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    How has Shakespeare captured the audiences attention in act one scene one of “the Tempest”? Throughout this essay‚ I will be explaining how Shakespeare captured the audience’s attention in “The Tempest” By pointing out key ideas and quoting them in “The Tempest” and developing the ideas. Shakespeare straight away plants the audience within the play‚ opening with the word of “Boatswain”. This word‚ straight away places the audience immediately upon a ship at sea. When the master speaks

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    contract‚ considering the use of key terms e.g.terms relating to payment can be analysed as implied terms found in law and the remedies available for not following the terms of a contract. Exclusion clauses that try to remove some liability for one party’s breach of contract are common in written contracts‚ yet these terms often have no legal effect. The law tries to balance freedom of contract with protecting the weaker party (usually a consumer) and this can be evaluated as part of the overall

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    Describe and evaluate one or more biological explanations of schizophrenia Research has shown that schizophrenia is heredity and can runs in families. This suggests that genes play a significant role. The closer the genetic relationship the more likely the people are to share the disorder. Evidence from family studies by Gottesman showed that when bothparent are schizophrenic then there is a 46% chance of the child getting it‚ however‚ if only one parent had it‚ it dropped to 17%. This suggests

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    Outline and evaluate one or more biological explanations of schizophrenia (8 marks AO1/16 marks AO1) Schizophrenia is classified as a mental disorder that shows profound disruption of cognition and emotion which affects a person’s language‚ perception‚ thought and sense of self. The dopamine hypothesis states that schizophrenic’s neurones transmitting dopamine release the neurotransmitter too easily‚ leading to the characteristic symptoms of schizophrenia. This hypothesis

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    writing the piece from the illness’s perspective as well‚ so I tried to put both things together when starting out on this assignment. What would be effective in having objects describe a girl suffering from anorexia was that they would simply hint at it through small details‚ somehow correlated to their relationship with her‚ and never explicitly state what the problem was. As observed in class‚ it also works as a metaphor for the growing concern one starts to receive when suffering from this disease;

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    supplies also determines the stakeholders. An organisation such as Lidl has far more stakeholders than family business; it is therefore much more influenced and affected by the actions‚ aims and objectives of its stakeholders. In this report I will evaluate the influence that the different stakeholders exert within Lidl. Employees are very influential stakeholders of Lidl and they are crucial for the running of the organisation. They have around 315‚000 employees worldwide. The quality of an employee’s

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    In the book The Girl Who Fell From The Sky By Heidi W. Durrow Rachel struggles to find her identity and race and how she fits in the world. In the book the theme is‚ The things people say about you don’t make you who you are‚ you make who you are and what you will be in the future. Being told by her classmates and others on who she is just by the way she looks and from what her aunt and grandmother say make her confused about who she is‚ hearing two different things on who she is. In the beginning

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    Gathering Evidence from the Crime Scene Task 1 Shaking – Shake items and allow the particles to fall into a large container or sheet of paper. This technique is suitable for recovering trace evidence: glass fragments‚ paint chips‚ hairs and fibres. Brushing – Brush the surface with a clean brush and collect the material in a container or piece of paper. This is necessary when shaking does not dislodge the particles. This technique is suitable for removing trapped particles from surfaces: gunpowder

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    UNFORGETTABLE SCENE It was one of those typical days where everything was normal. Cars and motorcycles passed by and out of sight. The noise from all directions filled the whole area like a buzzing sound. Surprisingly‚ people did not seem to bother by the noises at all‚ but rather went about with their daily business. Nobody had taken a moment to see what was happening around them on this busiest street of downtown Cambodia. There was a crash that finally caught their attention. Then‚ they started

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    Emergence From Silence: An examination of Mise-En-Scene in early scenes of The Great Dictator Charlie Chaplin’s The Great Dictator is a film new to the era of “talkies” and‚ in it’s early scenes focuses on very physical‚ present aspects of mise-en-scene‚ almost completely doing away with non-diagetic sound. The film grows throughout it’s full 124 minute run‚ having been filmed over several years and seemingly developing it’s delving into use of sound similarly‚ but in it’s early scenes The Great

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