Search results for de-flowering
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136,

03:38,

2008-04-02 14:22:31
Description: One night my friends decided to talk about puberty and de-flowering. It was hillarious!!
Channel: youtube

7,

00:40,

2009-01-21 10:37:44
Description: More @ http://www.myhotelvideo.com/en/landingpage/youtube/resourceid/Mhv_Catalog_Offer::122543
Location:
This family-friendly city hotel is located just steps from downtown San Miguel de Allende and (More) More @ http://www.myhotelvideo.com/en/landingpage/youtube/resourceid/Mhv_Catalog_Offer::122543
Location:
This family-friendly city hotel is located just steps from downtown San Miguel de Allende and only 5 minutes away from the La Luciernaga shopping centre. Guests will find the historical city centre and various other attractions, such as the Casa de Allende museum and the Parroquia Cathedral, within a 20 minute-walk of the hotel. The nearest bus station is a 20-minute drive from the accommodation.
Facilities:
Set within a tranquil private park surrounded by gardens, waterfalls and flowering trees, this beautiful boutique hotel opened in 1990 and comprises 28 elegant rooms and suites. The colonial architecture is perfectly complemented by the colourful and comfortable furnishings. The hotel has received an AAA 4 Diamond rating, and several guide books have named it the best, small, hotel in Mexico and best in the city. The hotel features bilingual staff, a concierge service and local transportation services to the city centre.
Rooms:
The artistically tiled, spacious rooms are decorated in a Mexican colonial style and come equipped with an en suite bathroom (bath/shower) with a double sink and hairdryer, as well as a hot tub, direct dial telephone, satellite/cable TV, radio, wireless Internet access and kitchenette with microwave. King-size or double beds feature, as well as individually regulated heating units, an in-room safe and a private terrace with beautiful views. Bottled water is provided in the rooms.
Sports/Entertainment:
There is 1 hot tub and 2 outdoor pools in the hotel grounds, one of which is heated. There is a sun terrace for guests wishing to top up their tans, and sun loungers and parasols are provided. Alternatively guests may want to unwind with a relaxing massage or spa treatment (additional fees apply). Sporty types will appreciate the hotel gym, and for those looking to explore the surrounding area, mountain bike tours and horseback trails can be arranged at an extra charge. The nearest golf course is a 15-minute drive away, where guests will also find tennis courts, available for use at a discounted price for hotel guests.
Meals:
Reputed to be one of the best in town, the acclaimed restaurant offers delicious traditional Mexican dishes as well as international cuisine. The restaurant features daily specials including a barbecue on Thursdays and a full Mexican buffet on Sundays. The restaurant's ambience reflects the heritage of colonial Mexico. A buffet-style breakfast is served at this hotel.
Payment:
American Express, MasterCard and VISA are accepted as methods of payment. (Less) Channel: youtube

63,

02:41,

2007-09-10 18:14:10
Description: Komponist: Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy (1809-1847) (Op. 34, No. 2)
Lyrik: Heinrich Heine (1797-1856)
Auf Flügeln des Gesanges,
Herzliebchen, trag ich dich fort,
Fort nach den Fluren des (More) Komponist: Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy (1809-1847) (Op. 34, No. 2)
Lyrik: Heinrich Heine (1797-1856)
Auf Flügeln des Gesanges,
Herzliebchen, trag ich dich fort,
Fort nach den Fluren des Ganges,
Dort weiß ich den schönsten Ort;
Dort liegt ein rotblühender Garten
Im stillen Mondenschein,
Die Lotosblumen erwarten
Ihr trautes Schwesterlein.
Die Veilchen kichern und kosen,
Und schaun nach den Sternen empor,
Heimlich erzählen die Rosen
Sich duftende Märchen ins Ohr.
Es hüpfen herbei und lauschen
Die frommen, klugen Gazelln,
Und in der Ferne rauschen
Des heilgen Stromes Well'n.
Dort wollen wir niedersinken
Unter dem Palmenbaum,
Und Liebe und Ruhe trinken,
Und träumen seligen Traum.
On Wings of Song
English Translation by Marty Lucas
On wings of song,
my love, I'll carry you away
to the fields of the Ganges
Where I know the most beautiful place.
There lies a red-flowering garden,
in the serene moonlight,
the lotus-flowers await
Their beloved sister.
The violets giggle and cherish,
and look up at the stars,
The roses tell each other secretly
Their fragant fairy-tales.
The gentle, bright gazelles,
pass and listen;
and in the distance murmurs
The waves of the holy stream.
There we will lay down,
under the palm-tree,
and drink of love and peacefulnes
And dream our blessed dream
乘着歌声的翅膀
曲:孟德爾頌(Op. 34, No. 2)
詞:海涅 (德國詩人)
乘著歌聲的翅膀
心愛的人,我带你飛翔
向着恒河的原野
那裡有最美的地方。
一座红花盛開的花園
竉罩着寂静的月光
蓮花在那兒等待
她們親密的姑娘。
紫羅蘭微笑地耳語
仰望著明亮星星
玫瑰花把芬芳的童話
俏俏地在耳際傾談。
跳過來細心傾聽
是那善良聰颖的羚羊
遠處喧腾着的
是那聖潔河水的波浪。
我們要在那裡躺下
在那棕櫚樹的下邊
享受著愛情和寂靜
沉入幸福的夢鄉。 (Less) Channel: youtube

18,

07:50,

2008-04-17 12:54:04
Description: How Do We Reverse the Brain Drain? Keynote speech by Emeagwali [emeagwali.com] delivered on October 24, 2003, at the Pan-African Conference on Brain Drain, Elsah, Illinois USA. The entire (More) How Do We Reverse the Brain Drain? Keynote speech by Emeagwali [emeagwali.com] delivered on October 24, 2003, at the Pan-African Conference on Brain Drain, Elsah, Illinois USA. The entire transcript, letters and photos are posted at http://emeagwali.com/speeches/brain-drain/to-brain-gain/reverse-brain-drain-from-africa.html. Permission to reproduce is granted. Thank you for the pleasant introduction as well as for inviting me to share my thoughts on turning “brain drain” into “brain gain.” For 10 million African-born emigrants, the word “home” is synonymous with the United States, Britain or other country outside of Africa. Personally, I have lived continuously in the United States for the past 30 years. My last visit to Africa was 17 years ago. On the day I left Nigeria, I felt sad because I was leaving my family behind. I believed I would return eight years later, probably marry an Igbo girl, and then spend the rest of my life in Nigeria. But 25 years ago, I fell in love with an American girl, married her three years later, and became eligible to sponsor a Green Card visa for my 35 closest relatives, including my parents and all my siblings, nieces and nephews. The story of how I brought 35 people to the United States exemplifies how 10 million skilled people have emigrated out of Africa during the past 30 years. We came to the United States on student visas and then changed our status to become permanent residents and then naturalized citizens. Our new citizenship status helped us sponsor relatives, and also inspired our friends to immigrate here. Ten million Africans now constitute an invisible nation that resides outside Africa. Although invisible, it is a nation as populous as Angola, Malawi, Zambia or Zimbabwe. If it were to be a nation with distinct borders, it would have an income roughly equivalent to Africa’s gross domestic product. Although the African Union does not recognize the African Diaspora as a nation, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) acknowledges its economic importance. The IMF estimates the African Diaspora now constitutes the biggest group of foreign investors in Africa. Take for example Western Union. It estimates that it is not atypical for an immigrant to wire 00 per month to relatives in Africa. If you assume that most Africans living outside Africa send money each month and you do the math, you will agree with the IMF that the African Diaspora is indeed the largest foreign investor in Africa. What few realize is that Africans who immigrate to the United States contribute 40 times more wealth to the American than to the African economy. According to the United Nations, an African professional working in the United States contributes about 50,000 per year to the U.S. economy. Again, if you do the math, you will realize that the African professional remitting 00 per month to Africa is contributing 40 times more to the United States economy than to the African one. On a relative scale, that means for every 00 per month a professional African sends home, that person contributes 2,000 per month to the U.S. economy. Of course, the issue more important than facts and figures is eliminating poverty in Africa, not merely reducing it by sending money to relatives. Money alone cannot eliminate poverty in Africa, because even one million dollars is a number with no intrinsic value. Real wealth cannot be measured by money, yet we often confuse money with wealth. Under the status quo, Africa would still remain poor even if we were to send all the money in the world there. Ask someone who is ill what “wealth” means, and you will get a very different answer than from most other people. If you were HIV-positive, you would gladly exchange one million dollars to become HIV-negative. When you give your money to your doctor, that physician helps you convert your money into health - or rather, wealth. Money cannot teach your children. Teachers can. Money cannot bring electricity to your home. Engineers can. Money cannot cure sick people. Doctors can. Because it is only a nation’s human capital that can be converted into real wealth, that human capital is much more valuable than its financial capital. A few years ago, Zambia had 1,600 medical doctors. Today, Zambia has only 400 medical doctors. Kenya retains only 10% of the nurses and doctors trained there. A similar story is told from South Africa to Ghana. I also speak from my family experiences. After contributing 25 years to Nigerian society as a nurse, my father retired on a 5-per-month pension. By comparison, my four sisters each earn 5 per hour as nurses in the United States. If my father had had the opportunity my sisters did, he certainly would have immigrated to the United States as a young nurse. The “brain drain” explains, in part, why affluent Africans fly to London for their medical treatments. Furthermore, because a significant percentage of African doctors and nurses practice in U.S. hospitals, we can reasonably conclude that African medical schools are de facto serving the American people, not Africa. A recent World Bank survey shows that African universities are exporting a large percentage of their graduating manpower to the United States. In a given year, the World Bank estimates that 70,000 skilled Africans immigrate to Europe and the United States. While these 70,000 skilled Africans are fleeing the continent in search of employment and decent wages, 100,000 skilled expatriates who are paid wages higher than the prevailing rate in Europe are hired to replace them. In Nigeria, the petroleum industry hires about 1,000 skilled expatriates, even though we can find similar skills within the African Diaspora. Instead of developing its own manpower resources, Nigeria prefers to contract out its oil exploration despite the staggeringly high price of having to concede 40% of its profits to foreign oil companies. In a pre-independence day editorial, the Vanguard (Nigeria) queried: “Why would the optimism of 1960 give way to the despair of 2000?” My answer is this: Nigeria achieved political independence in 1960, but by the year 2000 had not yet achieved technological independence. During colonial rule, Nigeria retained only 50% of the profits from oil derived from its own territory. Four decades after this colonial rule ended, the New York Times (December 22, 2002) wrote that “40 percent of the oil revenue goes to Chevron, [and] 60 percent to the [Nigerian] government.” As a point of comparison, the United States would never permit a Nigerian oil company to retain 40% of the profits from a Texas oilfield. Our African homelands have paid an extraordinary price for their lack of domestic technological knowledge. Because of that lack of knowledge, since it gained independence in 1960, Nigeria has relinquished 40% of its oilfields and 00 billion to American and European stockholders. Because of that lack of knowledge, Nigeria exports crude petroleum, only to import refined petroleum. Because of that lack of knowledge, Africa exports raw steel, only to import cars that are essentially steel products. Knowledge is the engine that drives economic growth, and Africa cannot eliminate poverty without first increasing and nurturing its intellectual capital. Reversing the “brain drain” will increase Africa’s intellectual capital while also increasing its wealth in many, many different ways. Can the “brain drain” be reversed? My answer is: yes. But in order for it to happen, we must try something different. At this point, I want to inject a new idea into this dialogue. For my idea to work, it requires that we tap the talents and skills of the African Diaspora. It requires that we create one million high-tech jobs in Africa. It requires that we move one million high-tech jobs from the United States to Africa. I know you are wondering: How can we move one million jobs from the United States to Africa? It can be done. In fact, by the year 2015 the U.S. Department of Labor expects to lose an estimated 3.3 million call center jobs to developing nations. In this area, what we as Africans need to do is develop a strategic plan – one that will persuade multinational companies that it will be more profitable to move their call centers to nations in Africa instead of India. These high-tech jobs include those in call centers, customer service and help desks – all of which are suitable for unemployed university graduates. The reason these jobs could now emerge in Africa is that recent technological advances such as the Internet and mobile telephones now make it practical, cheaper and otherwise advantageous to move these services to developing nations, where lower wages prevail. If Africa succeeds in capturing one million of these high-tech jobs, they could provide more revenues than all the African oilfields. These “greener pastures” would lure back talent and, in turn, create a reverse “brain drain.” Again, we have a rare and unique window of opportunity to convert projected American job losses into Africa’s job gain, and thus change the “brain drain” to “brain gain.” However, aggressive action must be taken before this window of opportunity closes. India is a formidable competitor. Therefore, we need to determine the cost savings realized by outsourcing call center jobs to Africa instead of India. That cost saving will be used as a selling point to corporations interested in outsourcing jobs. A typical call center employee might be a housewife using a laptop computer and a cell phone to work from her home. As night settles and her children go to bed, she could place a phone call to Los Angeles, which is 10 hours behind her time zone. An American answers her call and she says, “Good morning, this is Zakiya.” Using a standard, rehearsed script, she tries to sell an American product. Now that USA-to-Africa telephone calls are as low as 6 cents per minute, it is economically feasible for a telephone sales person to reside in Anglophone Africa while virtually employed in the United States, and – this is important - paying income taxes only to her country in Africa. I will give one more example of how thousands of call center jobs can be created in Africa. It is well known that U.S. companies often give up on collecting outstanding account balances of less than 0 each. The reason is that it often costs 0 in American labor to recover that 0. By comparison, I believe it would cost only 0 in African labor (including the 6 cents per minute phone call) to collect an outstanding balance of 0. Earlier, the organizers of this Pan African Conference gave me a note containing eleven questions. The first was: Do skilled Africans have the moral obligation to remain and work in Africa? I believe those with skills should be encouraged and rewarded to stay, work, and raise their families in Africa. When that happens, a large middle class will be created, thereby reducing the conditions that give rise to civil war and corruption. Then, a true revitalization and renaissance will occur. The second question was: Should skilled African emigrants be compelled to return to Africa? I believe controlling emigration will be very difficult. Instead, I recommend the United Nations impose a “brain gain tax” upon those nations benefiting from the “brain drain.” Each year, the United States creates a brain drain by issuing 135,000 H1-B visas to “outstanding researchers” and persons with “extraordinary ability.” The U.S. Internal Revenue Service (IRS), working in tangent with the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), could be required to credit one month’s salary, each year, to the country of birth of each immigrant. Already, the IRS allows U.S. taxpayers to make voluntary contributions to election funds. Similarly, it could allow immigrants to voluntarily pay taxes to their country of birth, instead of to the United States. The third question was: Why don’t we encourage unemployed Africans to seek employment abroad? Put differently, if all the nurses and doctors in Africa were to win the U.S. visa lottery, who will operate our hospitals? If we encourage 8 million talented Africans to emigrate, what will we encourage their remaining 800 million brothers and sisters to do? The fourth question was: Should we blame the African Diaspora for Africa's problems? Yes, the Diaspora should be blamed in part, because the absence it’s created has diminished the continent’s intellectual capital and thus created the vacuum enabling dictators and corruption to flourish. The likes of Idi Amin, Jean-Bedel Bokassa and Mobutu Sese Seko would not be able to declare themselves president-for-life of nations who have a large, educated middle class. The fifth question was: Should we not blame Africa’s leaders for siphoning money from Africa’s treasuries? It becomes a vicious circle: the flight of intellectual capital increases the flight of financial capital which in turn increases again the flight of intellectual capital. Leadership is a collective process, and “brain drain” reduces the collective brainpower needed to fight corruption and mismanagement. For example, the leadership of the Central Bank of Nigeria did not call a news conference after Sani Abacha stole billion dollars from it. The bank’s Governor-General did not go on a hunger strike. He did not report the robbery to the police. He did not file a lawsuit. Had they the intellectual manpower to counter corruption, the results would have been very different. The sixth question was: Is it possible to achieve an African renaissance? Because by definition, a renaissance is the revival and flowering of the arts, literature and sciences, it must be preceded by a growth in the continent’s intellectual capital, or the collective knowledge of the people. The best African musicians live in France. The top African writers live in the United States or Britain. The soccer superstars live in Europe. It will be impossible to achieve a renaissance without the contributions of the talented. The seventh question was: For how long has the “brain drain” problem existed? A common misconception is that the African “brain drain” started 40 years ago. In reality, it actually began ten times that long. Four hundred years ago, most people of African descent lived in Africa. Today, one in five of African descent live in the Americas. Therefore, measured in numbers, the largest “brain drain” resulted from the trans-Atlantic slave trade. Contrary to what people believed, Africa experienced a brain gain during the first half of the 20th century. Schools, hospitals and banks were built by the British colonialists. These institutions were the visible manifestations of brain gain. At the end of colonial rule, skilled Europeans fled the continent. Skilled Africans started fleeing the continent in the 1970s, 80s, and 90s. The result was the widespread rise of despotic rulers. The eighth question was: Is brain (Less) Channel: metacafe

17,

05:59,

2008-01-07 15:37:22
Description: Traditional Son Jarocho from the Sotavento region of Veracruz.
Son Jarocho muy tradicional de la region del Sotavento en Veracruz.
Transalation:
The Guanabana is such a soft fruit
for (More) Traditional Son Jarocho from the Sotavento region of Veracruz.
Son Jarocho muy tradicional de la region del Sotavento en Veracruz.
Transalation:
The Guanabana is such a soft fruit
for licking
It disintegrates in your palate,
And only your tongue can taste
The pleasure that you will find,
All the tenderness, that it can fit
Guanabana, so sweet & juicy
Guanabana, so sweet & juicy
Lick, slurp, lick, slurp, lick
and I get nothing out of it
Slurp, lick, slurp, lick, slurp
in the middle of the night
You are like a white tuberose,
A marvel made in flesh
Only one thing I ask,
that you don't let it get to your head.
Cuz the fruits in trees,
don't last forever
Guanabana, so sweet & juicy
Guanabana, so sweet & juicy
Slurp, lick, slurp, lick, slurp
in the middle of the night
Lick, slurp, lick, slurp, lick
and I get nothing out of it
A girl's rose bush,
was starting to dry out.
Yesterday, I watered it
And this morning it is flowering
She cried of happiness,
When she saw it so draped in red
Guanabana so sweet & juicy....
Letra:
La Guanabana pa chupar
es una fruta tan suave,
Se deshace al paladar,
y solo la lengua sabe
La dicha que a de encontrar,
la ternura que le cabe
Guanabana dulce y azucarada,
Guanabana dulce y azucarada!
Chupa, re-chupa, chupa, re-chupa, chupa
y no saco nada
Re-chupa, chupa, re-chupa, chupa, re-chupa
en la madrugada
Eres como blanco nardo,
y encarnada maravilla
Solo una cosa te encargo,
que no seas engrandecida
Que las frutas en el arbol,
no duran toda la vida
Guanabana dulce y azucarada,
Guanabana dulce y azucarada!
Chupa, re-chupa, chupa, re-chupa, chupa
en la madrugada
Re-chupa, chupa, re-chupa, chupa, re-chupa
y no digo nada
A una nina su rosal,
ya se le andaba secando
Ayer se lo fui a regar,
y hoy amanecio floreando
Lloro de felicidad,
al verlo coloradeado
Guanabana dulce y azucarada,
Guanabana dulce y azucarada!
Chupa.... (Less) Channel: youtube

10,

01:46,

2008-04-22 08:29:33
Description: Tulipa (Kingdom Plantae, Division Magnoliophyta, Class Liliopsida, Order Liliales, Family Liliaceae, Genus Tulipa) commonly called Tulip is a genus of about 100 species of bulbous flowering plants in (More) Tulipa (Kingdom Plantae, Division Magnoliophyta, Class Liliopsida, Order Liliales, Family Liliaceae, Genus Tulipa) commonly called Tulip is a genus of about 100 species of bulbous flowering plants in the family Liliaceae. The native range of the species include southern Europe, north Africa, and Asia from Anatolia and Iran in the east to northeast of China. The centre of diversity of the genus is in the Pamir and Hindu Kush mountains and the steppes of Kazakhstan. A number of species and many hybrid cultivars are grown in gardens, used as pot plants or as fresh cut flowers.
The species are perennials from bulbs, the tunicate bulbs are often produced on the ends of stolons and covered with glabrous to variously hairy papery coverings. The species include short low growing plants to tall upright plants, growing from 10 to 70 centimeters (4--27 in) tall. Plants with typically 2 to 6 leaves, with some species having up to 12 leaves. The cauline foliage is strap-shaped, waxy-coated, usually light to medium green and alternately arranged. The blades are somewhat fleshy and linear to oblong in shape. The large flowers are produced on scapes or subscapose stems normally lacking bracts. The stems have no leaves to a few leaves, with large species having some leaves and smaller species have none. Typically species have one flower per stem but a few species have up to four flowers. The colorful and attractive cup shaped flowers have three petals and three sepals, which are most often termed tepals because they are nearly identical. The six petaloid tepals are often marked near the bases with darker markings. The flowers have six basifixed, distinct stamens with filaments shorter than the tepals and the stigmas are districtly 3-lobed. The ovaries are superior with three chambers. The 3 angled fruits are leathery textured capsules, ellipsoid to subglobose in shape, containing numerous flat disc-shaped seeds in two rows per locule.
Although tulips are associated with Holland, both the flower and its name originated in the Ottoman Empire. The tulip is actually not a Dutch flower as many people tend to believe. The tulip, or "Lale" as it is called in Turkey, is a flower indigenous to Iran, Afghanistan, Turkey and other parts of Central Asia. A Dutch ambassador in Turkey in the 16th century, who was also a great floral enthusiast, Ogier Ghiselin de Busbecq, got their very names because of their Persian origins. Tulips were brought to Europe in the 16th century; the word tulip, which earlier in English appeared in such forms as tulipa or tulipant, entered the language by way of French tulipe and its obsolete form tulipan or by way of Modern Latin tulīpa, from Ottoman Turkish tülbend, "muslin, gauze." (The English word turban, first recorded in English in the 16th century, can also be traced to Ottoman Turkish tülbend.) The Turkish word for gauze, with which turbans can be wrapped, seems to have been used for the flower because a fully opened tulip was thought to resemble a turban. (Less) Channel: youtube

8,

00:55,

2008-06-12 11:52:01
Description: More @ http://myhotelvideo.com/de/landingpage/youtube/resourceid/Mhv_Catalog_Offer::91599
Location:
This hotel is situated on 18 acres of land on the Cape Eleuthera resort. It is adjacent to one of (More) More @ http://myhotelvideo.com/de/landingpage/youtube/resourceid/Mhv_Catalog_Offer::91599
Location:
This hotel is situated on 18 acres of land on the Cape Eleuthera resort. It is adjacent to one of the Bahamas' largest mega yacht marinas and is surrounded by the Exuma Sound and Rock Sound ocean inlets. A 4,500 acre private beach and nature reserve neighbour the hotel, as does a yacht club. The ocean is just a 2-minute walk from the hotel, and there are bars and restaurants located a similar distance away. The nearest town is Rock Sound, which can be reached in 25 minutes by car.
Facilities:
Newly opened in 2007, this is a luxury beach destination that offers a total of 37 private villas. The complex is fully air-conditioned and includes a reception hall with a hotel safe, a café, a restaurant, WLAN Internet access (fees apply), an iron and ironing board, bike hire, a playground and a private car park.
Rooms:
The Mariner Waterfront Town Homes in this resort feature expansive balconies and patios that have been built amongst tropical flowering gardens and offer beautiful views. These 2-bedroom villas include fully equipped kitchens with a fridge, oven and microwave, eat-in dining rooms, spacious living rooms with queen sleeper sofas and two and a half spacious bathrooms. Each villa has a flat screen remote controlled satellite TV and DVD/CD player, wireless Internet access, a direct dial telephone, tea and coffee making facilities, a washing machine, a room safe and individually regulated heating and air conditioning units. Each guest suite has been thoughtfully situated overlooking the marina and the villas are grouped in fours, perfect for families or friends who wish to be next door.
Sports/Entertainment:
The resort includes sun loungers and parasols, and offers the following sporting activities to its guests: water skiing, motor boating, diving, wind surfing, sailing, catamaran boating, canoeing and mountain biking. Guests can also play basketball, beach volleyball and badminton in the complex. In addition, massage treatments are available for an extra fee and the hotel offers entertainment programmes for both its adult and infant guests.
Meals:
A continental breakfast is served whilst à la carte meals can be selected at lunchtime and midday and evening meals can be selected from a menu.
Payment:
American Express, MasterCard and VISA are accepted by the hotel. (Less) Channel: youtube

0,

01:20,

2008-04-18 14:34:33
Description:
Channel: myspace

15,

00:29,

2008-04-21 22:28:09
Description: This heather is flowering in The Netherlands. The National Park Veluwezoom and Deelerwoud still carries the marks of the ice age. Characteristic features of this landscape are its elevated situation, (More) This heather is flowering in The Netherlands. The National Park Veluwezoom and Deelerwoud still carries the marks of the ice age. Characteristic features of this landscape are its elevated situation, hills that stretch into the distance and a rich variety of woods, heaths and drifting sand areas. The southern end of the reserve is presided over by the imposing country estates that have been built there over time. Monumental edifices, stately avenues and playful little brooks characterize the landscape. The central and northern parts of the area on the other hand are much wilder and more empty. Extensive forests and heaths form the landscape here. Not only is the landscape itself very varied but it is also home to a diverse range of different plants and animals including red deer, wild boar, badgers and reptiles. At the same time the area is an important nesting site for many rare birds. In het Nationaal Park Veluwezoom en het Deelerwoud zijn de invloeden van de ijstijd nog altijd aanwezig. Het landschap kenmerkt zich door zijn hoge ligging, langgerekte heuvels en een rijke variatie aan bossen, heidevelden en stuifzandvlaktes. Aan de zuidzijde van het gebied domineren de landgoederen die hier in de loop der jaren zijn gebouwd. Monumentale gebouwen, statige lanen en speelse beekjes bepalen hier het landschap. Het centrale en noordelijke deel van het gebied is daarentegen een stuk woester en lediger. Hier bevinden zich uitgestrekte bossen en heidevelden. In het afwisselde landschap komen zeer veel verschillende planten en dieren voor, waaronder edelherten, wilde zwijnen, dassen en reptielen. Tevens is het gebied een belangrijke broedplaats voor vele zeldzame vogels. Visit WWW.STOCKSHOT.NL for highres version or broadcast video footage ... Veluwe National Park (Less) Channel: youtube

23,

03:40,

2007-12-17 11:02:55
Description: http://es.geocities.com/jardindelosinmortales/
Li Po(701-762) fue un poeta chino considerado el mayor poeta de la dinastía Tang. Taoísta
Conocido como el poeta inmortal, se (More) http://es.geocities.com/jardindelosinmortales/
Li Po(701-762) fue un poeta chino considerado el mayor poeta de la dinastía Tang. Taoísta
Conocido como el poeta inmortal, se encuentra entre los más respetados poetas de la historia de la literatura china.
Chinese:李白
Pinyin: Lǐ Bái or Lǐ Bó
Wade-Giles: Li Po or Li Pai
Cantonese: Léih Baahk
Japanese Rōmaji: Rihaku
Korean: 이백 or 이태백
Zì 字: Tàibái 太白
Hào 號: Qīnglián Jūshì 青蓮居士
aka: Shīxiān, 詩仙
Poet Immortal
Vietnamese: Lý Bạch
月下獨酌
Drinking Alone by Moonlight
Yuè Xià Dú Zhuó
花間一壺酒。 A cup of wine, under the flowering trees;
獨酌無相親。 I drink alone, for no friend is near.
舉杯邀明月。 Raising my cup I beckon the bright moon,
對影成三人。 For her, with my shadow, will make three men.
月既不解飲。 The moon, alas, is no drinker of wine;
影徒隨我身。 Listless, my shadow creeps about at my side.
暫伴月將影。 Yet with the moon as friend and the shadow as slave
行樂須及春。 I must make merry before the Spring is spent.
我歌月徘徊。 To the songs I sing the moon flickers her beams;
我舞影零亂。 In the dance I weave my shadow tangles and breaks.
醒時同交歡。 While we were sober, three shared the fun;
醉後各分散。 Now we are drunk, each goes his way.
永結無情遊。 May we long share our odd, inanimate feast,
相期邈雲漢。 And meet at last on the Cloudy River of the sky. (Less) Channel: youtube

1,

03:00,

2009-01-10 20:19:23
Description: MAD des différents Tales of (Abyss, Destiny, Legendia, Symphonia) sur la musique Night of Nights, remix du thème de Sakuya Izayoi de Touhou 9 - Phantasmagoria of Flower View, Flowering (More) MAD des différents Tales of (Abyss, Destiny, Legendia, Symphonia) sur la musique Night of Nights, remix du thème de Sakuya Izayoi de Touhou 9 - Phantasmagoria of Flower View, Flowering Night. Un seul mot à dire. "PIKOHAN! Baka!" (Less) Channel: dailymotion

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2009-01-11 13:26:55
Description: MAD des différents Tales of (Destiny, Destiny 2, Rebirth, Phantasia, Eternia) sur la musique Night of Nights, remix du thème de Sakuya Izayoi de Touhou 9 - Phantasmagoria of Flower View, (More) MAD des différents Tales of (Destiny, Destiny 2, Rebirth, Phantasia, Eternia) sur la musique Night of Nights, remix du thème de Sakuya Izayoi de Touhou 9 - Phantasmagoria of Flower View, Flowering Night. (Less) Channel: dailymotion

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2009-02-16 00:39:12
Description: Floración de Strombocactus diciformis a lo largo de un día, 9 horas resumidas en 11 segundos.
Strombocactus diciformis flowering through a day, 9 hours in 11 seconds (More) Floración de Strombocactus diciformis a lo largo de un día, 9 horas resumidas en 11 segundos.
Strombocactus diciformis flowering through a day, 9 hours in 11 seconds (Less) Channel: youtube
TourFactory Virtual Home To... (Video no longer available)
Description: www.tourfactory.com For more information, contact: Pam Stilz (859) 221-6979 Prudential AS de Movellan Natural light and air infuse this beautiful plantation home with wrap-around porches &...

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2009-06-11 06:26:34
Channel: youtube

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2009-09-07 14:40:39
Description: Release Date: 11 August 2010 (Netherlands) ..... Illumination Entertainment / Universal Studio's...... Genre: Animation | Family ..... Cast: Steve Carell, Jason Segel, Russell Brand ..... (More) Release Date: 11 August 2010 (Netherlands) ..... Illumination Entertainment / Universal Studio's...... Genre: Animation | Family ..... Cast: Steve Carell, Jason Segel, Russell Brand ..... http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1323594/ ... Plot: In a happy suburban neighborhood surrounded by white picket fences with flowering rose bushes, sits a black house with a dead lawn. Unbeknownst to the neighbors, hidden beneath this home is a vast secret hideout. Surrounded by a small army of minions, we discover Gru (voiced by Steve Carell), planning the biggest heist in the history of the world. He is going to steal the moon (Yes, the moon!) in Universal's new 3-D CGI feature, Despicable Me. Gru delights in all things wicked. Armed with his arsenal of shrink rays, freeze rays, and battle-ready vehicles for land and air, he vanquishes all who stand in his way. Until the day he encounters the immense will of three little orphaned girls who look at him and see something that no one else has ever seen: a potential Dad. The world's greatest villain has just met his greatest challenge: three little girls named Margo, Edith and Agnes. (Less) Channel: 123video
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