weeks after I finally received my passport, I used it to leave the country and go home. But Israel continues to haunt me. Interesting way of putting it. I canāt stand Israel, and yet I canāt keep away from it. I travel a lot for work and for relationships and whatnot, three-four times a year, around the world, and Israel is the most insane place Iāve ever been to. There is nothing that comes close to the contrasts here. You see inequality in a lot of places, between poor and rich and between the old and the new, but in Israel it happens so fast, and itās everywhere. When people ask me whatās happening in Tel Aviv, I tell them itās hard to say, but Iām pretty sure itās metastasizing. It seems to be out of control, like the movement of a cell that has no direction anymore. Yes I am too much of an Israeli to survive in Denmark, and too much of a Dane to survive in Israel. I touch everyone, I talk with everyone, and there [in Denmark] they donāt understand what thatās about. I have hot blood. Where do you get it, is it hereditary? I think so. My mother has lived here for a decade, and she never really let go of my father, so she raised me in his image without noticing, so she wouldnāt have to give him up completely and she could be in love with me instead. Beautiful and yet screwed up, just as it sounds. In fact, you donāt really have a home. No. Itās a strange feeling. I was here in January, I took part in the Israeli Contact Festival [an improvisational dance event]. I missed the check-in at the hostel, and then ā and this is the Jewish side of me ā I didnāt want to pay 500 shekels [about $140] for a hotel room, so I said, fine, letās see what homeless people do. I found a construction site, a Tel Aviv building that was being renovated, and I went to a small corner and slept there, curled up with my camera case. And I said, yallah, I donāt care where I sleep, I donāt feel the need to get to some bed. I can sleep on this bench. Itās nice, but also lonely. And also very free. Very.
Volkswagen After getting the details about Volvo's latest all-electric vehicle, the EX30 compact SUV, there's much to be excited over. It offers seating for five adults and an estimated 265 to 275 miles on a full charge, starting at less than $35,000. However, traditionalists may be slightly less enthusiastic about its power window controls. Volvo says the EX30's cabin is "Inspired by the uncluttered elegance of a Scandinavian home." That uncluttered elegance only provides the driver with a pair of conventional left and right power window switches to control the front and rear windows. To toggle control between the front and rear windows, there's a lighted touch sensor just ahead of the up and down switches in the driver's door armrest. Volvo isn't even the first carmaker to implement this style of window switch ā that dubious honor goes to Volkswagen and its ā so it's becoming an unwelcome trend. The benefit of this new methodology to automakers isn't immediately apparent. One could speculate that money is saved by eliminating two of the four window switches at the driver's door. Still, those potential savings are somewhat or completely negated by the need for the lighted touch sensor to toggle between the front and rear. The other potential reasoning is that since drivers typically operate only the front windows from their set of controls, the possibility of lowering one of the rear windows by accident ā something we've all done ā is eliminated if the selector switch remains in front mode. The touch sensor lacks a tactile signal While keeping controls focused on the front windows has merit, significant criticism stems from the execution. Because the touch sensor is flat and not tactile, a driver needs to do one of two things to determine whether it's set to control the front or rear windows They either need to take their eyes off the road to glance at the switch, or they can test raise or lower one of the windows a small amount. It's an unnecessarily complicated process. It seems that if VW, Volvo, and others are going to persevere with only a pair of left and right window switches at the driver's control, the method of selecting front or rear needs to be more tactile, like perhaps a button that has up and down positions, or a rocker switch that's engaged in the front or rear position. This tactic is already employed with power-adjustable side mirrors, which typically only have a single control pad with an actual knob or switch to select left or right operation. We get that carmakers are implementing technology at light speed, and power window switches are a design facet that hasn't been updated in decades. Still, VW and Volvo's current execution leaves something to be desired. We'd say the next step will be putting the window controls on the car's infotainment screen, it's best not to give automakers any ideas.
i can t stand