Tuesday, December 26, 2006

'Best shopping street' in London




Deptford High Street beat well-known Oxford Street for the titleDeptford High Street is London's best place to shop, according to a mathematical formula devised for the Yellow Pages business directory.
It reveals that it is the city's most diverse and vibrant high street.
The formula, which defines High Street Diversity, is based on basics, choice, and mix, and takes into account the type of shops available.
The south London high street beat more well-known places like Oxford Street and Kensington High Street.
Retail and consumer trends expert Tim Dennison, who was commissioned by Yellow Pages to develop the formula, said: "This is genuinely groundbreaking work as there has never been a mathematical way to measure the diversity of a high street before." He said the research should give shoppers some food for thought when they plan their next spending trip.
Richard Duggleby, head of external relations at Yell, publisher of Yellow Pages directories, said: "Our data shows that many London high streets offer this mix.
"But what's fascinating is that some of the smaller pockets of London are also well able to service our needs.
"Big isn't necessarily best when it comes to shopping."
TOP 10 DIVERSE HIGH STREETS
1. Deptford
2. Kensington
3. Sutton
4. Streatham
5. Peckham
6. Barnet
7. Twickenham
8. Bromley
9. Putney
10. Beckenham

The most beautiful street in my town


This street is in the Gostivar.
It's in Centre.
Na ovaa ulica pominuvaat mnogu luge dnevno i ovaa e najprometna ulica spored mene.Ima i drugi ulici no mislam ovaa e najdobra.

MACEDONIA


Republic of Macedonia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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This article is about the country in Europe. For other uses, see Macedonia.
For an explanation of terms related to Macedonia, see Macedonia (terminology).
Република МакедонијаRepublika MakedonijaRepublika e MaqedonisëRepublic of Macedonia



1Macedonian is designated as the primary official language. As of June 2002, any language spoken by at least 20% of the population is also an official language. At present, only Albanian fulfils this requirement, but it can only be used as prescribed by law (e.g. issuing official documents, when communicating with government offices, in municipal self-government) and always in addition to Cyrillic Macedonian. In communities where over 20% of the population speak another language, that language can be used as a municipal official language along with Macedonian and any other official languages; such languages include Turkish, Serbian, Romany and Aromanian.
The Republic of Macedonia (Macedonian: Република Македонија / Republika Makedonija, listen (help·info), Albanian: Republika e Maqedonisë), often referred to as Macedonia, is a landlocked country on the Balkan peninsula in southeastern Europe. It borders Serbia to the north, Albania to the west, Greece to the south, and Bulgaria to the east. As the result of a naming dispute with Greece, in 1993 it was admitted to the United Nations under the provisional name the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM), pending resolution of the dispute.[1]
The capital is Skopje, with 500,000 inhabitants, and there are a number of smaller cities, notably Bitola, Prilep, Tetovo, Kumanovo, Ohrid, Veles, Štip, Kočani, Gostivar and Strumica. It has more than 50 natural and artificial lakes and sixteen mountains higher than 2,000 meters (6,550 ft) above sea level.
The country is a member of the UN and the Council of Europe and a member of La Francophonie, the World Trade Organization (WTO), and the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe. Since December 2005 it is also a candidate for joining the European Union and has applied for NATO membership.

Unfortunately-Fortunately

I had English repeat

Unfortunately : She asked me

Fortunately : I knew everyting

Unfortunately : She wrote me "4"

Fortunately : I told to direktor

Unfortunately : She was angry

Fortunately : She wrote me "5"