You have some nerve. Come boy‚ and let me cut out your tongue! (The LORD GENERAL draws his sword.) ROSSIGNOL: Oh‚ but I have a name indeed. Mark it well: I am Prince Rossignol. I am your torment‚ and I am your salvation from this sad fate of yours. Find yourself a sow to marry‚ hog. Princess Flora belongs to me! (The two men clash swords. They fight‚ and ROSSIGNOL disarms the LORD GENERAL‚ who falls to the floor
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Introduction to Hospitality 1 Introduction to Hospitality Manual on Module II Introduction to Hospitality (Fine-tuned version) 2 Introduction to Hospitality Contributors Dr Benny Chan‚ Hong Kong Community College‚ The Hong Kong Polytechnic University; Mr Murray Mackenzie‚ School of Hotel & Tourism Management‚ The Hong Kong Polytechnic University and PSHE Section‚ Curriculum Development Institute. 3 Introduction to Hospitality Copyright © The Government of the Hong Kong Special
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Lost in Translation (2003). Director: Sofia Coppola. Summary The film takes place in Tokyo where two characters find themselves feeling alone and lost in the foreign landscape. Bob‚ a famous American actor‚ and Charlotte‚ who is married to constantly working photographer‚ are drawn to each other. They grow sympathetic towards one another and together they navigate the spaces (clubs‚ restaurants‚ karaoke bars) of an unfamiliar culture. They gain a deeper understanding of one another. Charlotte
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learn it. Why? Research about how we remember and forget gives us a clue. 01 HOW QUICKLY WE FORGET 19th century psychologist Hermann Ebbinghaus created the “Forgetting Curve” after studying how quickly he learned‚ then forgot‚ a series of three-letter trigrams. Here’s what he discovered: In the time it takes to make and drink a cup of coffee‚ you’ll forget 42% of what you learned. 42% 20 MIN 56% In about the time it takes to watch your favorite TV show‚ you’ll forget 56% of what you learned
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person can experience is leaving everything you’ve ever known behind and starting completely over somewhere else. Eva does this in the Lost in Translation by moving from Poland all the way to Canada when she is just a teenager. When I was sixteen years old my family moved from Minnesota to Texas. This isn’t quite as drastic of a change as in Lost in Translation‚ but many of the things Eva experienced I can relate with even if I just crossed numerous state line borders. Eva says “My mother says I’m becoming
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Sarah Walker Mrs. Markovich ENG4Uh 26 February 2013 Poor Prince Hamlet The dearly depressed Prince Hamlet‚ featured in William Spakespeare’s Hamlet‚ reveals his true and deeper feelings of sorrow and grief for himself and his father but also the hatred and revulsion masked beneath his quick and unkind words‚ directed more to his mother and Claudius. Hamlet‚ being the only person to see through to the true character of Claudius‚ dares to question as to why his mother would betray him and his
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Throughout history‚ many rulers have been overthrown‚ conspired against‚ and assassinated. Many would argue that this was due to these rulers not knowing how to control their people‚ but upon reading the short essay‚ “The Prince” by Niccoló Machiavelli‚ one would realize that rulers have been ruined only due to their inability to rule. A ruler could have commendable‚ honorable qualities that people want their ruler to possess‚ but these exact qualities would led to their ruin. Thus a good ruler must
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by his drawing until he came up with a box and threw out an explanation to it. That is how he made his acquaintance to the little prince. He took him a long time to know where he came from‚ but little by little he learned that the prince came from asteroid B-612. Everything there is small. Through their conversation‚ everything was revealed to him. The little prince took much care of his planet. He doesn’t want anything destroyed his home. One day‚ a rose appeared on his planet. For him‚ it is
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Bauer‚ Margaret D. "Forget The Legend And Read The Work: Teaching Two Stories By Ernest Hemingway." College Literature 30.3 (2003): 124. Academic Search Premier. Web. 24 Sept. 2016. The article by Margaret D. Bauer begins with her stating that she does not suggest we read and critique literature with no consideration as to the history behind the piece and the author‚ but that she does like to teach works of literature that differ from the authors’ prior reputation and remind people to not jump to
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In the Wall Street Journal‚ Lost in Translation is an article about how language has influenced the way people view the world. Lera Boroditsky ask the public a question if language really shapes the way we speak without even noticing that our brain is even doing that. She explains that English language marks the verb tense‚ but that the Russian language marks the verb tense and describes the gender as well. In the Turkish language you would require the verb and the information to support the verb
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