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Promoted Content
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Promoted ContentSeptember 2010
Polen auf dem Weg zur Wirtschafts- und Währungsunion.
Der flexible Wechselkurs als ein Instrument zur Absorption asymmetrischer Schocks.
by Stazka, Agnieszka
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Trusted PartnerHumanities & Social SciencesMay 2019
Neoliberal Gothic
by Linnie Blake, Agnieszka Soltysik Monnet, William Hughes
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Trusted Partner
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Trusted Partner
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Children's & YAJune 2021
TP Roll Crazy Crafts
by Agnieszka Niedzwiadek
We are presenting some new easy crafts based on basic rolls of toilet paper! With the help of pre-cut elements and stickers, children will turn them into crazy or very cute animals! Fun & easy crafts Smart & relaxing activity Develops concentration & manual skills See more on Caramel Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bhh4MsXfXx4 See more on Caramel latest catalogue: https://catalog.caramel.be/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/J0371_Catalogue_FKFT-2020.pdf
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Fiction
The Pained and Damned
by Agnieszka Lingas-Łoniewska
He is a skinhead. Her Grandfather died in Auschwitz. Can love overcome such adversities? Alex is twenty years old and has been a skinhead since he was sixteen. He has his brotherhood, ideals, and truths that he believes in. Amelia is an eighteen-year-oldhigh school student with a tragic past. Amelia and Alex‘s paths should have never crossed.They have nothing in common – neither origin, nor views, nor family past. And yetthe youngsters meet under dramatic circumstances and fall in love with each other. From that moment everything changes. “The Pained and Damned” is a story that knocks you off your feet. A dramatic pursuit of love stronger than prejudice, a painful search for one‘s own identity and an ending that will not let you fall asleep.
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Agriculture & farmingJanuary 2015
Climate Resilient Crops for The Future
by K.V. Peter
Concise Oxford Dictionary defines Resilience as recoiling; springing back; resuming its original shape after bending, stretching, compression etc. With five components of crop production –space, water, energy, light, nutrients- limiting, there are stresses on crops to perform at threshold input yielding optimum output. Droughts and floods, cold and heat waves, forest fires, landslides and mud slips, ice storms, dust storms, hailstorms, thunder clouds associated with lightening and sea level rise are throwing new challenges to farming. This dangerously narrow level of food base prompts to widen the base of grains, vegetables, fruits, spices, industrial crops, mushrooms and aromatic plants. The emphasis so far was more on terrestrial plants, forest plants and lesser on lower plants. The aquatic plants-fresh water, brackish water, marine- were not much explored for edible use except by Chinese and Japanese. Halophytes, bryophytes, ferns and sea weeds are so far climate resilient. The Indo-Burmese Centre of origin (Hindustan centre including North East) is abode of several plants of possible vegetable, fruit and spicy value. The New Life styles consequent to migration for employment have brought newer food and dietary patterns. The urbanization and smaller family size are leading to pre-cooked foods and visitation to restaurants. s on bryophytes, halophytes, microalgae, chasmophytes, pseudocereals, medicinal mushrooms, speciality mushrooms, palmyrah palms, bramakamal, tropical tuber crops, dragon fruits, broad dhaniya, plants for dyes, kale and ornamental ginger are authored by eminent working scientists from 21 Universities and Research Institutes in Japan and India. The crops for the future especially climate resilient are to be identified and promoted in an emerging production scenario of new life style foods and convenient speciality foods getting attention by the new generation. The present book Climate Resilient Crops for the Future carries 17 chapters authored by men of eminence in respective areas concerning to the above areas.
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Literature & Literary StudiesJanuary 2018
Beloved Delhi
A Mughal City and her Greatest Poets
by Saif Mahmood (Foreword by Rakhshanda Jalil; Preface by Sohail Hashmi)
‘A riveting resurrection of the city of poets, the city of history, Saif Mahmood’s learned and evocative book takes us to the heart of Delhi’s romance with Urdu verse and aesthetics.’—Namita Gokhale Urdu poetry rules the cultural and emotional landscape of India—especially northern India and much of the Deccan—and of Pakistan. And it was in the great, ancient city of Delhi that Urdu grew to become one of the world’s most beautiful languages. Through the 18th and 19th centuries, while the Mughal Empire was in decline, Delhi became the capital of a parallel kingdom—the kingdom of Urdu poetry—producing some of the greatest, most popular poets of all time. They wrote about the pleasure and pain of love, about the splendour of God and the villainy of preachers, about the seductions of wine, and about Delhi, their beloved home. This treasure of a book documents the life and work of the finest classical Urdu poets: Sauda, Dard, Mir, Ghalib, Momin, Zafar, Zauq and Daagh. Through their biographies and poetry—including their best-known ghazals—it also paints a compelling portrait of Mughal Delhi. This is a book for anyone who has ever been touched by Urdu or Delhi, by poetry or romance.