I. The document provides information about a student named Kh.Badamkhatan who is reading the book "The Count of Monte Cristo" to improve their English skills.
II. It outlines the student's purpose and objectives in reading the book, which is to read the full text, learn new vocabulary like verbs and adjectives, and translate unfamiliar words.
III. Background information is provided on the author Alexandre Dumas and a brief summary of Chapter 4 is included, along with lists of verbs and adjectives from that chapter.
The pictures in the slideshow are copy-and-pasted from various webpages. Leave a comment below if you're concerned that I've used an image inappropriately.
A short presentation made for my students to facilitate them to understand the characters' relationship in this awesome book. We read The Count of Monte Cristo Dominoes three, Oxford and it was difficult for them to understand all the chararters the book has.
The pictures in the slideshow are copy-and-pasted from various webpages. Leave a comment below if you're concerned that I've used an image inappropriately.
A short presentation made for my students to facilitate them to understand the characters' relationship in this awesome book. We read The Count of Monte Cristo Dominoes three, Oxford and it was difficult for them to understand all the chararters the book has.
Hosted by Henri Broekmate (Lionbridge). Panelists Nathalie Dougall (Booking.com), Matt Romaine (Gengo), Bernie Hsu (Alibaba).
For many firms, global crowdsourcing is an unparalleled way to reduce fixed costs and dramatically enhance operating efficiency and scalability. Enterprise crowdsourcing and big data seem to be a good match, particularly as data-related work can often be broken down into tasks or projects. Managing resources and workflows at the task or unit level is at the heart of the localization industry’s expertise. Many suppliers are finding that they can easily offer adjacent services such as search relevance, sentiment analysis, data tagging, user generated content curation, transcription, and data enrichment, in a crowd model – typically in a private crowd. This panel will discuss whether localization service providers and language technology innovators are offering relevant crowd solutions. Using technology as a lens, we will also discuss whether there is a role for increased crowdsourcing as the adoption of MT drives increased post-editing work. Lastly we will exchange ideas about where the crowdsourcing opportunity sits in the framework of the “gig” economy, and whether it will thrive and grow, or crumble under the push for legislation and labor reform.
Business communication -Assignment - Kerala UniversityNijaz N
1. Why do we communicate? What benefits does effective communication give you? How is the effectiveness of communication evaluated?
2. Discuss communication as a two-way process of exchange of information.
3. Discuss the important barriers in the communication process. Give practical examples of failures of communication arising from the different communication barriers.
4. Do you agree that, in its final form, communication is a manifestation of the personalities of both the sender and the receiver? Discuss.
5. How does group communication differ from mass communication? Does this difference between these two forms of communication demand greater care on the part of communicator (Sender)? Discuss.
A Tale of Two Cities is a novel that works on several levels. Most study it as social commentary about the French Revolution, but even those not interested in history will find it a book of interest, because it is quite possibly the most romantic love story ever told’.
Hosted by Henri Broekmate (Lionbridge). Panelists Nathalie Dougall (Booking.com), Matt Romaine (Gengo), Bernie Hsu (Alibaba).
For many firms, global crowdsourcing is an unparalleled way to reduce fixed costs and dramatically enhance operating efficiency and scalability. Enterprise crowdsourcing and big data seem to be a good match, particularly as data-related work can often be broken down into tasks or projects. Managing resources and workflows at the task or unit level is at the heart of the localization industry’s expertise. Many suppliers are finding that they can easily offer adjacent services such as search relevance, sentiment analysis, data tagging, user generated content curation, transcription, and data enrichment, in a crowd model – typically in a private crowd. This panel will discuss whether localization service providers and language technology innovators are offering relevant crowd solutions. Using technology as a lens, we will also discuss whether there is a role for increased crowdsourcing as the adoption of MT drives increased post-editing work. Lastly we will exchange ideas about where the crowdsourcing opportunity sits in the framework of the “gig” economy, and whether it will thrive and grow, or crumble under the push for legislation and labor reform.
Business communication -Assignment - Kerala UniversityNijaz N
1. Why do we communicate? What benefits does effective communication give you? How is the effectiveness of communication evaluated?
2. Discuss communication as a two-way process of exchange of information.
3. Discuss the important barriers in the communication process. Give practical examples of failures of communication arising from the different communication barriers.
4. Do you agree that, in its final form, communication is a manifestation of the personalities of both the sender and the receiver? Discuss.
5. How does group communication differ from mass communication? Does this difference between these two forms of communication demand greater care on the part of communicator (Sender)? Discuss.
A Tale of Two Cities is a novel that works on several levels. Most study it as social commentary about the French Revolution, but even those not interested in history will find it a book of interest, because it is quite possibly the most romantic love story ever told’.
Module “Tirante el Blanco” chapters 1 to 14
"Discover Don Quijote de la Mancha" is a MOOC (Massive Open Online Course) offered by Universidad Francisco Marroquín. The main goal of the course is to teach today’s multimedia generation and lovers of literature about the greatest novel of all time. In the first module professor Eric C. Graf explains chapters 1 through 14 of the novel.
Eric Clifford Graf is a professor of literature at Universidad Francisco Marroquín. He has a PhD in Spanish language and literature from the University of Virginia (1997). He specializes in medieval and early modern Spain, the history of the novel, Renaissance studies, and literary, political, cultural, and economic theory.
Credits
New Media | UFM 2015
http://www.ufm.edu
http://www.newmedia.ufm.edu
http://donquijote.ufm.edu/en
Thomas Hardy is recognized as a great poet; a great novelist; a story-teller of super excellence. Like Dickens he was a social chronicler of his times.
He studied architecture in King’s College, Cambridge and became the Topper in M.Tech.
Hardy wrote poems all through his life but got recognition as a poet only in the fag end of his life because the themes of most of his poems were far ahead of his time. He wrote more than one thousand poems. More than 1000 poems in eight volumes were published during his life time while many more got published posthumously.
Writing Assignment–Art, Expression, &the Great WarDirections.docxmaryettamckinnel
Writing Assignment
–
Art, Expression, &
the Great War
Directions:
Essays should be doubled
-
spaced, size 12 font, with one inch margins all around.
Essays must be a minimum of 1
page
and should be a maximum of 3
pages.
All references from the textbook
or documents must be cited parenthetically (
Tindall
, pg) or (Author)
.
All references to the art
must
be cited parenthetically by an abbreviated
title
and artist (
Wounded, Dix).
All references to the
memorials must be cited parenthetically by the title (Sk
eleton Memorial).
No bibliography is needed for your essays.
The required heading is only your name and a page number in the top right hand corner of each page.
Writing Assignment:
In the aftermath of the Great War the world changed in extremely
dramatic ways.
For example
,
t
he 19
th
A
mendment gave women the right to vote which changed
the
role of women; the "Great M
igration
"
and
Harlem
Renaissance
changed the lives of African
-
Americans
;
the advent of radio and the growth of Hollywood
shrank the c
ountry; and the birth of the age of the automobile made people more mobile and free. Y
our
weekly
textb
ook reading will detail
these changes
and others during the 1920s and examine their effect on
society, while this week's writing assignment will look at t
he
effect
of
WWI
on individuals and
s
ociety.
While the world changed around them, many individuals and cultures were trying to make sense of the pain,
suffering, death and destruction wrought by the years of war. Many
soldiers
expressed themselves during
and
after the war through poetry, literature, art, and
sculpture
, and many societies expressed
their
grief in small
and large memorials and
cemeteries
. The following
sources
are a collection of several
poems
, excerpts from
literature, and images of works
of art and memorials. Read the words and view the images, then
write
a
response paper based on the question
s
below!
Question
:
Read the following poems, look at the works of art, and examine the memorials created by American, British,
Canadian
, French,
and German soldiers that fought
on the Western Front th
roughout World War I. Discuss
how these expressions represent to the world and future generations the nature and impact of the Great War
on individuals and society.
End your essay by answering the ques
tion:
If you had to sum up the
impact of the
Great War in one word, what would that word be?
Some of the questions to consider
when writing your response are:
What do the poems tell us about the
experiences of these soldiers?
How do the works of art expre
ss what the soldiers experienced during the war
and how they are dealing with, or not dealing with, that experience?
What differences can you see between
the
European
and American perspectives on the war?
How do these men view the war and their role there
in?
What strikes you when reading these poems?
You do not need to answer any or all of these specifically, but they might help gi.
Similar to the count of monte cristo chapter 4 (13)
0x01 - Newton's Third Law: Static vs. Dynamic AbusersOWASP Beja
f you offer a service on the web, odds are that someone will abuse it. Be it an API, a SaaS, a PaaS, or even a static website, someone somewhere will try to figure out a way to use it to their own needs. In this talk we'll compare measures that are effective against static attackers and how to battle a dynamic attacker who adapts to your counter-measures.
About the Speaker
===============
Diogo Sousa, Engineering Manager @ Canonical
An opinionated individual with an interest in cryptography and its intersection with secure software development.
Sharpen existing tools or get a new toolbox? Contemporary cluster initiatives...Orkestra
UIIN Conference, Madrid, 27-29 May 2024
James Wilson, Orkestra and Deusto Business School
Emily Wise, Lund University
Madeline Smith, The Glasgow School of Art
Have you ever wondered how search works while visiting an e-commerce site, internal website, or searching through other types of online resources? Look no further than this informative session on the ways that taxonomies help end-users navigate the internet! Hear from taxonomists and other information professionals who have first-hand experience creating and working with taxonomies that aid in navigation, search, and discovery across a range of disciplines.
Acorn Recovery: Restore IT infra within minutesIP ServerOne
Introducing Acorn Recovery as a Service, a simple, fast, and secure managed disaster recovery (DRaaS) by IP ServerOne. A DR solution that helps restore your IT infra within minutes.
This presentation by Morris Kleiner (University of Minnesota), was made during the discussion “Competition and Regulation in Professions and Occupations” held at the Working Party No. 2 on Competition and Regulation on 10 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found out at oe.cd/crps.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
Getting started with Amazon Bedrock Studio and Control Tower
the count of monte cristo chapter 4
1.
2. Structure
The Purpose
The Objectives
Author
Works
The introduction of the book
Brief content
Chapter 4
Conclusion
3. Brief introduction
Name: Kh.Badamkhatan
Grade: 10th V
Age: 15
Hobby: reading classical books
Favourite word: Every cloud has a silver lining
Future goal: Excursionist
4. Purpose
This book is considered a literary
classic today. My purpose is to
read The Count of Monte Cristo
improve my English knowledge.
5. Objectives
I. To read the book
II. To mention his works
III. To find out:
Verbs
Adjectives
Expressing words
III. To translate new words
IV. To conclude
6. Alexandre Dumas
Paris, France
Dumas Davy de la
Pailleterie
24 July 1802 – 5
December 1870
French writer
Henry III and His Courts
Le Capitaine Paul
100 languages
7. Works
Many of his historical novels of high adventure, including
The Count of Monte Cristo
The Three Musketeers
Twenty Years After
The Vicomte de Bragelonne: Ten Years Later
The Knight of Sainte-Hermine
8. About book
The Count of Monte Cristo was originally published in
the Journal des Débats in eighteen parts. Publication ran
from August 28, 1844 to January 15, 1846. It was first
published in Paris by Pétion in 18 volumes (1844-5). This
book has been translated into nearly 100 different
languages.
9. Brief content
Edmond Dantes.
the Pharaon.
The Pharaon's shipowner, M. Morrel
the next captain of the ship.
the beautiful Mercedes
a letter
Danglars, Fernand Mondego, and Caderousse.
the public prosecutor, Monsieur de Villefort.
Chateau D'If.
10. Chapter 4
Fernand says that he would have killed Edmond on the
spot if Mercedes hadn’t threathened to kill herself in
retaliation. After getting Caderousse totally wasted,
Fernand and Danglars quickly get down to business and
try to figure out a way to ruin Edmond’s life. Danglars
wrote a letter using his left hand and denouncing
Edmond. “The crown prosecutor is advised, by a friend of
the monarchy and the faith, that one Edmond Dantes, first
mate of the Pharaon, arriving this morning from Smyrna
after putting in at Naples and Porto Ferrajo, was entrusted
by Murat with a letter for the usurper and by the usurper
with a letter to the Bonapartist committee in Paris.”
13. Expressing words
As well as- мөн түүнчлэн
As if- шиг
A man who sales books as well as newspapers.
She behaved as if he wasn’t there.
14. Conclusion
After reading The Count of Monte Cristo first 10
chapter, I have learnt a lot of new words. . I have
understood from first 10 chapter, there are a lot of
bad people in this world. You must protect yourself
from them and be carefully.