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conjonctions when ----x----> ≠ while //
Cal Grondahl Utah Standard Examiner Cagle 19 November 2010 Related > Thanksgiving
The Guardian p. 26 28.6.2006
The Guardian p. 10 5.5.2007
Dr. Ellis maintained a
demanding schedule late into his life. he said at 90. “While I’m alive, I want to keep doing what I want to do. See people. Give workshops. Write and preach the gospel according to St. Albert.”
Albert Ellis, 93,
Influential Psychotherapist, Dies, NYT, 25.7.2007
Businessman is killed by thieves who slashed his neck and battered his head when he arrived home while they raided his garage... Coiwardly burglars kill dad in 'savage attack', sub, M frontpage, 5.1.2004
while temporel / while rhétorique tout en / alors que / pendant que / tandis que / même si / bien que
when quand / lorsque
when conjonction ≠ when pronom
When
The second act opens before dawn tomorrow, 100m miles from Earth, when Spirit, a US robot rover the size of golf buggy, hurtles through the thin atmosphere and bounces to a halt on the parched deserts of Mars, to begin a search for water on the arid planet. The third act of the drama is revealed later that day when a European spacecraft called Mars Express completes a series of huge elliptical swings around the red planet and settles down to a steady polar orbit which will allow it to probe the secrets of the Martian air and rock.
To boldly
go in search of comets and Mars secrets, G, 3.1.2004,
Voir aussi
While
Judge Orders U.S. Military to Stop ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’
October 12, 2010
A federal judge on Tuesday ordered the United States military to stop enforcing the “don’t ask, don’t tell” law
that prohibits openly gay men and
women from serving. issued an injunction banning enforcement of the law and ordered the military
to immediately “suspend and discontinue” any investigations or
proceedings to dismiss service members. Judge Phillips wrote that the 17-year-old policy “infringes the fundamental rights of United States service members and prospective service members”
and violates their rights of due process and freedom of speech. the new ruling represents a significant milestone for gay rights in the United States. Judge Orders U.S. Military to Stop ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’, NYT, 12.10.2010, http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/13/us/13military.html
Roll right up, folks!
While his 1960s counter-culture contemporaries have faded into obscurity, Robert Crumb has flourished. Why? Robert Hughes explains his relevance 40 years after Fritz the Cat, the Vulture Demonesses and the Snoid were born Headline and sub, G, 7.3.2005, http://www.guardian.co.uk/arts/crumb/story/0,15829,1431910,00.html
WASHINGTON, Jan. 21 - The Bush administration on Friday unveiled rules for the new Medicare drug benefit that guarantee patients access to a wide variety of medicines while giving insurance companies potent tools to control costs
New Medicare Rules on Drugs Balance Access Against Costs, NYT, 22.1.2005,
Six out of 10 women sent to jail while they await trial are acquitted or given a non-custodial sentence, a report published today reveals. Report slams
'unjust' jailing of women on remand, G, 6.9.2004,
In the past, women travelled to lose themselves, while men preferred to climb and conquer. So, asks Dea Birkett, has anything changed? The great escape, G, 5.7.2004, http://travel.guardian.co.uk/news/story/0,7445,1254170,00.html
There is some truth to this. "It's my personal aim that Bush is removed from the White House," says Moore, who has hired former Clinton operatives as a rapid response unit to any attacks that impugn the film's integrity. "But if the movie can inspire a few of the 50% of the Americans who do not vote to get involved and be engaged, then that is important." While the film is far more subtle than Moore's previous work, there are few who have seen it who believe it will convert anybody who has not already made up their mind. But what it could do is galvanise those who may vote to get organised, and encourage those not inspired by the Democratic candidate, John Kerry, to go to the polls to remove Mr Bush. Fahrenheit 9/11 sets US alight, Moore film fires up left and incenses right, adding cultural fuel to fight for presidency, G, 25.6.2004, http://film.guardian.co.uk/news/story/0,12589,1246849,00.html
Police officer stabbed to death
A 48-year-old man was in custody tonight after a policeman was stabbed to death while making an arrest, his force said. Headline, G/PA, 21.5.2004, http://www.guardian.co.uk/crime/article/0,2763,1222168,00.html
You may not be bitten by a snake or snapped up by a shark while visiting Australia but the country is fatal to nearly 400 tourists a year. Britons who see Australia and die, G, 1.1.2004, http://travel.guardian.co.uk/news/story/0,7445,1114580,00.html
The NOP poll, conducted at the weekend, found that 41 per cent of people want Mr Blair to resign as Prime Minister, while 52 per cent do not. Fifty-nine per cent think Mr Blair lied over the Iraqi threat, while 29 per cent do not. Blair: Three out of five voters say he lied over Saddam
threat, I, 30.9.2003,
The Government is in talks with security companies about tagging asylum-seekers so that they cannot abscond while their claims are being assessed. Secret plan to tag asylum-seekers, I, 28.9.2003, http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/politics/story.jsp?story=447785
Cases of measles rise
The uptake of the MMR vaccination has fallen to its lowest level since the programme became established while cases of measles are climbing to record rates, according to official figures. Headline and §1, DT, 27.9.2003.
While fast food and hotel franchises are here to stay, their growth rates are being eclipsed by a host of younger companies Complexion of the industry is changing rapidly, FT, Franchising Special Report, p. 1, 4.6.2003.
Over-55s are generally looking forward to decent pensions, while the middle-aged fear that theirs will be worth less than they had been led to believe. Survey charts rise of the younger Victor Meldrew, GE, p. 5, 27.8.2002.
Talking on a mobile phone while driving is more dangerous than being drunk, according to research published today. Drivers on mobiles ‘riskier than drunks’, T, p. 7, 22.3.2002.
Sunday morning, 9am, and while most are sleeping off their hangovers I have taken mine to a Paris fashion show. Paris – the grand finale, ES, p. 21, 14.3.2002.
But the coachloads of tourists, who over the weekend put up deckchairs in the graveyard and ate fish and chips while looking at the flowers, were absent. New warning on Soham coverage, GE, p. 5, 27.8.2002.
When / while
It was partly to try to bring Islam out from the shadows, and to co-opt its tough-talking leaders, that Mr Sarkozy set up the French Council of the Muslim Faith (CFCM) in 2003. The idea was to give Islam an official voice, and to temper it by offering recognition. In one sense, this has worked. Although the component factions on the council have spent much time squabbling, the CFCM helped the government with its headscarf ban by deciding not to contest it. Even the UOIF’s decision this week to issue a unilateral fatwa was a useful appeal for calm. But the worry now is that radical groups, unrepresented on the council, may exploit the current anger.
While the suburbs burn
When the French rejected the European Union constitution earlier this year, it seemed at the time to be the final humiliation for Mr Chirac. Less than six months later, his government has been making headlines around the globe for its inability to control the riots. The referendum rejection was seen as a wake-up call for the governing class from an electorate that was fed up and fearful. Now France has delivered one even more shrill. An underclass
rebellion:
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