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<p><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><span style="font-size: 12px; color: #f4f5f5;">Cate Kennedy is an Australian author based in Victoria. She graduated from University of Canberra and has also taught at several colleges, including The University of Melbourne. She is the author of the highly acclaimed novel The World Beneath, which won the Peoples Choice Award in the NSW Premiers Literary Awards in 2010. It was also shortlisted for The Age fiction prize 2010 and the ASA Barbara Jefferis Award 2010, among others. She is an awardwinning shortstory writer whose work has twice won The Age Short Story Competition and has appeared in a range of publications, including The New Yorker. Her collection, Dark Roots, was shortlisted for the Steele Rudd Award in the Queensland Premiers Literary Awards and for the Australian Literature Society Gold Medal. Cate is also the author of the travel memoir Sing, and Dont Cry, and the poetry collections Joyflight and Signs of Other Fires. Her latest book is Th
e Taste of River Water New and Selected Poems by Cate Kennedy, which was published in May 2011 and won the Victorian Premiers Literary Awards CJ Dennis Prize for Poetry.Coleophora bulganella is a moth of the Coleophoridae family. It is found in Mongolia.The larvae feed on Caragana bungei. They feed on the leaves of their host plant.The larvae feed on Caragana bungei. They feed on the leaves of their host plant.Mabel Beatrice Elliott was born in 1885. Educated in London and then the Netherlands and Belgium, she became proficient in a French, Dutch and German. In 2011, the Royal Society of Chemistry discovered details of her activities during the First World War. During the War, she worked in the newly formed department of Postal Censorship in the War Office there she became suspicious that a seemingly standard business letter contained a hidden message written in invisible ink. This message was soon discovered to contain a message written by a German Spy, Anton Kuepferle.In 2011, the
Royal Society of Chemistry discovered details of her activities during the First World War. During the War, she worked in the newly formed department of Postal Censorship in the War Office there she became suspicious that a seemingly standard business letter contained a hidden message written in invisible ink. This message was soon discovered to contain a message written by a German Spy, Anton Kuepferle.You can't have your cake and eat it too is a popular English idiomatic proverb or figure of speech. The proverb literally means "you cannot both possess your cake and eat it". Once the cake is eaten, it is gone. It can be used to say that one cannot or should not have or want more than one deserves or can handle, or that one cannot or should not try to have two incompatible things. The proverb's meaning is similar to the phrases "you can't have it both ways" and "you can't have the best of both worlds." Conversely, in the positive sense, it refers to "having it both ways" or "having
the best of both worlds." A similar theme appears in the Bible, when Jesus tells his disciples they cannot serve two masters God and money mammon they must abandon one and favor the other. They must subordinate their value of worldly things to the honor due to God.Many people misunderstand the meanings of "have" and "eat" as used here but still understand the proverb in its entirety and intent and use it in this form. Some people feel this form of the proverb is incorrect and illogical and instead prefer "you can't eat your cake and have it too", which is in fact closer to the original form of the proverb see further explanations below but very rare today. Other rare variants use "keep" instead of "have".Many people misunderstand the meanings of "have" and "eat" as used here but still understand the proverb in its entirety and intent and use it in this form. Other rare variants use "keep" instead of "have".
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