Algebra is all about graphing relationships, and the curve is one of the most basic shapes used. Here's a look at eight of the most frequently used graphs.
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Here we've compiled 18 grammar rules on sentence structure and their exercises which build up from definitions of grammatical terms to practical rules and
April, 23rd. again, the most important day of the year for bookworms the world over Do you know why? Many things have been said ...
I've just come across this site. Everyone? Should? (Certainly, people who use them should be able to spell them and know what they mean.). Why they're good they often say more accurately what is meant; Cogito ergo sum, for example, has the philosophical advantage (over the English translation) of not having a pre-existing subject ‐ it is the ing that creates the subject they are the key to more vocabulary. Carpe diem ‐'carpal tunnel', post mortem ‐ 'mortal'... they are un- ambiguous: 'Time flies' could evoke wacky visions of Bentine-esque scientists studying the speed of fruit-flies, stop-watch in hand Another thing everyone (everyone who uses them, that is) should know is how to translate and/ or spell them. Cogito ergo sum means the reverse of 'I think therefor [sic] I am' (which means 'I think, the reason for that [therefor] is that I am). And prima* facia‡is presumably a typo for prima fasciae, whatever that means ‐ undercoat specially for use on guttering? Come to think of it, I have heard on some US TV drama a DA saying /pri:mǝ fæʃǝ/, which might suggest that this typo (facie, the ablative of facies [='at first sight']) ‐ and incidentally, I prefer 'sight' to 'view': when Elizabeth's walking by the lake at Pemberley, turns a corner and suddenly sees the house's façade, sort of thing ‐ may be at large in US law schools. Another gripe about the translations: pro bono is an adverbial phrase; work done pro bono is done 'for the good' (either for the furtherance of goodness in general or because it in particular is 'a good cause'. Someone who translates it as 'done without charge' presumably says things like 'PIN number'. or 'ATM machine'. Again, I suspect the influence of US legal practice. For an American lawyer, 'pro bono' has been almost fully Anglicized as an adjective meaning 'unpaid'. Give it a generation or two and it will probably have coalesced into a single word. But does everyone need to know these Latin tags? I have my doubts. Some of them are useful to know, but that's not the same. They're neat and efficient; I use them sometimes. But they're easy to get wrong, and can interfere with communication. Moreover, they are a custom-made banana skin ‐ and if you slip on it you may get egg on your f... (Verbum sat) b Update 2013.04.08: A few tweaks and fix format. Update 2013.06.13: Update footer. Update 2013.09.30.11:15: Footer updated. Update 2013.11.13.18:35: Footer updated Update 2014.06.07.23:15: Footer updated: Update 2015.08.01.16:30 – Added this footnote: * Incidentally, over the years there have been many ‘correct' ways of pronouncing Latin. In Goodbye Mr Chips one of the old teachers mocks Mr Chips for giving veni, vidi, vici the new-fangled /w/ pronunciation. [I'm referring to the 1969 film. I don't know whether this happens in the book, or in any of the other film versions.] This is the style preferred by Classics scholars today.] In one of these styles, prima has the /ɑɪ/ diphthong in the first syllable... In a choir I used to sing in, there was a great kerfuffle about how one should pronounce Benedicite. It couldn't have mattered less, as it happens, since that word does not occur in the text. But in Benjamin Britten's world† (and particularly at the school he went to when he went there) the first "i" (but not the second) had this same /ɑɪ/ diphthong. ...and in that world, while we're on the subject the first syllable in habeas corpus had the /eɪ/ diphthong. In that poem, in the school where Wilfrid Owen learnt his Latin, the last two lines rhymed (and they may have scanned as well – I dunno; even if they didn't they probably did in schoolboy-speak, where the stress is often inverted in memorized (and drilled) Latin. Think of aMO aMAS aMAT..., whose actual stress is attested by most [if not all] Romance languages.) Update 2015.08.18.18:30 – Added this metafootnote: † This is too restrictive. Looking up something else in the Concise OED I just happened on this: REWOP from COED Update 2015.09.09.12:50 – Added this footnote: ‡ Not before time, I think this joke needs explaining. The correct phrase is prima facie, not prima facia. The reference would have been clearer if I had added an s; but it also depended on pronunciation of the first word with an /ɑɪ/ diphthong. The fascia is part of the eaves of a house (the surface facing out) as distinct from the soffit (the surface facing down). Mammon When Vowels Get Together V5.2: Collection of Kindle word-lists grouping different pronunciations of vowel-pairs. Now complete (that is, it covers all vowel pairs – but there's still stuff to be done with it; an index, perhaps...?) And here it is: Digraphs and Diphthongs . The (partial) index has an entry for each vowel pair that can represent each monophthong phoneme. For example AE, EA and EE are by far the most common pairs ov vowels used to represent the /i:/ phoneme, but there are eight other possibilities. The index uses colour to give an idea of how common a spelling is, ranging from bright red to represent the most common to pale olive green to represent the least common. Also available at Amazon: When Vowels Get Together: The paperback. And if you have no objection to such promiscuity, Like this. Freebies (Teaching resources: over 41,800 views and over 5,800 downloads to date**. They're very eclectic - mostly EFL and MFL, but one of the most popular is from KS4 History, dating from my PGCE, with nearly 2,150 views and nearly 1,000 downloads to date. So it's worth having a browse.) ** This figure includes the count of views for a single resource held in an account that I accidentally created many years ago.
A Christian femininity quiz that's not as old as it seems (For more info, visit The American Jesus; For a related post, click here...
This article reviews some of the essential functions of case managers. Case managers play an important role in the healthcare system.
auditory processing, phonological processing, meaning to sound, listening skills, speech errors, processing time, auditory perception, instructions, noise
What are some of the characteristics of students with Asperger's? Check out from this infographic on how student's with Asperger's behave in class or generally in their surroundings
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107K views, 1K likes, 9 comments, 279 shares, Facebook Reels from Ingles Urgente. inglesurgente.1 · Original audio
Algebra is all about graphing relationships, and the curve is one of the most basic shapes used. Here's a look at eight of the most frequently used graphs.
Hoy os enseño cómo se escriben algunos de los errores ortográicos más comunes que veo por redes sociales. Además va con infografías.