Mythology the Past and Present Nike is the winged goddess of victory according to Greek mythology. She sat at the side of Zeus‚ the ruler of the Olympic pantheon‚ in Olympus. A mystical presence‚ symbolizing victorious encounters‚ Nike presided over history’s earliest battlefields. A Greek would say‚ "When we go to battle and win‚ we say it is Nike." Synonymous with honored conquest‚ Nike is the twentieth century footwear that lifts the world’s greatest athletes to new levels of mastery and achievement
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Benedict Bajala BSActy-2 Rizal’s Relevance in the Present Time 1. Joining organizations: Rizal believed in the goals of organizations that are related to the achievement of unity and freedom of humankind. He always had the time and opportunity to join into organizations. 2. Global Fellowship: In every journey‚ he was able to meet and befriend foreigners who sympathize with the experiences and events occuring in the Philippines. 3. The Rizal traits: not stealing from government
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Make the Present Simple Tense: Structure: subject+auxiliary verb+ main verb+object do base There are three important exceptions: For positive sentences‚ we do not normally use the auxiliary. For the 3rd person singular (he‚ she‚ it)‚ we add “s” to the main verb or “es” to the auxiliary. For the verb to be‚ we do not use an auxiliary‚ even for questions and negatives. Only for interrogative and negative sentence we use auxiliary verb. Example : Look at these examples with the main
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Got big party plans? Before you go completely wild consider our top ten birthday party tips that will guarrantee your Big Day is remembered for all the right reasons: Best friends If your child has a best friend make sure they can come on the date you are planning for the party before you go ahead with bookings and invitations. The day just won’t be the same without their partner in crime by their side. Involve the birthday party child in the planning If your child is old enough‚ sit down
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SIMPLE PRESENT TENSE SP + V(Base Form) + C USE 1 Repeated Actions Use the Simple Present to express the idea that an action is repeated or usual. The action can be a habit‚ a hobby‚ a daily event‚ a scheduled event or something that often happens. It can also be something a person often forgets or usually does not do. Example: The train leaves every morning at 8 AM. USE 2 Facts or Generalizations The Simple Present can also indicate the speaker believes that a fact was true before‚ is
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The present perfect simple and continuous Put the verbs in brackets into the correct tense: present perfect simple or present perfect continuous. 1 Peter: You (telephone) for ages. You not nearly (finish)? Jack: I (not get) through yet. I (try) to get our Paris office but the line (be) engaged all morning. 2 Ann (fail) her driving test three times because she’s so bad at reversing. But she (practise) reversing for the last week and I think she (get) a bit better at it. 3 Tom: I often
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TECHNOLOGICAL INSTITUTE OF THE PHILIPPINES COLLEGE OF BUSINESS EDUCATION Principles of Economics With Land Reform and Taxation (Econ 003) NAME : _______________________________________________ SCORE : ____________________________ MIDTERM QUIZ No. 1 (Take Home) SECTION: _____________________________ DIRECTION: Write the CAPITAL LETTER of the CORRECT ANSWER on the space provided. Any form of ERASURES is strictly not allowed. 1. If you were running a firm in a perfectly competitive
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analysis of market structures by looking at perfect competition. Firms operate within their market‚ which consists of: Supply side: all of the firms producing similar products Demand side: all buyers willing to purchase the products Markets differ; the auto market is far different from the tomato market‚ for example. Thus economists separate markets into 4 categories: perfect competition‚ monopolistic competition‚ oligopoly‚ and monopoly. Perfect competition: There are many‚ many small
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killed 2‚500 people or the tsunami that took the lives of 280‚000. In both “Super Disasters” by Jacqueline Adams and The Perfect Storm by Sebastian Junger the authors wrote about natural disasters however they do this in very different ways‚ like in how they vary their writing techniques. For example‚ “Super Disasters” is more of an informational article whereas The Perfect Storm starts off as a personal anecdote. So as you can see both authors in these stories use many different types of techniques
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M&S (perfect competition) Vs Thames Water (monopoly) At one end is perfect competition where there are very many firms competing against each other. Every firm is so tiny in relation to the entire trade that has no power to manipulate price. It is a ‘price taker’. At the other end is monopoly‚ where there is just a single firm in the industry‚ and for this reason no competition from inside the industry. Perfect competition e.g. Marks & Spencer‚ they have many competitors such as‚ Asda‚ Next
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