Dominican Republic Beachguabina06The document discusses beaches in the Dominican Republic. It was written by Ing. Fernando Pérez Durán, an engineer based in the Dominican Republic. The document likely provides details about beaches in the Dominican Republic from an engineering perspective.
Concierto del 20 de Julio en el Parque de la Viña Ávilafran_stanbyEl documento describe una presentación musical de los DJs Kiko Nenepa y Benbom el 20 de julio de 2013 en el Parque de la Viña de Ávila. Incluye imágenes de la presentación cedidas por Patty JKB y proporciona información sobre próximos conciertos de los DJs del 19 al 25 de agosto en Becedas, Ávila.
Reported speechKiryl SamartsauThis document discusses reported speech and the grammatical changes that are typically made when reporting what someone else said. It provides examples of changing pronouns, places, times, and verb tenses in reported statements. It also discusses keeping some original tenses, changing modal verbs, and flexible changes depending on the reporting situation.
LLEF16 workshop - Mogilev, BelarusKiryl SamartsauThe document announces the 7th annual international workshop on Lifelong Learning within European Frameworks to be held in April 2016 in Mogilev, Belarus. The workshop will bring together academics, educators, and experts from various European states to promote collaboration, share new findings and concepts, and help develop common European education frameworks. It provides important dates, submission guidelines, registration information, and contact details for the event.
PhonicsKiryl SamartsauThis document discusses pronunciation and spelling in English. It covers the basics of vowels and consonants, then delves into more complex topics like syllables, stress, intonation, and how they interact. It examines patterns in stress placement for different word types such as nouns, verbs, prefixes, suffixes, and compound words. Stress can be influenced by factors like affixes, word class, number of syllables, and phonological structure. Exceptions are also addressed, such as variable stress in word pairs and suffixes that affect the stem.
English social classes aspectsKiryl SamartsauThis document discusses linguistic codes and terminology used among the British social classes. It notes that upper class speech is marked by dropping of vowels and consonants like 't's and 'h's, as well as using terms like 'one' instead of pronouns. Working class speech may replace 'th' sounds with 'f' or 'v' and drop final 'g's. Terminology also differs between classes, with upper class using terms like 'lavatory' and 'napkin' versus working class 'toilet' and 'serviette'. The document advises that "educated" speech is more upper-middle class than true upper class speech and lacks some of the distinguishing features.
Rules of EnglishnessKiryl SamartsauThis document outlines many different social "rules" or conventions across various contexts in English culture, including introductions, gossip, pub conversations, home life, transportation, work, leisure activities, and dress/food. Some of the rules mentioned include the "no-name rule" in introductions, privacy and guessing rules for gossip, bonding-talk rules between genders, invisible queue and pantomime rules for pub conversations, moat-and-drawbridge and nestbuilding rules for home life, denial and politeness rules for public transport, moderation and money-talk taboo rules for work, and dress code and games etiquette rules. The document seems to provide an extensive but lighthearted overview of implicit social guidelines across
Global talent track corporate presentation v4.1Global Talent TrackGlobal Talent Track (GTT) is a path breaking global educational initiative and corporate training solutions company, set up by some of the best minds from the industry, academia and technology domains. The company is funded by Intel Capital, Helion Ventures and Cisco.
Dictionary SkillsKiryl Samartsau Here are sentence definitions for the words:
A cottage is a small house, typically located in a rural area.
A rake is a tool with a long handle and a head with many thin teeth used for gathering leaves or hay.
A lobster is a large crustacean with claws and a hard shell that is eaten as seafood.
A ladder is a structure consisting of two long side pieces joined at regular intervals by rungs or steps used as a means of climbing up or down.
A pen is an enclosure for confining animals such as pigs or cattle.
A carrel is an enclosed study space in a library providing semi-private workspace for reading or studying.
A train
Memory managementRajni SirohiThe document discusses memory management in operating systems. It covers key concepts like logical versus physical addresses, binding logical addresses to physical addresses, and different approaches to allocating memory like contiguous allocation. It also discusses dynamic storage allocation using a buddy system to merge adjacent free spaces, as well as compaction techniques to reduce external fragmentation by moving free memory blocks together. Memory management aims to efficiently share physical memory between processes using mechanisms like partitioning memory and enforcing protection boundaries.
PhonicsKiryl SamartsauThis document discusses pronunciation and spelling in English. It covers the basics of vowels and consonants, then delves into more complex topics like syllables, stress, intonation, and how they interact. It examines patterns in stress placement for different word types such as nouns, verbs, prefixes, suffixes, and compound words. Stress can be influenced by factors like affixes, word class, number of syllables, and phonological structure. Exceptions are also addressed, such as variable stress in word pairs and suffixes that affect the stem.
English social classes aspectsKiryl SamartsauThis document discusses linguistic codes and terminology used among the British social classes. It notes that upper class speech is marked by dropping of vowels and consonants like 't's and 'h's, as well as using terms like 'one' instead of pronouns. Working class speech may replace 'th' sounds with 'f' or 'v' and drop final 'g's. Terminology also differs between classes, with upper class using terms like 'lavatory' and 'napkin' versus working class 'toilet' and 'serviette'. The document advises that "educated" speech is more upper-middle class than true upper class speech and lacks some of the distinguishing features.
Rules of EnglishnessKiryl SamartsauThis document outlines many different social "rules" or conventions across various contexts in English culture, including introductions, gossip, pub conversations, home life, transportation, work, leisure activities, and dress/food. Some of the rules mentioned include the "no-name rule" in introductions, privacy and guessing rules for gossip, bonding-talk rules between genders, invisible queue and pantomime rules for pub conversations, moat-and-drawbridge and nestbuilding rules for home life, denial and politeness rules for public transport, moderation and money-talk taboo rules for work, and dress code and games etiquette rules. The document seems to provide an extensive but lighthearted overview of implicit social guidelines across
Global talent track corporate presentation v4.1Global Talent TrackGlobal Talent Track (GTT) is a path breaking global educational initiative and corporate training solutions company, set up by some of the best minds from the industry, academia and technology domains. The company is funded by Intel Capital, Helion Ventures and Cisco.
Dictionary SkillsKiryl Samartsau Here are sentence definitions for the words:
A cottage is a small house, typically located in a rural area.
A rake is a tool with a long handle and a head with many thin teeth used for gathering leaves or hay.
A lobster is a large crustacean with claws and a hard shell that is eaten as seafood.
A ladder is a structure consisting of two long side pieces joined at regular intervals by rungs or steps used as a means of climbing up or down.
A pen is an enclosure for confining animals such as pigs or cattle.
A carrel is an enclosed study space in a library providing semi-private workspace for reading or studying.
A train
Memory managementRajni SirohiThe document discusses memory management in operating systems. It covers key concepts like logical versus physical addresses, binding logical addresses to physical addresses, and different approaches to allocating memory like contiguous allocation. It also discusses dynamic storage allocation using a buddy system to merge adjacent free spaces, as well as compaction techniques to reduce external fragmentation by moving free memory blocks together. Memory management aims to efficiently share physical memory between processes using mechanisms like partitioning memory and enforcing protection boundaries.