Monday 29 June 2015

PM

post meridiem (http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/post_meridiem) adverb - after noon, in the afternoon. antonyms - ante meridiem ======== Text generated by the application English Dictionary https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=livio.pack.lang.en_US

Friday 26 June 2015

Chuck (hwazhe)

chuck (http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/chuck) noun (plural chucks) - (cooking) Meat from the shoulder of a cow or other animal. - (mechanical engineering) A mechanical device that holds an object firmly in place, for example holding a drill bit in a high-speed rotating drill or grinder. noun (plural chucks) - (dialect) A chicken, a hen. - A clucking sound. - (slang) A friend or close acquaintance; term of endearment. Are you all right, chuck? - Shakespeare Pray, chuck, come hither. - A gentle touch or tap. She gave him an affectionate chuck under the chin. - (informal) A casual throw. - (slang) An act of vomiting. - (cricket) A throw, an incorrect bowling action. verb (chucks, chucking; past and past participle chucked) - To make a clucking sound. - To call, as a hen her chickens. - To touch or tap gently. - (transitive) To throw, especially in a careless or inaccurate manner. Chuck that magazine to me, would you? - (transitive) To discard, to throw away. This food′s gone off - you′d better chuck it. - (intransitive) To vomit. - (intransitive) To throw; to bowl with an incorrect action. - (South Africa) To leave; to depart; to bounce. Let's chuck. - (obsolete) To chuckle; to laugh. - To place in a chuck, or hold by means of a chuck, as in turning; to bore or turn (a hole) in a revolving piece held in a chuck. noun (plural chucks) - abbreviation of woodchuck noun (plural chucks) - (Scotland) A small pebble. synonyms - chuckstone, chuckiestone Chuck noun - A diminutive of the male given name Charles, of mostly American usage. - (Canada) The city of Edmonton (so named because of the large Ukrainian population; -chuk (-чук) is common suffix in Ukrainian surnames). noun (plural chucks) - (countable) a Chuck Taylor shoe (usually referred to in plural form, Chucks). ======== Text generated by the application English Dictionary https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=livio.pack.lang.en_US

Thursday 25 June 2015

Gharibi

جاويد "درمان"..
دومرہ غریب وم چي گنڈلو لہ مي ستنہ نہ وہ..
بالا مودہ زما قمیص پوري لمنہ نہ وہ..
غریبی داسي چي ازغی ھم پہ ازغی اوباسم..
قسمت مي داسي چي پہ ٹول کلی كي غنہ نہ وہ..
سہ بلا گران دی دا پردی جیب نہ پیسے اوباسل..
نن مي لیدل دا یو مزدور دا لاس سرمنہ نہ وہ..
دا خپل احساس دا سیوري لاندي مي دمہ اوکڑلہ..
دا خار کوسے ٹولي پاخے وي چرتہ ونہ نہ وہ..
"درمانہ"تلئ میکدي تہ وم واپس راغلمہ..
پہ دے خبرہ چي دا مور راتہ بخنہ نہ وه.."

Tuesday 23 June 2015

What happens to the body in extreme heat?

The dangers of playing football matches in 40-50C temperatures could mean that the 2022 World Cup in Qatar takes place in the cooler, winter months. Meanwhile, parts of England have seen six consecutive days of temperatures above 30C, prompting official health alerts. So what is the body's key way of dealing with the heat? When temperatures rise, the body reacts by increasing blood flow to the skin's surface, taking the heat from within the body to the surface. This means sweat. As the sweat evaporates, the body cools down. If, as in the UK, our skin temperature is warmer than the external temperature we are also able to lose heat to the environment, termed 'dry heat loss'. But in hot, dry climates - like Qatar - this would not happen. The body would be completely dependent on sweat. Dependent on sweat The body's normal core temperature is 37-38C. If it heats up to 39-40C, the brain tells the muscles to slow down and fatigue sets in. At 40-41C, heat exhaustion is likely - and above 41C, the body starts to shut down. Chemical processes start to be affected, the cells inside the body deteriorate and there is a risk of multiple organ failure. The body cannot even sweat at this point because blood flow to the skin stops, making it feel cold and clammy. Heatstroke - which can occur at any temperature over 40C - requires professional medical help and, if not treated immediately, chances of survival can be slim. The best method of cooling people down is to immerse them in ice water or apply ice packs to the groin and armpits where crucial arteries are located - but it all depends on how long the body has been at an elevated temperature. George Havenith, professor of environmental physiology and ergonomics from Loughborough University, says humidity - the amount of moisture in the air - is critical in determining how much we can sweat out. If humidity is high, our ability to sweat is impaired and this makes us feel awful. But if it is hot and dry - like Qatar - sweat can help. "We can evaporate a lot of moisture from our skins - but we also have to produce it," says Prof Havenith. "This means going to very high sweat rates quickly, and people might be limited by the amount of sweat they can produce." So someone running at around 15km per hour in temperatures up to 37C would need to produce four litres of sweat per hour. Heating up Jamie Pringle, an exercise physiologist, works with professional triathletes at the English Institute of Sport in Sheffield. He says the fitter athletes are, the better they are able to cope with heat - and Tour de France leader Chris Froome is a good example. "Training increases blood volume in the body and that's where you sweat from so someone like Froome will have 10-12 litres of blood in his body compared to six litres in the average male." A serious athlete is going to build up high blood volume and can therefore sweat more and cool down more quickly and effectively when the going gets hot. Pringle says we can all improve our ability to hold on to fluids by spending a week or two in a heat chamber and exercising on a treadmill. The key is to listen to your body, Prof Havenith says. "Most amateur runners naturally slow down when they get too hot, but there are always people who keeping pushing themselves further and that's when things go wrong."

Tuck in/into

tuck in (http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/tuck_in) verb - (transitive) To pull the blankets or duvet up over (someone in bed); to put (someone) to bed. She tucked in her young son and turned out the light. - (transitive) To push the fabric at the bottom of a shirt under the pants. - (transitive) To score from with a casual motion verb - (intransitive) To start to eat. Tuck in, before the food goes cold. ======== Text generated by the application English Dictionary https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=livio.pack.lang.en_US

Siam was renamed as Thailand on June 23rd, 1939.

People speaking one of the Tai group of languages settled in what is now Thailand around 1,000 years ago. The name Siam came from a Sanskrit word, syam. It was adopted by the Portuguese from the 16th century and became the accepted geographical term. Kingdoms rose and fell, but from the 1780s the Chakri dynasty ruled the whole of Siam from their capital at Bangkok. They extended their domain into parts of modern Laos, Cambodia and Malaya, but in the late 19th and early 20th centuries they were forced to surrender their territories there to the French. 

In 1927 a radical People’s Party was formed. One of its founders was an army officer called Phibun (in full, Luang Phibunsongkhram), who in 1932 helped to lead a coup against the Chakri king and set up a government closer to a western-style democracy, with a parliament. The monarchy survived, but in 1938 Phibun took charge as dictator. A forceful nationalist and moderniser, he changed the country’s name to Thailand. 

The change was part of Phibun’s determination to bring his people into the modern world and at the same time to emphasise their unique identity. It was an anti-Chinese move with the slogan ‘Thailand for the Thai’. There were many Chinese in the country and many prosperous Chinese businesses, but Phibun cut down immigration from China and government-backed Thai businesses were set up, while the use of Mandarin in Chinese schools was limited to two hours a week. Thailand adopted the western calendar, a new flag was created and a new national anthem, while Phibun demanded that Thais wore western-style clothes, including hats. 

Thailand was allied with Japan in the Second World War and Phibun was forced to resign in 1944, but he returned to power with military backing in 1948 and the army ran Thailand with support from the US. Phibun was finally ousted by rivals in 1957. He retreated to Japan and died there at the age of 66 in 1964.

- See more at: http://www.historytoday.com/richard-cavendish/siam-becomes-thailand#sthash.3ShWItEq.dpuf

Monday 22 June 2015

What CD on Honda CD 70 stands for?

Honda motorcycles are inscribed with CD 70. Here CD stands for Cash Deposit. 70 shows the engine power. So it reads as Cash Deposit 70. And CDI here stands for Capacitor-Discharge Ignition. It elder brother is CG 125. Here CG stands for Cash Guarantee and 125 is its engine strength.

Sunday 21 June 2015

Word of wisdom

1 Mathematician ko job na mili to us ne clinic khola or bahar likha k 300 mein elaj karaen
Elaj na hua to 1000 wapis
1 admi ne socha k 1000 kamany ka acha moqa hai
wo clinic aya or kaha mujhe ksi b cheez ka zaiqa nhi ata
Dr:Box22 se dawa nikalo or isko 3 drops pilao
nurse ne pila di
Mareez:ye kya, ye to petrol hai
Dr:Mubarak ho, apko taste mehsus ho gaya lao 300
Mareez ko ghusa aya
kuch din baad wo phir gaya k ab Dr se purany paise b wapis lene hain
Mareez: Dr sab, meri yadasht kaam nahi karti
Dr:Box 22 se dawa nikalo or 3 drops pilao
Mareez: Lekin wo dawa to Zaban k taste ki hai
Dr: mubarak ho apki yadasht b wapas aa gaee lao 300

Saturday 6 June 2015

Sarkai Kamal

Sarkai Kamal's original name was Kamal Khan. His father name was Gul Momin. He was born 5.1.1954 in kot Lal Mir Ahmad Shah village Sarkai Sarai Nowrang district Lakki Marwat. And died 13.6.1986. He was Ahond by cast. He was middle (class 8) in education. His poetry is very popular among local Wazir Banochi Khattak and Marwat people. He poems are mostly recorded in the vocal of a local singer Damsaz Marwat.