A Woman's Sweet Lemons


Book Description

A Woman’s Sweet Lemons Life, Love and Personal growth This is an inspirational story of a woman who chose to rise above her misfortunes and live her life to the full, despite the challenges she faced. The old adages, “When life gives you lemons, make lemonade,” and “When people throw bricks at you, use them to construct your empire” and “sticks and stones may hurt my bones but talk can never hurt me,” have never been more applicable, relevant and appropriate. All cultures should embrace the fact that there is a paradigm shift in as far as how women should be treated in the home, in business, at the work place, in the community and in society as a whole. Failure to recognize, acknowledge and adapt with this shift is tantamount to being left behind while the whole world moves on. Whether we are young or old, misfortunes are a part of our lives. Misfortunes are to our lives as lemons are to our taste buds. Lemons are bitter but depending on how you use them, they can help to make an otherwise non appetizing dish look very appealing and taste very delicious, resulting in A Woman’s Sweet Lemons.




The Recipe Girl Cookbook


Book Description

150 easy, family-friendly, great-tasting recipes in the first cookbook from the wildly popular blogger Recipe Girl (RecipeGirl.com).




Sweet Lemons


Book Description




Sweet Lemons


Book Description

Rachel Springmann-Ribak and her family fled German-occupied Poland in 1940. She was three years old. After a harrowing journey in dilapidated ships, they and the surviving refugees ended up in Mauritius, where they were incarcerated in separate men's and women's camps for five years. "Sweet Lemons" offers a glimpse into an almost forgotten tale in the history of the Holocaust. Through Rachel's eyes we experience the harsh conditions, the loss of dignity, the small, stolen pleasures, and finally their arrival in the Promised Land.




When Grandma Gives You a Lemon Tree


Book Description

When Grandma gives you a lemon tree, definitely don’t make a face! Care for the tree, and you might be surprised at how new things, and new ideas, bloom. “Charms from cover to cover.” —Kirkus (Starred review) “When life gives you lemons, make lemonade.” In this imaginative take on that popular saying, a child is surprised (and disappointed) to receive a lemon tree from Grandma for her birthday. After all, she DID ask for a new gadget! But when she follows the narrator’s careful—and funny—instructions, she discovers that the tree might be exactly what she wanted after all. This clever story, complete with a recipe for lemonade, celebrates the pleasures of patience, hard work, nature, community . . . and putting down the electronic devices just for a while.




Our Best Bites


Book Description

Includes plastic insert with equivalent measurements and metric conversions.




Lemon Girl


Book Description

Included in ezvid.com wiki list of 9 Well-Written Novels That Put Women Front & Center 'It's all your fault.' Mere words these are. "But words can possess a shadow invincible enough to rob even a soul of its eternity." In a society that finds it easier to mark sins of a victim than the culprit, Nirvi is a young girl punishing herself for the faults she did not do and avenging her hurts by defeating her own truth. She is scared of her future, and ashamed of her past. She is failing herself, and knows it. She has had a long line of boyfriends, and hated them all. She detests the guy she is living with, runs away from the one she loves , and seduces the one who can never love her. When Arsh first sees Nirvi, she's a free and frank girl in whose eyes sparkle the lemony zest of life. The next time he sees her, she is a voiceless doll draped in clothes that cover her body less and shroud her soul more. And Arsh can't rest till he finds out what made Nirvi give up her own real self. Nirvi knows she is dragging herself on a path from which there can be no recovery. Can her spirit survive the treacherous downfall? Or is the pull of fear and push of desperation just too strong to withstand for a girl who believes she has "nowhere else to go" but down. "When it's time for you to fall in love, even a lemon can become the cause of it," says Arsh. But can love survive, when even the self love dies? Can love survive when respect is no more? Does true love have the power to revive a dying soul? Find out in the pages of this brilliantly woven, intense, heart-warming and thought-provoking saga of RISING IN LOVE...




The Semantics of Grammar


Book Description

“The semantics of grammar” presents a radically semantic approach to syntax and morphology. It offers a methodology which makes it possible to demonstrate, on an empirical basis, that syntax is neither “autonomous” nor “arbitrary”, but that it follows from “semantics”. It is shown that every grammatical construction encodes a certain semantic structure, which can be revealed and rigorously stated, so that the meanings encoded in grammar can be compared in a precise and illuminating way, within one language and across language boundaries. The author develops a semantic metalanguage based on lexical universals or near-universals (and, ultimately, on a system of universal semantic primitives), and shows that the same semantic metalanguage can be used for explicating lexical, grammatical and pragmatic aspects of language and thus offers a method for an integrated linguistic description based on semantic foundations. Analyzing data from a number of different languages (including English, Russian and Japanese) the author explores the notion of ethnosyntax and, via semantics, links syntax and morphology with culture. She attemps to demonstrate that the use of a semantic metalanguage based on lexical universals makes it possible to rephrase the Humboldt-Sapir-Whorf hypothesis in such a way that it can be tested and treated as a program for empirical research.




Woman's Work for Woman


Book Description