its objects‚complements‚ and modifiers is called a gerund phrase‚ or simply anoun phrase. EX. Feeling gratitude and not expressing it is like wrapping a present and not giving it." PARTICIPLE A verbal that functions as an adjective. Adjective: participial. Present participles end in -ing (carrying‚ sharing‚ tapping). Past participles of regular verbs end in -ed (carried‚ shared‚ tapped). EX. "God is a comedian‚ playing to an audience too afraid to laugh." INFINITIVE A verbal--often
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20:21 Yemenite->Ex. 20:20 Not to turn a city to idolatry — Deut. 13:14 To burn a city that has turned to idol worship — Deut. 13:17 Not to rebuild it as a city — Deut. 13:17 Not to derive benefit from it — Deut. 13:18 Not to missionize an individual to idol worship
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governmental power‚ government can exist only with the consent of the government. Ex. is that when slavery still existed‚ different territories had different opinions so‚ they let each territory decide if they wanted slavery or not.. 2. Limited Government- Basic principle of American government which states that government is restricted in what it may do‚ and each individual has rights‚ and the govt. can’t take away. Ex. Police need a warrant to enter your home 3. Constitulalism- basic principle that
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Terms to Know for the AP Test Argumentation (The use of logic to prove a point) Assert/assertions/unqualified assertions - opinions stated as facts – the basis of all arguments Ex.: “Such is not the course adopted by tyranny in democratic republics‚ body is left free‚ and the soul is enslaved.” The writer asserts that‚ in democratic republics‚ the soul is enslaved. This assertion rests upon an assumption – a supposed “fact” that is never actually proved. The assumption is that
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beginning of words. Ex: She sells sea shells by the sea shore. 2. Assonance- The repetition of the same or similar vowel sounds. Ex: The blue moon rose too soon. 3. Enjambment- The continuation of a sentence from one line to the next line. When you are reading poetry‚ do not stop at the end of a line. Read through until you hit punctuation that tells you to stop. Ex: “The setting sun/ slithers into the sea.” 4. Hyperbole- An overstatement which is a type of figurative language. Ex: “I’ve been waiting
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Peanuts and Cost Accounting A problem faced by a Restaurateur (Joe) as revealed by his Accountant-Efficiency Expert (Eff. Ex.) EFF. EX. Joe‚ you said you put in these peanuts because some people ask for them‚ but do you realize what this rack of peanuts is costing you? JOE It ain ’t gonna cost. ’Sgonna be a profit. Sure‚ I hadda pay $25 for a fancy rack to holda bags‚ but the peanuts cost 6 cents and I sell ’em for 10 cents. Figger I sell 50 bags a week to start. It ’ll take 12 ½ weeks to
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|The five competitive forces that shape strategy |June 26 | |Disruption and differentiation strategy |2009 | |Naik Henokh Parmenas – MM Executive – BINA NUSANTARA UNIVERSITY |MANAGING COMPETITION | The five competitive forces that shape strategy
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called a subject. EX.) John ran. Nouns that complete actions or have actions done to them are called objects. EX.) John visited Grandma. John gave Grandma a pie. Objects or prepositions are nouns that follow prepositions. EX.) John dropped the pie on the floor. On is the preposition and floor is the object. Subject complements follow linking verbs (is or are). Subject complements explain‚ rename or describes a subject. EX.) My brother is a mechanic. Nouns follow articles (a‚ an‚ the). EX.) Please park
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Clauses I) Prepositional and Appositive Phrases Phrase- a few words that do not have a subject or a verb and are one part of speech in a sentence A) Prepositional Phrases Prepositional phrase- preposition with a noun or pronoun following it Ex: near the table and chairs. “Near” is the preposition and “table and chairs” are the objects. 1) Adjectival Phrases Adjectival phrase- a prepositional phrase that modifies a noun or pronoun by telling what kind or which one ~modifies subjects‚ direct
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Logic An argument consists of one or more premises and one conclusion. A premise is a statement that can be either true or false that is offered to support a claim. The claim is the conclusion that can be either true or false. Arguments can be deductive or inductive. Deductive vs. Inductive A deductive argument is an argument in which the premises appear to provide complete support for the conclusion. An inductive argument is an argument such that the premises appear to provide some degree of
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