* Director of Human Resources Yvonne McMillan- Directs and coordinates human resources activities (Riordan Manufacturing, 2012). She should be able to provide the best feedback regarding the actual system and how the new system should operate. Also she must be aware of the technology being implemented and how…
Nag begins to scare Rikki-Tikki, as they discuss how Nag should not have eaten Darzee’s baby. while they are talking, Nagaina sneaks up behind them and prepares to strike Rikki. However, Darzee yells out to Rikki, and he moves just in time to miss Nagaina's powerful strike of death. The snakes slither away, and just as Rikki thinks he is safe, another snake slithers out of the bushes. It is Karait. After Karait tell Rikki “I am Death”, Rikki attacks him, hitting him in the back of the neck, paralyzing and killing Karait. Rikki is praised by the family for saving Teddy’s life. That night Nag and Nagaina plot to kill the family so they can have the bungalow and the garden to themselves. Nagaina leaves, and Nag stays in the bathroom. Rikki tiptoes over to Nag, and prepares to attack. Rikki sneaks up and attacks Nag, and the father runs to the bathroom with his gun, and shoots, killing Nag. The next morning, Nagaina is very upset, and is preparing to kill the entire family that lives in the bungalow. As she plots, Rikki runs to the…
In Rudyard Kipling's fiction story, "Rikki-tikki-tavi", the theme of survival is demonstrated through Rikki's actions during his many conflicts within the story. The first one is when Rikki Tikki gets washed away in a flood (22). Another event is how Darzee builds his nest high up out of the reach of the wicked Cobras (25). Also there is a conflict for survival when Rikki Tikki battles the twisted Cobras Nag and Nagaina (25-34). Rikki Tikki shows that his actions are important so that he can survive.…
When fighting with Nagaina, she went down to a hole “and she plunged into the rat hole where she and Nag used to live, his little white teeth were clenched on her tail and he went down with her and very few mongooses- however wise and old they maybe, care to go into the hole.” (27) This shows how brave Rikki-tikki was since none of the mongooses will ever go down, but he did because “Rikki-tikki knew he must catch her or all the trouble will begin again.” (26) Another time he showed bravery was when Nag was in the water jug he risked his life to jump in there and hold on. “Then he jumped. The head was lying a little clear from the water jar, under the curve of it; and as his teeth, Rikki braced his back against the bulge of the red earthenware to hold down the head. This gave him one second purchase, and he made the most of it. Then he was battered to and fro as a rat shaken by a dog…..” (22) He could of just let go,but he chose not to and wait into the humans killed Nag completely. This shows how brave he was.…
As Judge describes in Organizational Behavior, the Expectancy Theory, initially developed by Victor Vroom, proposes that an employee can be motivated to maximum levels of performance when a manager can match the organizational rewards to the personal goals. The personal goals are those that they are attractive to individual employees. In order to achieve this, Vroom examines the three key components and relationships that take place between the following aspects of the employer-employee relationship: individual effort, individual performance, organizational rewards, and personal goals.…
Ricki Ticki risked his life to help them. They needed protection from the snakes, so Ricki Ticki did that exactly. He protected them from the snakes. Those snakes were putting Ricki Ticki’s family in danger, so he got rid of them…
Bravery is what helped Rikki the most “Rikki-Tikki had sprung, jumped on the snake’s back, dropped his head far between his forelegs,…
These boys are terrified by a beast that they think lurks on the island. Piggy makes an observation and says “That little ‘un-” gasped Piggy-” him with the mark on his face, I don’t see him. Where is he now?”(46). After this the boy's fears increase. With this the boys represent Hobbes idea’s on fear which is that “Everyone lives in constant fear. Because of this fear, no one is really free..”. With the constant fear the boys have they don’t know what to do on the island so they do the opposite of what they are told. There is no adult figure there to tell them that there is no beast and there is nothing to fear. This shows how the political system that Ralph had formed was not being supported or followed through by the other boys on the island. Another way the boys didn’t help Ralph was when they would go off and hunt with Jack or when they decided to join Jack’s tribe because he said it would be more fun than staying with Ralph, who they initially deemed chief of the island. The littluns don’t understand that Ralph is the right person to listen to since they don’t understand the consequences of not having shelter, smoke, and water.…
If you recall in paragraph 25 killing a snake is a grown mongoose's business. This is his first step to growing up. Also if his mother fed him on snake, he would have natural eaten it. Now, since he had other snakes to fight, he didn't eat the snake. This shows how he has grown up. In paragraph 56 and 57, he is trying figure out when he should kill Nag. Paragraph 57 says, "'Now, if I kill him here, Nagaina will know; and if I fight him on the open floor, the odds are in his favor. What am I to do?' said Rikki-tikki-tavi." When Rikki-tikki attacked Karait he just attacked he didn't think about anything. That time he put himself at a bigger risk. This time he actually spent time to think. He considered his options and his surroundings. This shows that he has grown a little more. In paragraph 61 he kills Nag. In paragraph 104 he kills Nagaina. Paragraph 104 says, "...Rikki-tikki, covered with the dirt, dragged himself out of the hole leg by leg, licking his whiskers." He had just gone the rat-hole with his teeth in Nagaina. When he came back up, the garden found out that he killed Nagaina. When it says that he licking his whiskers, I can infer that he might have eaten…
Rikki Tikki Tavi they fight and the narrator know there feelings and emotions. In Rikki-tikki-tavi the point of view is third person and that effects the story because. The author know the thoughts and feelings of all of the animals and the people in the story. Well from the text it says," There was no answer from outside, so Rikki-tikki knew Nagaina had gone away. Nag coiled…
A. Attention Getter: As children grow, they learn many life lessons but they also become more immune to the sometimes ugly reality.…
Ralph takes on the role as the adult on the island as there is none. He constantly thinks of survival, having fire, and building shelter because he is concerned about everyone's safety, “Been working for days now. And look!” (50). He’s been working on the shelters with the other boys, but then soon tire and leave him with Simon to finish the shelter. He tries to make sure a fire is always burning, constantly thinking ahead for warmth, cooking food and the possibility of rescue. Jack is a problem, he is becoming more and more barbaric, never thinking things through or supporting others, selfish and unworthy for chief, “He isn’t a proper chief” (126). Ralph would like for everyone on the island to be in one tribe so they can all help each other using all of their strengths, some are better at building shelter, others are better at hunting. Jack does not agree and resists that idea, stealing their food and making their lives even more difficult. Jack is making Ralph’s life unbearable, but Ralph perseveres to be a leader on the…
In chapter one, the incident with the Red Whiskers (12) functions as a foreshadowing of Billy's confrontation with Claggart. This is very similar to what happens later between John Claggart and Billy (58). Melville uses the incident to show that although Billy Budd is a gentle man, unwilling to quarrel, he can become aggressive if provoked. This makes the later incident more believable, since the reader has already seen Billy behaving in this way. The Red Whiskers is similar to Claggart in a number of significant ways. Like Claggart, the Red Whiskers dislikes Billy, and out of sheer envy he "bestirs" himself to pick a fight with Billy.…
In the text it says, “It is the hardest thing in the world to frighten a mongoose because he is eaten up from nose to tail with curiosity.” (7) This is proving personification because, a mongoose is eaten up from nose and tail with curiosity, curiosity is something in humans, also the text says Rikki-tikki was a true mongoose, mongooses are born to eat and kill snakes. The theme is that love is able to give courage to everyone, and without curiosity Rikki-Tikki wouldn't feel love for teddy and his family. Also “When the house is emptied of people,” said Nagaina to her husband, “he will have to go away, and then the garden will be our own again.Go in quietly, and remember that the big man who killed Karait is the first one to bite. Then come out and tell me, and we will hunt for Rikki-tikki together.” (49) This shows Nagaina is being cunning in this paragraph, and cunning is a trait in humans. Nagaina’s cunning makes her attack the ones Rikki-Tikki loves and that makes him have the courage to fight her. The theme is demonstrated through personification in the…
When placed in a position to prove their strength and power, the boys soon found themselves fighting for the role of dominance. It was important on the island for each boy to demonstrate their strength to one another. Their civilization continued to fall when Roger started out throwing rocks to show his power towards…