toxic waste
toxic waste is waste material, often in chemical form, that can cause death or injury to living creatures. It usually is the product of industry or commerce, but comes also from residential use, agriculture, the military, medical facilities, radioactive sources, and light industry, such as dry cleaning establishments. The term is often used interchangeably with "hazardous waste," or discarded material that can pose a long-term risk to health or environment. Toxics can be released into air, water, or land. In 1976 the Toxic Substances Control Act required the Environmental Protection Agency to regulate potentially hazardous industrial chemicals, including halogenated fluorocarbons, dioxin, asbestos , polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and vinyl chloride. Other federal legislation pertaining to hazardous wastes includes the Atomic Energy Act (1954), the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (1976), and the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, or Superfund Act (1986). Toxic waste treatment and control has proved to be expensive and time-consuming with more resources spent on court battles than on actual cleanup. The disposal of toxic wastes is also a topic of international concern. In 1989, some 50 countries signed a treaty aimed at regulating the international shipment of toxic wastes. In some cases such wastes are shipped to developing countries for cheap disposal without the informed consent of their governments. The often substandard shipping, storage, and treatment methods endanger human health and the health of the environment. See air pollution ; pollution ; solid waste ; water pollution .
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Breathing life into the Manx language; The opposite of the stuffy academic, Jennifer Kewley Draskau is the horse-jumping, bungee jumping, parachuting linguist putting Manx back on Britain's language map. Peter Elson reports.(News)
Newspaper article from: Daily Post (Liverpool, England); 2/16/2009; 700+ words
; ...people learning and wanting to speak it. "Although Manx is a goidelic language, Irish and Scots speakers get very upset because...brythonic Celtic, whereas Manx, Irish and Scots Gallic are goidelic Celtic. There are systemic similarities, but they are not...
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Interesting Celt tales and folklore
Newspaper article from: New Straits Times; 1/22/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...others consider the Goidelics more equal than others. The Goidelic inhabited Ireland and the western highlands of Scotland. To...intents and purposes not fully part of the Celtic nations. The Goidelic languages are Irish Gaelic, Scottish Gaelic, and Manx. Manx...
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NI prize crossword.
Magazine article from: New Internationalist; 6/1/2009; 700+ words
; ...city renowned for its annual motor racing event (2,4) 11 Afro-Asian Hamitic language of Ethiopia and Somalia (8) 12 Goidelic language of some W European Celts (5) 14 Province of central Belgium and its capital (5) 17 Cambodian range of mountains...
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Free Will Astrology
Magazine article from: The Village Voice; 10/19/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...bastard tongue, an unruly mix of corrupted Latin, Anglo-Saxon, French (in particular Middle Norman), Brythonic and Goidelic Gaelic, Welsh, and other forms of the Celtic tongues." In other words, the most widely used language on the planet was...
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Confusing.(Letters)
Newspaper article from: Daily Post (Liverpool, England); 12/27/2001; 440 words
; ...who emigrated here through the Bala Claft to become an Ardudwy type, according to the studies of Iorwerth C. Peate. Am I a Goidelic or Brythonic Celt, maybe even pre-celtic. The mind boggles! Mr Jones may be having genuine concerns regarding the direction...
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Learning to speak American LANGUAGE
Newspaper article from: International Herald Tribune; 7/31/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...In Ireland, the words must fit the rhythm, often at the expense of logic or clarity. Gaelic has its roots in the ancient Goidelic of the Celts. English comes from the Germanic. We may be geographic neighbors, but when it comes to linguistic traits...
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Emma's power drive; answers to correspondents.
Newspaper article from: The Daily Mail (London, England); 11/16/2006; 700+ words
; ...languages belonging to the Celtic family of Indo-European tongues - Brittonic (the ancestor of Welsh and Cornish) or Pictish. Goidelic (the ancestor of Irish and Scottish Gaelic and Manx) was spoken in Ireland. These languages continued in use during the...
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The admiralty: an old boys' club whose time had come?(World War II)
Magazine article from: Esprit de Corps; 12/1/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...into an effective working aircraft carrier, the HMS Ben-my-Chree (the name means Girl of My Heart in Manx Gaelic, a Goidelic language spoken on the Isle of Man). Samson's unique group of pilots cruised the Mediterranean looking for work. The small...
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Obituary: J. E. Caerwyn Williams His preferred bedtime reading was said to be German commentaries on the Old Testament, which he read in its original languages
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 6/14/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...scholarship. For more than 60 years he wrote prolifically on the civilisation of the Celts, both ancient and modern, those of the Goidelic branch as well as those of the Brittonic, and particularly on the native literatures of Ireland and Wales. His learning was...
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Speaking from the shadows: Sophia Morrison and the Manx cultural revival. (Research article: focus on women).
Magazine article from: Folklore; 10/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...comes in the form of archaeological remains of roundhouses and hill forts. Linguistically, its form of Gaelic belongs to the Goidelic group of Celtic, Manx Gaelic being an off-shoot of Irish Gaelic. Throughout much of its history, the Isle of Man has been...
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Goidelic
Book article from: A Dictionary of Celtic Mythology
Goidelic, Goidhelic , Gadhelic , Gaedhelic . Name for the group of Q-Celtic languages...Brythonic or Brittonic, denoting the P-Celtic languages of Britain. The Goidelic invaders of Ireland are often referred to as the Féni in Irish...
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Celtic languages
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...Brythonic (also called British), and the Goidelic (also called Gaelic). Continental Celtic...8th cent. AD (see Welsh literature ). Goidelic The third group of the Celtic subfamily is Goidelic, to which Irish (also called Irish Gaelic...
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Irish language
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to Irish History
...Gaelic and Manx, constitute the Gaelic or Goidelic branch of the Celtic languages. Welsh...Celtic of Gaul formed a unity separate from Goidelic. More recent research suggests that Goidelic and Brythonic have much in common and that...
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CELTIC LANGUAGES
Book article from: Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language
...from Brython a Briton) and Irish or Goidelic (from Goidel an Irishman: modern Gael...to them as P-Celtic in contrast to Goidelic as Q-Celtic , on the basis of a sound...in Welsh Prydain Britain, while the Goidelic sound represented as q occurs in GAELIC...
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Gaelic
Book article from: The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English
...gālik / • adj. of or relating to the Goidelic languages, particularly the Celtic language of Scotland...their descendants. • n. (also Scottish Gaelic ) a Goidelic language brought from Ireland in the 5th and 6th centuries...
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