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WINGED WORDS, PHRASEOLOGICAL UNITS
Directory / Winged words, phraseological units / Swim, my boat, at the behest of the waves

Winged words, phraseological units. Meaning, history of origin, examples of use

Winged words, phraseological units

Directory / Winged words, phraseological units

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Swim, my boat, at the behest of the waves

Robert Plunkett
Robert Plunkett

Phraseologism: Sail, my boat, at the behest of the waves.

Meaning: It is quoted as an ironic commentary on the behavior of a passive, weak-willed person who meekly submits to the course of events, "goes with the flow."

Origin: The original source is the comic opera The Bells of Corneville (1877) by the French composer Robert Plunkett (1848-1903). From the verses of her character named Greniche: "Swim, my favorite boat, // Swim, swim, through the foam of the waves ..."

Random phraseology:

There were worse times, but there was no mean.

Meaning:

About the years of reaction, about the police-autocratic regime of Russia.

Origin:

Quote from N. A. Nekrasov's poem "Contemporaries", I, "Anniversaries and triumphs" (1875).

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Random news from the Archive

Newspapers and the Internet: An Ecologist's Perspective 15.03.2001

Newspapers consume a lot of energy and raw materials inefficiently to inform readers of the news, virtual publications on the Internet are much more environmentally friendly.

This popular belief is not true, says Professor Lothar Goetsching from the Institute of Paper Industry at the Technical University of Darmstadt (Germany). Taking a newspaper note of medium length (477 words), the professor compared the energy costs of publishing it on paper and on the Internet.

It turned out that in order for the reader to read the news in the newspaper, it took 7,2 kilojoules of energy (for the production of newsprint, printing and delivery to the kiosk), and through the Internet (taking into account the energy consumption of the server, computer, modem and monitor) - 38,7 kilojoules. If the consumer of information did not want to read the note from the screen, but print it, then as much as 257 kilojoules (the energy consumption for printing and making a sheet of high-quality printer paper is added).

However, the Ministry of Environmental Protection criticized Getching's calculations. Firstly, the professor took into account only the weight of the paper used in the newspaper for one average note - 0,61 grams, as if in a kiosk the buyer would be offered not the entire newspaper, but a clipping from it. Secondly, Getching assumed that newsprint was 90% recycled and printer paper was brand new. Both are wrong: newsprint is no more than 50% recycled, and new printer models are increasingly allowing the use of paper mixed with recycled paper.

If we take more realistic estimates, it goes something like this. Incidentally, a survey commissioned by Minolta, a company producing copiers and printers, showed that 18% of German Internet users began to consume more paper since they connected to the network. Only 6,8% of e-mail users read their letters only from the monitor, the rest prefer printouts.

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