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> Машина Времени, Abbey Road
stud_muffler
сообщение 26-03-2007 в 4:24
Сообщение #121


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Цитата(Serbel @ 25-03-2007 в 14:09) *

Я извиняюсь что не в кассу последущее сообщение. Стад, вот ты считаешь это нормально чтоб написать на иврите подпись под каждым своим сообщением и обзывательством определённого человека?

Там всего-то написано типа: Макаревич - loser! Я думаю, что это ему самому (Макаревичу) даже бы понравилось. Его можно сказать сравнили с Ленноном. Помнишь: I'm a loser!

Цитата
I'm a loser
I'm a loser
And I'm not what I appear to be

Of all the love I have won or have lost
There is one love I should never have crossed
She was a girl in a million, my friend
I should have known she would win in the end

I'm a loser
And I lost someone who's near to me
I'm a loser
And I'm not what I appear to be

Although I laugh and I act like a clown
Beneath this mask I am wearing a frown
My tears are falling like rain from the sky
Is it for her or myself that I cry

I'm a loser
And I lost someone who's near to me
I'm a loser
And I'm not what I appear to be

What have I done to deserve such a fate
I realize I have left it too late
And so it's true, pride comes before a fall
I'm telling you so that you won't lose all

I'm a loser
And I lost someone who's near to me
I'm a loser
And I'm not what I appear to be


cool.gif




Молчание ещё не доказывает отсутствие ума, но уже доказывает отсутствие глупости.
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I'll try being nicer if you'll try being smarter.
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Serbel
сообщение 26-03-2007 в 23:47
Сообщение #122





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Цитата(stud_muffler @ 26-03-2007 в 3:24) *

Там всего-то написано типа: Макаревич - loser! Я думаю, что это ему самому (Макаревичу) даже бы понравилось. Его можно сказать сравнили с Ленноном. Помнишь: I'm a loser! cool.gif

Ну уж не loser, а лузер. Дело всё в том что мы по разному реагируем. Если ты пытаешься смягчить, то я не пытаюсь этого делать. Я считаю неправильным написать фразу на другом языке и этим кичится, когда половина не понимают этот язык. Это как удар исподтишка в солнечное сплетение.
Могу представить если Доныч что нибудь на Украинском напишет ну и так далее по цепочке.
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Доныч
сообщение 27-03-2007 в 9:41
Сообщение #123


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Цитата(Serbel @ 26-03-2007 в 22:47) *

Ну уж не loser, а лузер. Дело всё в том что мы по разному реагируем. Если ты пытаешься смягчить, то я не пытаюсь этого делать. Я считаю неправильным написать фразу на другом языке и этим кичится, когда половина не понимают этот язык. Это как удар исподтишка в солнечное сплетение.
Могу представить если Доныч что нибудь на Украинском напишет ну и так далее по цепочке.


От, типа по-украински тут не все поймут. Была бы проблема.




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Jikiy
сообщение 28-03-2007 в 13:29
Сообщение #124





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Цитата(Serbel @ 25-03-2007 в 20:09) *

Я извиняюсь что не в кассу последущее сообщение. Стад, вот ты считаешь это нормально чтоб написать на иврите подпись под каждым своим сообщением и обзывательством определённого человека?

тебе знакомые не полностью перевели, поленились для тебя стараться, видимо biggrin.gif
мне тут друг перевел так:
Макарон неудачник, хочешь поговорить об этом???




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Роман
сообщение 28-03-2007 в 15:21
Сообщение #125





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Цитата(Jikiy @ 28-03-2007 в 14:29) *

тебе знакомые не полностью перевели, поленились для тебя стараться, видимо biggrin.gif
мне тут друг перевел так:
Макарон неудачник, хочешь поговорить об этом???


laugh.gif так вот из-за чего весь скандальчик... мде
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СВГ
сообщение 28-03-2007 в 15:29
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Цитата(Serbel @ 26-03-2007 в 22:47) *

половина не понимают этот язык.

причём, меньшая biggrin.gif
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maxaon
сообщение 28-03-2007 в 17:45
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А кто такой макарон?
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Доныч
сообщение 28-03-2007 в 18:17
Сообщение #128


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Цитата(maxaon @ 28-03-2007 в 17:45) *

А кто такой макарон?


Думаешь подразумевался maxaon ? tongue.gif




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maxaon
сообщение 28-03-2007 в 19:51
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Цитата(Доныч @ 28-03-2007 в 19:17) *

Думаешь подразмевался maxaon ? tongue.gif

если это так ... то я ноту и ли эту направляю.. всему прогрессивному человечеству.... а если не так то всё одно направлю.. тока позже.. кому пока не решил
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Jikiy
сообщение 28-03-2007 в 22:50
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Цитата(maxaon @ 28-03-2007 в 16:45) *

А кто такой макарон?

Макаревич, т.е. tongue.gif




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Serbel
сообщение 29-03-2007 в 0:46
Сообщение #131





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Цитата(Jikiy @ 28-03-2007 в 12:29) *

тебе знакомые не полностью перевели, поленились для тебя стараться, видимо biggrin.gif
мне тут друг перевел так:
Макарон неудачник, хочешь поговорить об этом???

Нет не хчу, про Макара, я про него знаю больше чем он сам знает о себе. (шутка)
Хочу в этой теме о студии Abbey Road, о Лондоне наконец, ну или о новом альбоме, раз уж такую тему завели. А зачем мне Макар? Мне с ним детей не крестить. Удачник он или неудачник мне безразлично, у меня своих проблем хватает. Я его иногда пытался защитить лишь из-за того что некоторые просто по хамски ведут по отношению к нему или другому музыканту. И самое печальное что их бред никто не читает из музыкантов, а они продолжают унижать людей зная что им не ответят и думают что обсирая других возвеличиваются как баобабы, а на самом деле окружающим просто противно это читать.

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Robik
сообщение 29-03-2007 в 10:43
Сообщение #132





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Вас интересует Лондон? Я тоже обожаю этот город. Вот немного истории для вас,если вы спрашивали..
London


Though there were prehistoric settlements throughout the vast area that we now call London, no evidence has yet been found for any such community at the northern end of London Bridge where the present city grew up. The origins of London lie in Roman times.

When the Romans invaded Britain in AD43, they moved north from the Kentish Coast and traversed the Thames in the London region, clashing with the local tribesmen just to the north. It has been suggested that the soldiers crossed the river at Lambeth, but it was further downstream that they built a permanent wooden bridge, just east of the present London Bridge, in more settled times some seven years later. As a focal point of the Roman road system, it was the bridge which attracted settlers and led to London's inevitable growth. Though the regularity of London's original street grid may indicate that the initial inhabitants were the military, trade and commerce soon followed. The London Thames was deep and still within the tidal zone: an ideal place for the berthing of ships. The area was also well-drained and low-lying with geology suitable for brickmaking. There was soon a flourishing city called Londinium in the area where the monument now stands. The name itself is Celtic, not Latin, and may originally have referred merely to a previous farmstead on the site.

In AD 60, London was burnt to the ground by the forces of Queen Boudicca of the Iceni tribe (from modern Norfolk), when she led a major revolt against Roman rule. The governor, Suetonius Paulinus, who was busy exterminating the Druids in North Wales, marched his troops south in an attempt to save London but, seeing the size of Boudicca's approaching army, decided he could not mount an adequate defence and evacuated the city instead. Not everyone managed to escape though and many were massacred. Though the governors' military duties kept them mostly on the British frontier, it seems likely that they spent the winter months in London, the most convenient city from which to reach any part of Britain or the continental Empire. From the 250s, an altar inscription records that Governor Marcus Martiannius Pulcher rebuilt the Temple of Isis in the city; and a speculator, from his or a subsequent governor's staff, was buried on Ludgate Hill. An elaborate late 1st century building, with large reception rooms and offices, has been partially excavated beneath Cannon Street Station. It may have been the Governor's Palace. A second palatial building was recently discovered in the smaller trading settlement at Southwark, in the marshes south of the river.

Monument to Gaius Julius Alpinus ClassicianusThe financial and economic equivalent of the governor was the procurator and there is clear evidence that the offices of this official lay somewhere within the city of Roman London. The Procurator, Gaius Julius Alpinus Classicianus who rebuilt the city after Boudicca's rebellion and promoted London trade, died and was buried there. Parts of his monumental tombstone have been dug-up and are on display in the British Museum. Bricks and writing tablets have also been found stamped with such messages as 'issued by Imperial Procurators of the Province of Britain'.

The major symbol of Roman rule was the Temple of the Imperial Cult. Emperor worship was administered by the Provincial Council whose headquarters appear to have been in London by AD 100. A member of its staff, named Anencletus, buried his wife on Ludgate Hill around this time. Pagan worship flourished within the cosmopolitan city. A temple to the mysterious Eastern god, Mithras, was found at Bucklersbury House and is displayed nearby. Traditionally, St. Paul's stands on the site of a Temple of Diana. Other significant buildings also began to appear in the late 1st century, at a time when the city was expanding rapidly. The forum (market-place) and basilica (law-courts) complex, at Leadenhall Market, was erected and then quickly replanned as the largest such complex north of Alps. The forum was much bigger than today's Trafalgar Square. Procurator Agricola encouraged the use of Bath Houses and a grand public suite has been excavated in Upper Thames Street. They were as much a social venue as a place to bathe. There was a smaller version at Cheapside and, in later centuries, private bath houses were also built. Another popular attraction was the wooden amphitheatre erected on the north-western outskirts of the city. It is possible that gladiatorial shows were put on here, though lesser public sports, like bear-baiting, may have been more regular.

Model of the Second Great Forum and Basilica in Roman London

By the early 2nd century, London had spread west of the Walbrook and a military fort was erected near the amphitheatre which itself was rebuilt in stone. This may have been in anticipation of a visit from the Emperor Hadrian in AD 122. He would not have approved of soldiers being billeted with civilians. The garrison was probably modest with responsibilities restricted to ceremonial, escort and guard duties. The amphitheatre may have been used for their military exercises.

By about AD 200, the administration of Britain was divided in two. York became the capital of Britannia Inferior & London of Britannia Superior. Around the same time the city also acquired its famous walls (probably about 20ft high). This protective measure may have been due to Civil War, initiated when Governor Clodius Albinus tried to claim the Imperial Crown in Rome.

A century later, the Emperor Diocletian again reorganised Britain to improve administrative efficiency. London became the capital of Maxima Caesariensis, one of the four newly created provinces. It remained the financial centre of Britain, home of the treasury, and the usurping British Emperor Carausius established Memorial medallion showing Constantius Chlorus relieving the Siege of Londona mint there in AD 288. Carausius was soon murdered by his finance minister, Allectus. The latter employed Frankish mercenaries who besieged London and then proceeded to plunder it. Just in time, the true Emperor's general, Constantius Chlous, arrived, with a fleet of ships, to save the city & reunite Britain with Rome.

Details of late Roman London, and Britain as a whole, are few. Christianity appears to have reached the province at an early date and, only a year after the religion became officially tolerated in the Empire, London had its own Bishop, Restitutus, who is known to have attended the Imperial Council of Arles. Less welcome newcomers may have led to the addition of catapult towers along the city defences around AD 350. Picts and Irishmen were certainly invading Southern Britain eighteen years later. The Emperor Julian sent his general Theodosius to expel them and he used London as his headquarters. Soon afterward, the city's prestige was increased by its renaming as Augusta.

Another British usurper, Magnus Maximus, claimed the Western Imperial throne in AD 383. He is also known to have set up a mint in London and it was probably from the city that he left, with much of the Roman army stationed in Britain, for his lengthy campaigns on the Continent. Five years later, Maximus was dead and Imperial power was waning in the extreme Western provinces. Germanic style buckles, of circa AD 400, found in the city indicate that, as in other British towns, London officials were employing Saxon Mercenaries. London was arranging its own defence and, only ten years later, the Emperor Honorius renounced his responsibility for the British Provinces.
http://britannia.com/history/londonhistory/
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Jikiy
сообщение 29-03-2007 в 11:09
Сообщение #133





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Цитата(Robik @ 29-03-2007 в 9:43) *

Вас интересует Лондон? Я тоже обожаю этот город. Вот немного истории для вас,если вы спрашивали..
London
Though there were prehistoric settlements throughout the vast area that we now call London, no evidence has yet been found for any such community at the northern end of London Bridge where the present city grew up. The origins of London lie in Roman times.

When the Romans invaded Britain in AD43, they moved north from the Kentish Coast and traversed the Thames in the London region, clashing with the local tribesmen just to the north. It has been suggested that the soldiers crossed the river at Lambeth, but it was further downstream that they built a permanent wooden bridge, just east of the present London Bridge, in more settled times some seven years later. As a focal point of the Roman road system, it was the bridge which attracted settlers and led to London's inevitable growth. Though the regularity of London's original street grid may indicate that the initial inhabitants were the military, trade and commerce soon followed. The London Thames was deep and still within the tidal zone: an ideal place for the berthing of ships. The area was also well-drained and low-lying with geology suitable for brickmaking. There was soon a flourishing city called Londinium in the area where the monument now stands. The name itself is Celtic, not Latin, and may originally have referred merely to a previous farmstead on the site.

In AD 60, London was burnt to the ground by the forces of Queen Boudicca of the Iceni tribe (from modern Norfolk), when she led a major revolt against Roman rule. The governor, Suetonius Paulinus, who was busy exterminating the Druids in North Wales, marched his troops south in an attempt to save London but, seeing the size of Boudicca's approaching army, decided he could not mount an adequate defence and evacuated the city instead. Not everyone managed to escape though and many were massacred. Though the governors' military duties kept them mostly on the British frontier, it seems likely that they spent the winter months in London, the most convenient city from which to reach any part of Britain or the continental Empire. From the 250s, an altar inscription records that Governor Marcus Martiannius Pulcher rebuilt the Temple of Isis in the city; and a speculator, from his or a subsequent governor's staff, was buried on Ludgate Hill. An elaborate late 1st century building, with large reception rooms and offices, has been partially excavated beneath Cannon Street Station. It may have been the Governor's Palace. A second palatial building was recently discovered in the smaller trading settlement at Southwark, in the marshes south of the river.

Monument to Gaius Julius Alpinus ClassicianusThe financial and economic equivalent of the governor was the procurator and there is clear evidence that the offices of this official lay somewhere within the city of Roman London. The Procurator, Gaius Julius Alpinus Classicianus who rebuilt the city after Boudicca's rebellion and promoted London trade, died and was buried there. Parts of his monumental tombstone have been dug-up and are on display in the British Museum. Bricks and writing tablets have also been found stamped with such messages as 'issued by Imperial Procurators of the Province of Britain'.

The major symbol of Roman rule was the Temple of the Imperial Cult. Emperor worship was administered by the Provincial Council whose headquarters appear to have been in London by AD 100. A member of its staff, named Anencletus, buried his wife on Ludgate Hill around this time. Pagan worship flourished within the cosmopolitan city. A temple to the mysterious Eastern god, Mithras, was found at Bucklersbury House and is displayed nearby. Traditionally, St. Paul's stands on the site of a Temple of Diana. Other significant buildings also began to appear in the late 1st century, at a time when the city was expanding rapidly. The forum (market-place) and basilica (law-courts) complex, at Leadenhall Market, was erected and then quickly replanned as the largest such complex north of Alps. The forum was much bigger than today's Trafalgar Square. Procurator Agricola encouraged the use of Bath Houses and a grand public suite has been excavated in Upper Thames Street. They were as much a social venue as a place to bathe. There was a smaller version at Cheapside and, in later centuries, private bath houses were also built. Another popular attraction was the wooden amphitheatre erected on the north-western outskirts of the city. It is possible that gladiatorial shows were put on here, though lesser public sports, like bear-baiting, may have been more regular.

Model of the Second Great Forum and Basilica in Roman London

By the early 2nd century, London had spread west of the Walbrook and a military fort was erected near the amphitheatre which itself was rebuilt in stone. This may have been in anticipation of a visit from the Emperor Hadrian in AD 122. He would not have approved of soldiers being billeted with civilians. The garrison was probably modest with responsibilities restricted to ceremonial, escort and guard duties. The amphitheatre may have been used for their military exercises.

By about AD 200, the administration of Britain was divided in two. York became the capital of Britannia Inferior & London of Britannia Superior. Around the same time the city also acquired its famous walls (probably about 20ft high). This protective measure may have been due to Civil War, initiated when Governor Clodius Albinus tried to claim the Imperial Crown in Rome.

A century later, the Emperor Diocletian again reorganised Britain to improve administrative efficiency. London became the capital of Maxima Caesariensis, one of the four newly created provinces. It remained the financial centre of Britain, home of the treasury, and the usurping British Emperor Carausius established Memorial medallion showing Constantius Chlorus relieving the Siege of Londona mint there in AD 288. Carausius was soon murdered by his finance minister, Allectus. The latter employed Frankish mercenaries who besieged London and then proceeded to plunder it. Just in time, the true Emperor's general, Constantius Chlous, arrived, with a fleet of ships, to save the city & reunite Britain with Rome.

Details of late Roman London, and Britain as a whole, are few. Christianity appears to have reached the province at an early date and, only a year after the religion became officially tolerated in the Empire, London had its own Bishop, Restitutus, who is known to have attended the Imperial Council of Arles. Less welcome newcomers may have led to the addition of catapult towers along the city defences around AD 350. Picts and Irishmen were certainly invading Southern Britain eighteen years later. The Emperor Julian sent his general Theodosius to expel them and he used London as his headquarters. Soon afterward, the city's prestige was increased by its renaming as Augusta.

Another British usurper, Magnus Maximus, claimed the Western Imperial throne in AD 383. He is also known to have set up a mint in London and it was probably from the city that he left, with much of the Roman army stationed in Britain, for his lengthy campaigns on the Continent. Five years later, Maximus was dead and Imperial power was waning in the extreme Western provinces. Germanic style buckles, of circa AD 400, found in the city indicate that, as in other British towns, London officials were employing Saxon Mercenaries. London was arranging its own defence and, only ten years later, the Emperor Honorius renounced his responsibility for the British Provinces.
http://britannia.com/history/londonhistory/

Бобик, тут другая машина времени... напиши рецептик какой, ну или советы по дайвингу, в крайнем случае спой сербелу колыбельку-)))




Только лошади летают вдохновенно... Изображение
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Robik
сообщение 29-03-2007 в 11:17
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Я здесь человек новый и мне сложно пока разобраться. Но мне показалось ,что он интересуется английской культурой и моим любимым городом. Машина времени -это ведь из Уеллса? Мне больше нравитя Азимов. И про дайвинг я ничего не знаю- плавать ,к сожалению, не умею.
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Jikiy
сообщение 29-03-2007 в 11:21
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Цитата(Robik @ 29-03-2007 в 10:17) *

Я здесь человек новый и мне сложно пока разобраться. Но мне показалось ,что он интересуется английской культурой и моим любимым городом. Машина времени -это ведь из Уеллса? Мне больше нравится Азимов. И про дайвинг я ничего не знаю- плавать ,к сожалению, не умею.

почитай по темам-))) машина времени - из москвы вообще-то...
Р.S. но не надо инфу о москве плиз laugh.gif




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Rio
сообщение 29-03-2007 в 11:26
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О, млин, чего тока не встретишь biggrin.gif
Уже думаешь, что ничему не удивляешься, а тут на тебе... biggrin.gif




Изображение
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Robik
сообщение 29-03-2007 в 11:29
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Cпасибо за информацию. Обязательно псмотрю. Только я музыкой не очень интересуюсь- я кино люблю. Я сам родом из Мордовии, но у нас там собственного, мордовского кино не было. Вот когда я с родителями переехал за рубеж- смог ходить в кино и смотреть фильмы, которые мне нравятся. А у вас тут раздел про кино есть?
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Мритью Локи
сообщение 29-03-2007 в 11:32
Сообщение #138





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Это Жорик! rolleyes.gif




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Robik
сообщение 29-03-2007 в 11:40
Сообщение #139





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Нет. еня зовут Роберт. Это если полностью. А так -Робик. Ну там мама или тётя моя, меня так называют. Я с ними живу. Мы вместе смотрим фильмы разные и иногда я захожу во всякие форумы просто так. Часто меня гонят, но я не обижаюсь. Ну говорят -зануда и достал своими вопросами. Но я вот спрошу еще разок -а про кино у вас тут обсуждают?
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Доныч
сообщение 29-03-2007 в 11:52
Сообщение #140


Одесса


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Цитата(Robik @ 29-03-2007 в 11:40) *

Нет. Меня зовут Роберт. Это если полностью. А так -Робик. Ну там мама или тётя моя, меня так называют. Я с ними живу. Мы вместе смотрим фильмы разные и иногда я захожу во всякие форумы просто так. Часто меня гонят, но я не обижаюсь. Ну говорят -зануда и достал своими вопросами. Но я вот спрошу еще разок -а про кино у вас тут обсуждают?


Да.




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