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Recomiendo que todos los personas miren esta peliculá porque es muy bueno y es la prima peliculá de Robert Rodriquez. Es mas bueno si vas a la Universidad de Tejas porque es la escuela de Robert Rodquiez.
Forms belwen v. Also belewi, -ow & bylʒen, belien. Forms: p. bælh, bel(e)wede; ppl. bollʒhenn, ibolve.
Etymology OE belgan, bealh, bolgen & bylgan.
(a) To become angry, be enraged; also, provoke (sb.); (b) to cry out in anger, rage, roar; (c) of animals: to roar, bellow; of the wind, the sea: roar, rage.
c1175(?OE) Bod.Hom.(Bod 343)106/3 : Ne sceole we nenne mon bylʒen.
c1175 Orm.(Jun 1)7159 : He wass gramm & grill & bollʒhenn.
c1175 Orm.(Jun 1)8144 : He warrþ wraþ & bollghenn.
c1275(?a1200) Lay.Brut (Clg A.9)15839 : Þis ihærde Mærlin and bælh on his mode, and þas word sæide, wrað þeh he weore.
c1275(?c1250) Owl & N.(Clg A.9)145 : Þos hule..sat tosvolle & ibolve, Also ho hadde one frogge isuolʒe.
c1300 SLeg.Becket (LdMisc 108)1051 : Þe king and þat mid him was..heo criden on þis holi man and beleweden ech-on.
c1300 SLeg.Jas.(LdMisc 108)57 : Þe deuelene..guonne to grenne and reme, Belewi, and wel foule crie.
a1450(a1338) Mannyng Chron.Pt.1 (Lamb 131)8196 : Þe dragons..hadde longe to-gyder smyten, Spatled, spouted, belewed, & byten.
a1450(c1410) Lovel.Grail (Corp-C 80)47.213 : The kyng..forth In the Cyte gan..to go, Cryeng and belwenge As A fend.
c1330 St.Mary Magd.(1) (Auch)280 : Þe se wel hard bigan To ʒellen & to belien þan.
c1390 Disp.Virg.& Cross (Vrn)401 : Beestes gan Belwe in eueri binne.
(a1393) Gower CA (Frf 3)4.2113 : He torneth him into a Bole And gan to belwe.
a1400 Gloss.Bibbesw.(Paris n.a. lat.699)274 : Beloweth [Cmb: tor torreie: bole yelleth].
c1400(c1378) PPl.B (LdMisc 581)11.333 : Þere ne was cow þat wolde belwe after boles.
c1400 Femina (Trin-C B.14.40)8 : Tyche bletuþ, bole belweþ.
(c1410) York MGame (Vsp B.12)16 : Þan þei bygynne..to belewe and to..seke þe hyndes.
?a1425 WBible(2) (Cld E.2)Jer.50.11 : [Ʒe ben sched out as caluys..and] lowiden ether bellewiden [as bolis].
c1450(c1380) Chaucer HF (Benson-Robinson)1803 : He gan to blasen out a soun As lowde as beloweth wynd in helle.
©2018 Regents of the University of Michigan. For details about this collection's copyright see the MEC copyright statement and the U-M Library Copyright Policy.
On August 23-25 at Krasnoyarsk International airport took place traditional summer spotting and more than 40 aviation fans and journalists took part in it.
This time two symbolic things happen. First of all, the airport has been changed name from Emelyanovo to Krasnoyarsk, so, we might say that this spotting was the first in history of Krasnoyarsk airport. In the second place, spotters were able to walk on new apron and took pictures of aircrafts being served at new terminal, which has been opened at end of 2017.
The new terminal doesn’t work at its full capacity for now, there is an unfinished stands opposite of the building and reconstruction of taxiways in progress.
Nevertheless all work will be done before Univesiade 2019 begins, which take place at Krasnoyarsk. By the way, the very first flight, which was served in the new terminal, was a NordStar Boeing 737 painted in Universiade livery.
The airport is hub for NordStar and Krasavia airlines.
In 2016 Lufthansa Cargo moved their department from Emelyanovo to Tolmachevo (Novosibirsk), but some captions still remind of that times.
On the other hand, in 2017 the airport got new partner – AirBridgeCargo, russian cargo airlines, and now has plans to build new cargo hub for them.
Also there is a aviation rescue center of Ministry of Emergency Situantions on the west side of the apron, which participates in rescue missions in Siberia and other regions of Russia. Its fleet contains Il-76, Be-200, An-74, Mi-8 and Mi-26.
Krasnoyarsk airport route network contains 65 routes, including 45 domestic and 20 international ones to 14 countries. Flights are operating by 27 russian and foreing airlines.
Spotters were especially happy to see a few particular guests. First of them is soviet An-12 of SibNIA, which came early morning of first day.
Второй – самолёт-облётчик радио-технических средств аэропорта, принадлежащий ФГУП «Госкорпорация по организации воздушного движения».
Second one was special aircraft of government aeronautical company, which performs checks of radio navigation equipments.
Ну, и главный подарок – самолёт-ретранслятор Ту-214СР, принадлежащий специальному лётному отряду «Россия», и обеспечивающий первых лиц страны спецсвязью, где бы они не находились.
The main present was aircraft-repeater Tu-214SR, owned by Special Flight Squadron of Russia and providing secured connection for heads of government of Russia.
Despite of cloudy weather and not so vivid sunsets and sunrises, as they could be, the event was great, and I want to thank for that PR-department of International airport Krasnoyarsk.
It might be the most famous -- or notorious -- powerbomb in WWE history. And Mae Young was all for it.
It happened on March 13, 2000, when Mae Young was wheeled out to the Monday Night Raw stage, in a wheelchair, and D-Von Dudley got her out, handed her to Bubba Ray Dudley, who then powerbombed her off the stage and through a table.
Bubba Ray's eyes bugged out and he stared off into space.
Young was 77 years of age at the time, and it was the height of WWE's Attitude Era.
And it was the second time the Dudley Boyz had treated Mae so roughly, having done a top-rope powerbomb through a table a week before.
"I have never thought of my age as any barrier, because I feel I can do anything these 15- and 16-year-old kids can do," Young told writer Dave Scherer later that year for a Wrestling Digest article.
In the World Wrestling Entertainment Unscripted book, both Dudleys talked about the stunt.
"When you've got an 80-year-old woman like Mae Young, who you're supposed to put through a table, at first you go, 'What?'" said D-Von Dudley. "But when she comes up to you and slaps you in the face and tells you, 'Don't be a wuss with me; throw me through; I wanna go through' -- what are you gonna do? By far, that was the toughest person, pound for pound, we've ever been in the ring with."
Bubba Dudley addressed how delicately he did the move: "I picked her up very lightly, put her down very gently. After the match was over and we'd gone to the back, she came up to me, grabbed me by the wrist like only Lou Thesz could have done, 'Listen, hotshot, if you're gonna slam me, slam me like one of the boys.' You could imagine the look on my face, seeing this little, blonde lady telling me that. From there, we did the spot where I Superbombed her off the top of the stage, 12 feet from the ground, through two tables. She has since suggested to me on three different occasions that we do the same spot from the top of the steel cage.
"Taking an 80-year-old woman and throwing her off the stage, yeah, if you take it for face value, it's awful. But this is entertainment. People know it's entertainment; we tell them it's entertainment. The whole idea was to make the Dudley Boyz more dastardly bad guys. But you tell me what is more sick: The Dudley Boyz doing that to a woman to become more dastardly bad guys in the fans' eyes, or the fans cheering and applauding the Dudley Boyz for doing it and making us the biggest babyfaces in WWE? I'll never forget having Mae Young in my arms before I dropped her off the stage and through the tables, and looking out and seeing people screaming and chanting with their hands in the air, 'Yeah, do it! Kill her!' This is what the people want. We give them what they want the safest way we know how."
Jerry Lawler wrote about Mae Young and the incidents with the Dudleys in his autobiography: "She was absolutely indestructible. Like the Terminator, you couldn't kill her. And I think they really tried."
Charming hillside villages dotted with lemon trees and overlooking pristine blue bays: This is Italy’s stunning, sun-drenched Amalfi Coast. Visitors flock here from around the world to eat some of the world’s best food prepared by famously friendly locals, to hike through impossibly picturesque medieval towns, and to bask in the glorious Mediterranean sunshine. If the Amalfi Coast is in your travel plans and you’d like to take a deeper look at the food culture, perhaps, or have a local take you out on the water, or even to follow a guided trek, consider booking one of the many fine and diverse tours that are offered by local companies. Whatever your interest, budget, or preferred mode of travel, odds are good that one of these will suit your fancy and add some depth to your vacation.
With a well-balanced combination of guided transportation and free time for exploration, this trip offers an ideal way to get the lay of the land and a sense of the local culture on the very first day of your Amalfi trip, though it’s also a good choice if your trip happens to be a short one and you want to see as much as possible while you’re there. The day begins with a pick-up at your Sorrento hotel in a comfortable motorcoach, which will carry you to the charming seaside village of Positano, where you’ll have a full hour to explore on your own (the town’s lovely boutiques, historic church, and bright beaches are a good way to pass the time).
From there, you’ll re-board your coach and take the scenic route to Amalfi, where you’ll spend two hours exploring on your own, and then on to Ravello for another hour of exploration. An accompanying guide will explain the history of the villages as you travel and offer suggestions for where to eat and shop in each of your stops.
Thinking about an all-inclusive tour? Consider this one, which combines guided visits to a number of the Amalfi Coast’s sweetest little towns, as well as visits to Napoli and Capri, with multiple cooking classes, giving you both a literal taste of the local culture and the best souvenir of all: the know-how to cook your own decadent Southern Italian food back at home!
You’ll spend each night at four-star lodgings in the heart of Sorrento and venture out daily for your tours and classes. Tours and cooking classes are held on alternating days, to allow for a nice mix of activities, free time, and learning.
Day Two, for example, you’ll spend at a farmhouse in the hills of Sorrento, learning to cook a multiple-course menu using organic ingredients plucked fresh from the garden, rolling your own pasta, and even making desserts.
Day Five takes you to Napoli, where you’ll sample famous Neapolitan pizza, flaky sfogliatelle, and perfect espresso, and enjoy a guided walking tour of the city.
On the final day, you’ll enjoy an eight-hour boat tour that takes you along the Sorrento coastline and to the island of Capri. In between, there are two additional full-meal cooking classes, a bus tour of the coast, and plenty of time for exploring on your own. Lunch and dinner are included on three days each, and other meals can be taken at your leisure (if you still have room).
If you’re looking for a quick getaway to the Amalfi Coast, consider this mostly-inclusive mini-tour. You’ll stay for two nights in a comfortable three- or four-star Sorrento hotel and have both your arrival and departure days to spend exploring Sorrento and the surrounding villages at your leisure. On the day in between, you’ll travel with a small group (no more than eight people) and your guide on a hydrofoil boat from Sorrento out to the island of Capri.
There, you can spend the day exploring; perhaps you’d like to see the stunning Villa San Michele, built out of Roman ruins, or ride the chairlift to the top of Monte Solara, from which you can see a 360-degree view that includes both the sea and the mainland. A three-course lunch in Capri Town is included, after which you’ll have a bit more time to explore before rejoining your group and boarding your hydrofoil back to Sorrento.
This quick getaway is particularly ideal for couples, who’ll love the many opportunities to stroll romantic cobbled streets and seaside pathways hand-in-hand.
Take the luxe option and hire your very own boat chauffeur/tour guide to take you on a day cruise down the Amalfi Coast and then out to Capri. Your captain will pick you up in Amalfi, Positano, or Praiano on either a stylish speedboat or a classic Italian wooden boat called a gozzo. From there, you’ll begin your leisurely tour down the coast, with your guide pointing out noteworthy sites on land and weaving you among private islands, past fjords and grottoes, and even under one of the arches of the Faraglioni rock formations.
You can make a stop along a stretch of beach to take a swim in the crystal blue waters, after which you’ll head out to the island of Capri, where you’ll circle the tiny coast, seeing the famous White Grotto and Blue Grotto, and perhaps taking another swim in the Green Grotto.
You’ll have a bit of free time on the island of Capri to eat and meander, and then it’s back to the mainland. Because this is a private tour, you have a lot of flexibility — spend more time strolling the island, perhaps, or skip the swimming stops if that’s not your thing. No matter what, you’re sure to enjoy this day.
Pompeii — an ancient city stopped in time by a devastating eruption of nearby Mount Vesuvius and preserved in ash and lava — is a bucket-list destination for archaeology and history buffs around the world. If you’re taking a vacation on the Amalfi Coast, you really shouldn’t miss it, and this day tour, which picks you up at your Sorrento hotel, allows you to see it without the hassle of making private arrangements.
You’ll make the hour-long drive from Sorrento to Pompeii in a comfortable, climate-controlled coach, and meet your professional tour guide upon arrival. Your guide will take you on a two-hour exploration of the ruins. You’ll see the public baths, the Temple of Jupiter, the marketplace, and other structures in and around which the ancient Pompeiians lived their daily lives while learning about both the history of the place and the process by which archaeologists explore it.
After a lunch break, you’ll board your coach for a drive up Mount Vesuvius, where you’ll get a spectacular view of the surrounding countryside. If you choose, you can take a 30-minute hike up to the volcano’s crater with a mountain guide and learn about the geology and natural history of the area. Your descent from the crater begins your trip back to Sorrento, where you’ll be dropped off at your hotel.
There’s really nothing quite like seeing the villages of the Amalfi Coast from the water, the way countless generations of fishermen have seen them as they roped their daily catch and sailed back into the harbor. On this boat trip, you and a small group (maximum 12) will join your captain for a leisurely boat ride down the UNESCO-listed coastline, enjoying the surprisingly diverse sightseeing it offers.
You’ll start at Positano, puttering down the coast to the Emerald Grotto for an optional stop. You’ll pass Praiano, where cliffside houses seem to sparkle in the sunlight, and then the Furore fjord, just past which you’ll pull into a rocky cove only accessible by boat. Have a swim or a snorkel here before moving on to Amalfi, where you’ll have a few hours to explore on foot, and if there’s still time, you’ll make one final stop for a swim in a cave past Maiori.
From here, you’ll turn back and see it all again as you return to your original docking point at Positano.
The Amalfi Coast farmhouse with limoncello, but despite producing a few DOC wines, isn’t typically thought of as a destination for wine lovers. But this is Italy, after all, and as it turns out, the neighboring inland region of Irpinia makes a number of quite glorious wines. If your Italian visit is headquartered in the Amalfi Coast but you’d like to have a bit of a vineyard experience without necessarily going far, this tour is perfect for you.
Your guide, an expert sommelier, will meet you in the morning in Positano, Amalfi, or Ravello, and whisk you and the rest of your small group to Irpinia in a comfortable minivan, explaining the winemaking history of the region — one that spans millennia — as you drive.
Taurasi will be your first stop, and there, you’ll visit a vineyard that specializes in the full-bodied red wine that shares the town’s name, as well as two other DOCG wines: fiano di avellino and greco di tufo. Your sommelier guide will offer tasting notes and tips and teach you more about the process of winemaking.
After a stop for lunch in tiny Montemiletto, you’ll head to the village of Sorbo Serpico, where you’ll tour another winery and taste three more wines. From here, you can doze away the ride back to the Amalfi Coast, where you’ll be in plenty of time for dinner.
Get a sense for both the layout of beautiful Sorrento and its local flavors on this small-group walking tour through the city. The three-hour tour stops at eight different local establishments to sample their wares, which include hand-rolled gnocchi, crispy sfogliatelle, buffalo mozzarella, and gelato, not to mention the region’s famous lemony liqueur, limoncello.
It’s a slow stroll, one intended to allow you to digest a bit between stops and enjoy the leisurely pace of life in Southern Italy. As is right and proper, the tour ends with a delicious cup of gelato. This is a great tour to indulge in early in your trip because it’ll familiarize you with some common menu items while also giving you some geographical insight into the city… not to mention ideas aplenty for where to eat full meals!
Select the family tour option on this private tour for a Pompeii visit that your kids will never forget. You’ll meet your private tour guide at the train station in Sorrento to embark on a 30-minute train ride (starting the day off with a win — what kid doesn’t love trains?) to Pompeii. Your guide will accompany you into the archaeological site and illuminate the lives of the 20,000 people who lived here in 79 AD when Mount Vesuvius covered the town in ash and lava.
Kids will be fascinated by the eerie remnants of the city and the archaeological techniques still being used to uncover more of the long-buried city. Your guide will help you kick it up a notch by providing puzzles, a special kid-friendly map, and all sorts of games and trivia that will help bring this ancient place to life.
The tour guide will happily answer all of your kids’ questions — and yours, too — giving you their full attention and ensuring that you have an amazing, educational visit.
Our writers spent 2 hours researching the most popular Amalfi Coast tours on the market. Before making their final recommendations, they considered 30 different tours overall, screened options from 30 different brands and read over 50 user reviews (both positive and negative). All of this research adds up to recommendations you can trust.
However The Shape of Water's director believes most games can't be adapted for the big screen.
Beloved film director Guillermo del Toro has expressed his desire to direct a big budget adaptation of Irrational Games' 2007 classic BioShock as part of a piece offering his thoughts on video games as a storytelling medium.
In the piece written for Shortlist, del Toro says: "As for making movies out of games, the one I could really see is BioShock. I would love to make it into a movie. Gore Verbinski was attached to it, and he would have been perfect."
A BioShock movie has been in various states of pre-production for some time, but has had trouble getting off the ground.
In February Verbinski told IGN: "What's interesting is when you get that close to shooting a movie, you've kind of made it. That's the danger - you've kind of made it in your head.
"It's one thing when your movie doesn't happen [...] but when you go literally eight weeks before you start shooting, it's devastating."
Del Toro, known for directing Pan's Labyrinth, Pacific Rim and upcoming awards season favourite The Shape of Water, does admit however that "most other games ... are impossible to make into movies."
"They're two completely different narrative forms. Yet for decades there was that game curse on superhero movies, except for the original Superman and Batman films. Most people thought the rest were unadaptable. Then they found a way to do it, and it worked. Something will happen that will allow a truly great video game movie."
BioShock is widely considered one of the best shooters ever made and won acclaim ten years ago for its incredible setting - the fallen utopia of an underwater city called Rapture - and its intelligent, political and meta story.
Del Toro has a long professed his love of video games and has on two occasions attempted to make them. In 2012 he was produce a horror game called Insane with THQ, but the collapse of the publisher forced the project to be shut down.
In 2014 Konami surprised the world with PT (Playable Teaser) an incredible and short horror game that acted as an announcement trailer for a Silent Hill reboot called Silent Hills, which del Toro was to make with Metal Gear Solid creator Hideo Kojima.
However, due to Kojima's well-publicised falling out with and eventual departure from Konami the following year, in the run up to the release of Metal Gear Solid 5: The Phantom Pain, the game was cancelled.
"What would I do next?" del Toro wrote after describing the ill-fated projects. "I'd go somewhere and the building would burn down."
Del Toro is set to appear in Kojima's Death Stranding - the first game from his newly independent Kojima Productions - but as a character, rather than a creative collaborator.
Elsewhere in the Shortlist piece, the 53-year-old director describes why he loves video games and what makes them work so well.
"Good games approach storytelling in a different syntax and narrative form than movies, or TV, or novels. They're very useful - they've made me a much more nimble storyteller... The future of games depends on the storytellers."
We’re completing the 50+ Tools and Techniques today with this final installment. Read about advanced selection and masking tools, as well as some stupid graphics geek tricks, and ways to fake removing a background in seconds.
Whether you’re skilled at Photoshop or a beginner, you’ll be sure to find something to add to your bag of tricks here. Besides descriptions of some of the less-than obvious PS tools, we dispel some common questions about Fill vs Opacity, and Blending Modes like Multiply and Screen. Keep reading!
Have you read the first two parts of the 50+ Tools and Techniques? If not, they’re still available, and they provide a good overview of the basics you’ll need to use these more advanced tools and tips for removing backgrounds.
If you’ve caught up with these but still need some brushing up, you can check out a HTG Guide to Layer Masks and Vector Masks, which will come in handy with these tips on advanced maskmaking.
Finally, if you feel confident in your Photoshop knowledge, dive on in!