My father always _____ (read) a newspaper andsee he is_____ (read) one now. Get the answers you need, now! lekhrajbagdi20 lekhrajbagdi20 02.02.2020 English due to use of mobile phones while driving. You may use the following hints : 10 [careless drivers - drive recklessly - use mobile phones during driving - innocent passengers and
Family daily routine, father reading newspaper and drinking coffee, eating breakfast together, weekend. Old man sit on sofa and read newspaper. Illustration of a man sitting down while reading a newspaper on a white background. Black and white cartoon of a girl and her father. Black and white cartoon of a girl talking to her father about
The 18" 1:11"-twist carbon steel barrel keeps the gun viable indoors, while the traditional wooden stock adds an air of class and sophistication.. In 2004, Springfield Armory introduced the SOCOM 16 version of the M1A. This rifle shortens that 22-inch barrel to 16.25 inches, adds a polymer stock, and tips the barrel with a stubby muzzle brake.
Time to add both a new state record Smallmouth Bass and a new state record Largemouth Bass from South Dakota to the list of this year's record breakers. The South. Post-spawn, the smallmouth bite moves to rocky structure in 15 to 20 feet of water. The quality of the fishing stays fairly consistent through summer, though by July the bass may be in 20- to 40-foot depths.
curiousGeorge123 * A newspaper is read by my father every day while drinking coffee. That is a perfect example of an awkward, ungainly sentence that would never leave the lips of a native speaker. AlpheccaStars.
Dịch Vụ Hỗ Trợ Vay Tiền Nhanh 1s. In 2007, I was suddenly plunged into the role of caregiver for my then 75-year-old father, who had vascular dementia. His short-term memory was severely impaired, as were his judgment and reasoning skills. At the outset, I knew very little about dementia and next to nothing about caregiving, and fumbled my way through one challenge after another. With experience, I grew more competent and everyone’s situation is different, and every individual unique, here are six insights that helped me help my in mind that many people lack a practical understanding of dementiaMy stepmother never could understand, or accept, that there were things her husband could no longer do. She’d get frustrated and angry with him for forgetting things and misplacing items. When she fell gravely ill, her son was upset that my father expressed no sympathy, though my father lacked the cognitive capacity to grasp that his wife was sick. To my dismay, this misunderstanding led to a major family Dearborn and her father in Athens in 1970Even health workers can have surprisingly little understanding of dementia. A geriatric-psych nurse informed me that my father would be discharged from the hospital back to his house, where his wife could look after him – when his wife no longer lived there. The nurse had taken my father’s words at face value, though his version of reality was unreliable and out of date. For me, this was a turning point I realised I had to become not just my father’s caregiver but his care achievable goalsMy father had no awareness that he had dementia and adamantly refused my attempts to help him. I hired an eldercare manager to help me figure out a way around this. When I told her I wanted to keep him safe, she said that was impossible I could only try to keep him safer. That small grammatical shift helped me hugely it changed my task from impossible to doable. I came to terms with the fact that I couldn’t work miracles, but I could try to make the conditions of my dad’s daily life less dangerous, less frightening, more comfortable, more kindlyMy dad would startle if I came up behind him and started to speak. It was better to face him and say “Dad!” to get his attention first. No long speeches, no convoluted questions; I had to speak in small, simple chunks and give him time to respond. He became very sensitive to my tone. If I sounded stern, impatient or critical, he became anxious. Speaking to him calmly helped him stay calm. I tried to give him as much choice as I could in daily, domestic matters, but choices often overwhelmed him. So I’d keep it simple black olives or green? If he hesitated or began to fret, I’d offer to decide for him, an option he often can be usefulMy father was prone to abrupt mood swings; he could be lighthearted one moment and morose the next. He tended to ruminate, to get stuck in a mental groove about one of his habitual worries like whether his taxes had been paid. I found that I could sometimes distract and reorient him if I caught it early, by introducing something amusing or fun that would catch his attention. “What’s this?” I’d ask, pointing to a nearby object. Or “How about a poem?” – because reciting poetry was his may be shamed or judged for your caregiving choicesA taxi driver who I spoke to about my attempts to get my dad into care immediately went on a rant, saying, “Old people should be cared for by family!” I explained that my dad had nobody to help him but me and I lived overseas. The driver berated me for mistreating my dad. I realised that strangers would judge me without trying to understand my family situation. It was infinitely more painful, though, when my own father, in a state of agitation, told me that I was his only from all walks of life need quality dementia care, and caregivers need supportIn seeking out dementia care for my dad, I must have toured a dozen different care facilities. The variations were striking, and heartbreaking. How much living space the residents had, how much privacy, what activities were available, how they were spoken to, how they were treated. While some underfunded facilities provided excellent care and some well-funded facilities did not, too often money bought comfort. Dignity was on offer – for a fee. I witnessed first-hand people living and working in disgraceful conditions. All people living with dementia deserve quality care. And those involved in caring for someone with dementia – which currently about million people in Australia are doing – need ongoing support, including my case, it was essential to take breaks from my father’s company, given his endlessly repetitive conversation, as well as the emotional toll of watching his cognitive decline. Just an hour or two spent on my own or with a friend could do wonders to refresh my flagging mental state. In fact, if I had to do it all again, the one thing I would do differently is take better care of myself. I was so focused on my father’s care that I badly neglected my after someone whose mind no longer functions as it once did can be rewarding – my father and I shared plenty of tender moments of connection. It can also be enormously challenging – practically, emotionally, financially, legally. Addressing these challenges on a broader scale will require the political will, and a groundswell of public support, for the funding of quality dementia research, education, prevention and care. Cynthia Dearborn’s memoir The Year My Family Unravelled is out now through Affirm Press
CNN — A New York firefighter drowned while attempting to save his teenage daughter who had been swept away in rough surf on the Jersey Shore on Friday, authorities said. First responders were able to rescue the girl and her father was transported to a local hospital where he was later pronounced dead, according to first responders. He was identified as New York Fire Department firefighter Mark Batista, according to the department. “We are heartbroken to learn about the death of Firefighter Mark Batista, who died Friday while swimming at the Jersey Shore,” New York Fire Department spokesperson Amanda Farinacci Gonzalez said in a statement. “Firefighter Batista was a dedicated public servant who spent fifteen years serving in the FDNY, as both an EMT and a firefighter. We join his family in mourning his tragic passing.” At around 830 Friday, rescuers from the Area Network of Shore Water Emergency Responders Team responded to reports that two swimmers were in distress at the Sylvania Avenue Beach in Avon-by-the-Sea, according to a Facebook post by the interlocal organization. Rescuers were able to quickly find and rescue the teenager in the rough waters but were unable to locate the man, the post said. The rescue team launched an hourlong search effort involving rescue swimmers, divers, jet skis boats, and a drone to find the father, according to the Facebook post. At around 10 am, a US Coast Guard helicopter identified a “possible location” for the father and rescue swimmers located him and removed him from the water. First responders attempted to administer “lifesaving efforts” to the 39-year-old Teaneck man, who was transported to Jersey Shore University Medical Center where he was pronounced dead, according to the Avon-by-the-Sea Police Department. In a Friday Facebook post, the Monmouth County Sheriff’s Office urged caution in the water. “In the wake of this morning’s unfortunate incident in Avon where a man drowned while trying to rescue his daughter after she was caught in rough surf, we once again caution all to please NOT go in the water when there are no lifeguards on duty,” the sheriff’s office wrote. The official cause of death has not yet been released. The Avon-by-the-Sea Police Department is investigating the incident. CNN’s Zoe Sottile and Artemis Moshtaghian contributed to this report.
[ Simple vs Continuous Past Tense ]while my father_______ a newspaper, My mom was preparing breakfast for familyA. readB. was readingC. readsD. was readSelect your answer A B C D E Random Topics Adjective Order Despite, In Spite Of, Although, Even Though, HoweverDesert vs. Dessert Things in EnglishReported Speech and Reporting VerbsPresent and Past Simple PassivePhrasal VerbsPresent ContinuousSimple TenseOther quiz Prepositions of Time, Place, and Movement › ViewYou have a very nice lamp hanging… the amongB. underC. over Grammar › ViewJUMP is a… A. Noun B. Verb C. AdjectiveHow to use Read the question carefully, then select one of the answers button.
[ a, an, the, Zero Article ]My father is reading ___ newspaper. A. A B. An C. Zero articleSelect your answer A B C D E Random Topics Passive Voice Good vs. Well Irregular VerbFuture - be going toGoing To Be and WillTOEFLCompliment, Congratulation, and HopeRelative & Interrogative PronounsPast Tense Regular and IrregularOther quiz Past Tense › ViewThe beds were very comfortable, I _____ sleepedB. slepedC. sleptD. slipped Conjunctions › ViewI like to eat fried noodles _______ not fried andB. but C. orHow to use Read the question carefully, then select one of the answers button. report this ad
“Historic” – that is how Tunisia’s president, Kais Saied, described his meeting with Syria’s Bashar al-Assad on the eve of the Arab League summit in Jeddah earlier this month. Snaps of him standing alongside al-Assad and Egypt’s Abdel Fatah al-Sisi during the summit were widely shared around the region, signalling Tunisia’s return to the grand old club of Arab all their internecine conflicts and rivalries, hidden and visible, Arab leaders are again united around one sacred goal aborting their people’s aspirations for change. Muammar Gaddafi, Hosni Mubarak and Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali may no longer be on the stage, but their spirit lives on in a new let us focus on Tunisia – once seen as the last democratic hope of the Arab world. Since the era of the Arab spring, which in Tunisia saw Ben Ali deposed, the country has resisted the dark fates of its sisters such as Egypt, Yemen, Libya or Syria. Democratisation seemed to be in train. But no longer – as the experience of my 81-year-old father, Rached Ghannouchi, father, the leader of the moderate Islamist party Ennahdha and the former elected speaker of Tunisia’s parliament, was arrested in April, as the family prepared to break its fast at the end of Ramadan. About 100 security officers raided our home. My sister says my father was taken to a military barrack, where he spent almost 48 hours, waiting to be allowed access to his lawyers, before he was charged with “conspiring against state security”.The reason – I should say, pretext – are the following comments he made “There is a paralysis, intellectual and ideological, which, in reality, lays the ground for civil war. Because imagining Tunisia without this or that side, Tunisia without Ennahdha, Tunisia without political Islam, without the Left, without any of its components, is a civil war project. It is a crime. That is why those who welcomed this coup with celebrations cannot be democrats.”The ludicrous charge against him carries the possibility of the death did we get here? In the years after the revolution, Tunisia managed to adopt a consensual progressive constitution and lay down the foundations for local governance. It was on the verge of completing its democratic transition, ready to focus on confronting its mighty socioeconomic challenges, having devoted much of its energy to political it was dismantled from within. Kais Saied, a relatively unknown assistant university lecturer, was in 2019 voted president, using pro-revolutionary and ultra-conservative rhetoric. But as soon as he set foot in the presidential Carthage palace, he pulled up the democratic ladder upon which he had climbed to power. In 2021, he barricaded parliament with military vehicles and started running the country through presidential decrees, before dissolving the legislature in 2022. He moved to overthrow the constitution, writing his own instead, which was passed after a referendum with a 30% turnout, giving him immense power over his subjects’ bodies and his de facto coup, Saied directed his firepower at two targets judges and the security services. He dissolved the independent Supreme Judicial Council, appointing his own, and dismissed 57 judges by a single presidential decree, accusing them of also restored Ben Ali’s old legacy in the security apparatus, reversing post-revolution reforms aimed at curbing police brutality. This is how he prepared the ground for the current crackdown against dissidents. The targets include not only political leaders of all tendencies, but civil society activists, journalists, solicitors, even people simply writing critical Facebook are called everything from “enemies” to “cancer cells”. The list grows by the day, from “agents of foreign powers” to vulnerable African migrants accused of being part of a conspiracy to change the country’s demography, echoing the far-right “great replacement” has turned from a fragile democracy into a country resembling a full-fledged dictatorship. It is a cocktail of failures, robbed of its hard-won freedoms, and thrust into a deep economic crisis. People stand in long queues every day, hoping to get bread, some sugar, flour or all unfolds in full sight of Europe, whose major capitals look the other way, confining themselves to the odd statement of concern, which are openly mocked by Tunisia’s despot, who retorts “I, too, am concerned by your concern!” As tanks blocked parliament, destroying Tunisia’s nascent democracy, these countries would not even call what was happening a my father, who has dedicated his life to reconciling Islam with democracy, in word and action, finds himself behind bars today, the message to the people of the region is loud and clear democracy is not for them, and anyone who thinks otherwise is a naive idealist. But if change through peaceful means is not attainable, what is the way out of this Arab abyss? Soumaya Ghannoushi is a British-Tunisian writer and researcher specialising in the Middle East and north Africa
while my father read a newspaper