steppes were able to create the largest land empire in human history is a question that historians have tried to address for a long time. Mongolians were so successful in their conquests because they were created from their steppe lifestyle of horse and bow and received the uniting leader that they needed in 1204‚ Genghis Khan. The Mongols were first recorded in 618-907 in China. Their word for "Mongol" means brave fighter who knows no fear ("The Mongols Conquests..." 9). The Mongolian lifestyle was
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problem of testing a given number for “primality” has been known to be proven by Euclid in ancient Greece that there are in fact infinitely many primes. In such relations‚ a mathematician will describe in example two projects that use prime numbers‚ composite numbers and the quadratic formula to solve equations. From the projects section on page 397 of Mathematics in Our World‚ for Project One‚ the mathematician will work only equations ( a ) and ( c )‚ but complete each of the six steps (a-f) and
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that your 2nd table will have a composite primary key – primary key from the 1st table will be brought to the 2nd table as a link of reference. Composite primary key – primary key that is made up to two keys. 3rd STEP: 2NF (Second Normal Form) – Remove Partial Dependency Partial Dependency – dependency of attributes to only half portion of the primary key. To be in 2NF‚ all attributes must be fully dependent on the entire set of primary key (which is a composite primary key. In the above example
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photograph is not enough to capture the bloody effect of this war.” Such hostility within his high modality language and desire for innovation‚ led to him achieving his motto “near enough‚ is not good enough” pioneering reality with his super imposed composite images which combines “the notion of cinema‚ photography and
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opportunity to prove himself to his wife‚ Penelope. The trial was to pick up Odysseus’ bow and string it with ease. “So they mocked‚ but Odysseus‚ mastermind in action‚ once he’d handled the great bow and scanned every inch‚ then‚ like an expert singer skilled at lyre and song—who strains a string to a new peg with ease‚ making the pliant sheep—got fast at either end—so with his virtuoso ease Odysseus strung his mighty bow” (Homer 21.451-456). After carefully examining his very own weapon‚ he picked it
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substantial amount of time. The fox loved boar but noticed that next to the hunter was his bow. The bow’s string looked like dried skin to the fox. The fox‚ interested in the bow string‚ decided to eat the bow string then later the boar. He didn’t necessarily like the taste of the string but didn’t want to let it go to waste. He continued to chew on the string and then it snapped which released the tension of the bow. The bow then impaled the heart of the fox and killed it. The moral of the story is that greed
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a relation with a unique composite key: A composite key contains two or more attributes. An example of a unique composite key in the EMPLOYEE table is if we combined LastName‚ FirstName‚ and Department as a key; these three attributes combined would insure that we would identify only one row. 2.13 Explain the difference between a primary key and a candidate key: Candidate keys are keys that uniquely identify each row in a relation. They can be single or composite. The primary key is the
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I would like to express my deepest appreciation to all those who provided me the possibility to complete this report .Firstly‚ I would like to thank my additional mathematics teacher‚ Puan Rohana bt. Dalmen for her guidance and constant supervision as well as for providing necessary information regarding the project and also for her support in completing the project. I would like to express my gratitude towards my parents and family members for their kind co-operation and encouragement which helped
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01/27/06 10:25AM Plate # 0-Composite pg 1 # 1 The Wealth of Networks 1 0 1 Name /yal05/27282_u00 01/27/06 10:25AM Plate # 0-Composite pg 2 # 2 Name /yal05/27282_u00 01/27/06 10:25AM Plate # 0-Composite pg 3 # 3 The Wealth of Networks How Social Production Transforms Markets and Freedom Yochai Benkler Yale University Press New Haven and London 1 0 1 Name /yal05/27282_u00 01/27/06 10:25AM Plate # 0-Composite pg 4 # 4 Copyright 2006
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Jonathan Edwards’ persona in this sermon is powerful‚ enforcing his view of God’s power and using imagery to describe God’s wrath vividly. The tone throughout the sermon is very intense‚ creating imagery for the audience to better understand his beliefs about how an angry God deals with sinners. This is an excerpt‚ depicting the key parts of the full sermon. Throughout the sermon‚ Edwards’ use of imagery gives the audience an image of God holding the sinners over the pits of hell‚ their fates
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