FEAR OF FLYING:
to admit to being afraid
to convince yourself that...
to cause inconvenience
to fasten your seat belts
to combat the fear
unquestionable benefits
to surrender oneself to sth
check in
casualties
take-off
a remedy for this phobia
related to flying
to step in
unquestionable
symptoms
to enumerate the reasons
to make it to the ground
The SLOW FOOD Movement
They raise people's awareness.
They foster the enjoyment of eating.
They deal with environmental issues.
They encourage people to shop locally.
They fight against GMO and the use of pesticides.
They educate consumers about the risk of fast foods.
They teach gardening skills to prisoners.
They celebrate food and local cuisine.
They defend family farms.
They support regional food and local food businesses..
Anonymous "declared war" on so-called Islamic State following thedeadly attacks in Paris.
As part of its "cyberwar" on IS, the hacker group has now released several guides aimed at teaching us all how to break into IS websites and attack the network's social media accounts.
It's part of Operation Paris, or #OpParis, and one document is called a Noobguide for beginners.
Newsbeat speaks to experts about what this means for those tempted to try.
Prof Tim Watson, director of the cybersecurity centre at the University of Warwick, says Anonymous is providing "a valuable counter-narrative" to what Islamic State is promoting online.
He tells Newsbeat the hacker group has great strengths because it's not "from the establishment" and is made up of "independent thinkers" so they can reach audiences which may normally feel disconnected.
But while its actions may be "well meant", Prof Watson questions their call for hacking "noobs" (newbies) to join in for the following reasons.
Pure and simple, hacking a computer is illegal.
There are laws that mean you could be put into prison for up to 10 years for misusing a computer system.
Prof Watson says: "We would not ask the public to help out with a hostage situation or a drugs raid - they would get in the way and may get injured.
"The same is true here.
"Even specialists find operation security difficult, so someone who picks up a 'how to' guide and tries to follow it will almost certainly give enough information away for them to be identified."
Potentially the people running an Islamic State website or social media account could trace your IP address - that means working out who you are and where you are.
Prof Watson says some will be left active deliberately, to allow security services to monitor what could turn into terrorist activity.
He explains: "I'm not party to any decision making, but you can imagine specialists will deliberately leave certain channels open because they provide useful sources of intelligence.
"Those channels might be the ones that are shut down by well-meaning people if they follow Anonymous' instructions."