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How to write a good subject ? 1. Think It ThroughYou
don't have to be an expert to write intelligently on any subject, but
you do need enough knowledge to convince your reader that you know what
you're talking about. Spend some time thinking and researching before
you sit down to write. What's interesting, unique, important, or
exciting about the subject? Why would someone want to read about it?
Shift your imagination into high gear.
When
you have some ideas to work with, start writing. Let your imagination
run wild. Don't worry about proper sentence structure at this point --
just get your thoughts out in front of you and go with the flow. Ideas
are like potato chips... if you have one, you'll probably have lots
more.
3. Fill It In Go back through what you've written and add more detail. Fill in the blanks. Connect the ideas. Build the structure. This is where you establish your style and tone. Think about who's going to read your work and choose words that make sense to the people you're writing for. Junior high students don't use the same vocabulary as research scientists. 4. Let It Rest If the words aren't fitting together quite right, take a break. Clear your mind and let go of any angst you're feeling about your writing. When you start again, it will be easier to see what's working and what needs more work. 5. Check It Out When you've completed a rough draft, read it through from beginning to end. Do you have a catchy title and an engaging lead? Does the body hold the reader's interest? Does it make sense? Don't rely on a spell-check program to catch your errors. Print out a copy and read it out loud. Your ears can catch the mistakes your eyes missed 6. clean It Up Go back and fix any spelling, punctuation or grammar errors you found. Use a dictionary, thesaurus, and a style book to smooth the rough spots and polish your words until they shine. Edit, read, and repeat as needed 7. Pass It Around Ask someone else to read what you've written. You know your mother and your best friend will think it's great, so try to get feedback from somebody who doesn't already think you're perfect. Be open to suggestions and willing to make changes, but ultimately you must be certain they are your words and that they speak well for you. Pollution Many cities around the world today are heavily polluted. Careless manufacturing methods employed by some industries and absence of consumer demand for environmentally safe products have been behind the pollution problem. One result is that millions of tons of glass, paper, plastic and metal containers are produced, and these are difficult to dispose of.However, today more and more consumers are choosing ‘green’ and demanding that the products they buy are safe for the environment. Before they buy a product, they ask questions like these, Will this product damage the ozone layer?, Is this package of any danger to the environment? Or Can this metal container be used once? A recent study showed that two out of five adults now consider the Environmental safety of a product before they buy it. This means that companies must now change the way they make and sell their products to make sure that they are ‘green’, that is, friendly to the environment. Only a few years ago, it was impossible to find green products in supermarkets, but now there are hundreds. Some supermarket products have tickets on them to show that the product is green. Some companies have made the manufacturing of clean and safe products their main selling point and insist on it in their advertising. The concern of a safer and cleaner environment is making companies rethink how they do business. The public will no longer accept the old attitude of Buy it, Use it and then Throw it away.
Air pollution
air pollution can effect our health in many ways with a both short-term
effects different groups of individuals are effected by air pollution
in different ways .some individuals are much more sensitive to
pollutants than are others. young children and elderly people after
suffer môre from effects of air pollution.poeple with health problems
such asthma .heart and lung disease may olso suffer more when the air
is poolluted the extent to wich in individual is harmed by air
pollution usualy depends on the total to the damaging chimicals i.e the
duration of exposure and the concentration of the chimicals must be
taken into account..this s the end of pragraph i wish to benefit it ok Racism Racism or racialism is a form of race, especially the belief that one
race is superior to another. Racism may be expressed individually and
consciously, through explicit thoughts, feelings, or acts, or socially
and unconsciously, through institutions that promote inequality between
races. Racism Turkish children playing in a muddy courtyard; faces of Vietnamese girls
pressed against the windows of dirty barracks; security guards with
their guns standing near the fences. This is an area in Cottbus, an
industrial town in Germany that the police are trying to protect. It
looks more like a prison than a refuge for immigrants who are more and
more exposed to the violence of racist groups, like the skinheads. E arlier this month, gangs of lawless German youths began attacking Vietnamese, Turkish and African labourers, so the authorities have rushed the victims to such places like Cottbus. Indeed, a wave of anti-immigrant violence is sweeping Germany. Every day brings some new spectacle of terror. Luckily the violence is limited to small uncontrolled groups. Most Germans are outraged at those racist gangs and refer to them as criminals and delinquents looking for fun. Thousands of Germans have marched in Berlin and other cities to protest against racism. However, foreign workers in Germany still fear for their lives and their families and do not feel totally secure. Some are thinking of going back to their native countries. Are tourists good for a country This question can be looked from several points of view. Firstly, tourism should be considered in relation to a country’s economy. Secondly it can be seen in terms of its effects on the countryside and environment. Thirdly, the influence of the tourist industry on culture must be taken into account. The economy of a country often benefits as a result of tourism; foreign visitors come and spend their money, and this creates jobs for those who run hotels and restaurants. However, there are also certain drawbacks. Whereas the people directly involved in the industry may benefit, other may find that they are worse off. This is because the cost of living goes up and goods become more expensive since tourists are prepared to pay more for them. As far as the effect on the environment is concerned, tourism is often a bad thing. While it is true to say that development results in better roads being built and improvements for poorer areas, it is sometimes very harmful. In some countries, huge hotels and skyscrapers have ruined areas of unspoilt beauty. The cultural influence of tourism is difficult to measure. In some countries foreign influence can destroy the local way of life. On the other hand, countries which do not encourage tourism may miss the benefits that foreign technology and investment can bring. In conclusion, it can be seen that tourism has both advantages and disadvantages; if it is controlled properly, it can be good for a country, but there will always be a danger that it may do a great deal of harm.Humain rights The concept of human rights has existed under several names in European thought for many centuries, at least since the time of King John of England. After the king violated a number of ancient laws and customs by which England had been governed, his subjects forced him to sign the Magna Carta, or Great Charter, which enumerates a number of what later came to be thought of as human rights. Among them were the right of the church to be free from governmental interference, the rights of all free citizens to own and inherit property and be free from excessive taxes. It established the right of widows who owned property to choose not to remarry, and established principles of due process and equality before the law. It also contained provisions forbidding bribery and official misconduct. The political and religious traditions in other parts of the world also proclaimed what have come to be called human rights, calling on rulers to rule justly and compassionately, and delineating limits on their power over the lives, property, and activities of their citizens. In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries in Europe several philosophers proposed the concept of "natural rights," rights belonging to a person by nature and because he was a human being, not by virtue of his citizenship in a particular country or membership in a particular religious or ethnic group. This concept was vigorously debated and rejected by some philosophers as baseless. Others saw it as a formulation of the underlying principle on which all ideas of citizens' rights and political and religious liberty were based. In the late 1700s two revolutions occurred which drew heavily on this concept. In 1776 most of the British colonies in North America proclaimed their independence from the British Empire in a document which still stirs feelings, and debate, the U.S. Declaration of Independence The Human Development
The
Human Development Index (HDI) is a comparative measure of life
expectancy, literacy, education, and standard of living for countries
worldwide. It is a standard means of measuring well-being, especially
child welfare. It is used to determine and indicate whether a country
is a developed, developing, or underdeveloped country and also to
measure the impact of economic policies on quality of life.[1] The
index was developed in 1990 by Indian Nobel prize winner Amartya Sen,
Pakistani economist Mahbub ul Haq, with help from Gustav Ranis of Yale
University and Lord Meghnad Desai of the London School of Economics and
has been used since then by the United Nations Development Programme in
its annual Human Development Report. Described by Amartya Sen as a
"vulgar measure", because of its limitations, it nonetheless focuses
attention on aspects of development more sensible and useful than the
per capita income measure it supplanted, and is a pathway for serious
researchers into the wide variety of more detailed measures contained
in the Human Development Reports.The HDI measures the average
achievements in a country in three basic dimensions of human
development:
A long and healthy life, as measured by life expectancy at birth.Knowledge, as measured by the adult literacy rate (with two-thirds weight) and the combined primary, secondary, and tertiary gross enrollment ratio (with one-third weight).A decent standard of living, as measured by the log of gross domestic product (GDP) per capita at purchasing power parity (PPP) in USD.Each year, UN member states are listed and ranked according to these measures. Those high on the list often advertise it (e.g., Jean Chrétien, Former Prime Minister of Canada [1]), as a means of attracting talented immigrants (economically, individual capital). Immigration Morocco recently saw a migration of the population of cities and villages me especially in the last 50 years that happened Leone Morocco for independence. What are the reasons that drive housing villages to migrate to cities? And what are the causes of migrations out of the negative impact? -There is a range of reasons why the villagers to the cities Tahgerh me among them lack even the most basic means necessary hospitals and transportation means Finding work Mestekareaulthossein circumstances of living .................. ect . The result eased the congestion entire towns and neighborhoods Baladi shanties and Tahera begging and the use of young children Resulting from the whole circumcision eased some tragic scenes -Finally, I wish to state that changed everything in their power to stop the advance of the pious and out of control the situation Immigration to the USA Twenty
seven million white immigrants entered the United States between 1880
and 1924. Two thirds of these so-called new immigrants came from
different parts of Europe that were economically underdeveloped. In the
first decade of the 20 th century, about six million immigrants arrived
from Russia, Austria, Hungary and Italy. They were drawn by the
flourishing manufacturing sector of the economy. They not only brought
their labour force but also their skills that were vital to industries
such as construction and textile. Nevertheless, their customs and
culture struck native-born, Americans who considered them as impossible
to assimilate. That phenomenon did not last forever. With the end of the colonial empires in the fifties and sixties and emergence of independent Asian and African countries, a new law was voted: The 1964 Hart-Cellar Act. This law gave equal access to Asians, Africans, Latin-Americans and Europeans. Since then, over eight million legal immigrants have entered the United Stated, about half of them from the Third World. The new immigrants are likely to change the composition of the American population. Some demographers predict that by 2030, American and Europeans roots will not be a majority. Even the dominance of the English language is seen as uncertain. The problem is whether the diversity of origins will continue to maintain American Society as united as it has been so far.
Americans A
mong the reasons why immigrants have traditionally come to the USA is
to have a better life – that is to raise their standard of living. It
was properly the most important reason for leaving their homeland.
Because of its abundant natural resources, the United States appeared
to be a “land of plenty” where millions could come to seek their
fortunes. Of course, most immigrants “didn’t get overnight” and many of
them suffered terribly, but the majority of them were eventually able
to improve their former standard of living.
Globalization
Globalization refers to increasing global connectivity, integration and
interdependence in the economic, social, technological, cultural,
political, and ecological spheres. Globalization is an umbrella term
and is perhaps best understood as a unitary process inclusive of many
sub-processes (such as enhanced economic interdependence, increased
cultural influence, rapid advances of information technology, and novel
governance and geopolitical challenges) that are increasingly binding
people and the biosphere more tightly into one global system. War
WAR is one of the wost crime that pople have ever made to the humanity.
that's why we should know why some ediot poeple can't stand leaving in
peace because
Business
In economics, business is the social science of managing people to
organize and maintain collective productivity toward accomplishing
particular creative and productive goals, usually to generate profit. Natural disaster
A is the consequence of when a potential natural hazard becomes a
physical event (e.g. volcanic eruption, earthquake, landslide) and this
interacts with human activities. Human vulnerability, caused by the
lack of planning, lack of appropriate emergency management or the event
being unexpected, leads to financial, structural, and human losses. The
resulting loss depends on the capacity of the population to support or
resist the disaster, their resilience.[1] This understanding is
concentrated in the formulation: "disasters occur when hazards meet
vulnerability".[2] A natural hazard will hence never result in a
natural disaster in areas without vulnerability, e.g. strong
earthquakes in uninhabited areas. The term natural has consequently
been disputed because the events simply are not hazards or disasters
without human involvement Advertinsing
One the hand advertising makes consumers aware, of the new products on
the market and helps them spend their money wisely it also as creates
many jobs . A drought
A drought is a prolonged, abnormally dry period when there is not
enough water for users' normal needs. Drought is not simply low
rainfall; if it was, much of inland Australia would be in almost
perpetual drought. Because people use water in so many different ways,
there is no universal definition of drought. |
Families
It's not necessarily a fact that small families are the best, but the fact that raising just one child is extremely expensive. There is the hospital bill, one must have good medical/dental (very expensive) for those toothaches, possible braces, fevers, scrapes, childhood diseases, not to mention the many shots children get during their younger years. There is clothing, food, a good home to live in, education and other hidden costs. Your child is better adjusted if they (a boy) are put into a sport at the age of 5 or 6, or if it's a girl, into dancing, etc., to keeping them off the streets and also give them insight as to what the future can hold for them. It costs many thousands of dollars to raise one child, and I use to know the stats on it, but it has since changed. If a family can afford more than 2 children (good to have sibling) then they should go for it. I have known families during the 50s to 70s where there were 5 - 8 kids in a family and they were all well adjusted kids, not to mention the oldest child always ends up helping mom and pop out. Large families can be fun, but if you can't afford it this can cause a great deal of pressure on the parents and either shorten their life span or end in divorce. To have a large family you have to be well organized Right of women
Nowadays we take it for
granted that women have the same rights as men before the first world war few people believed this. As far as work was concerned there were jobs wich were regarded as women`s jobs and other wiche were regarded as men`s jobs. Women`s jobs were generally lower paid as men`s. Men did almost all the heavy jobs in industry or in transport. Women had jobs like dress-making, cleanning or worked as servants. Women`s main role was as being to raise children and look for their home. Women were not expected to take position of leaderschip. Women were not even allowed to vote in elections. Before the war some women had been struggling to achieve greater equality with men. The most famous of these had been the suffragettes who stagged a violent campaign against the govervment from 1905 to 1914 trying to achieve the right to vote.however, at the outbreak of war, the were still no near to success. Many men argued that women were unsuited to such responsibility that women could not be trusted to vote sensibly that women should not concern themselves with such male activities and voting. During the war many things changed Women
Millions of women throughout the world live in conditions of abject
deprivation of, and attacks against, their fundamental human rights for
no other reason than that they are women. Combatants and their sympathizers in conflicts, such as those in Sierra Leone, Kosovo, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Afghanistan, and Rwanda, have raped women as a weapon of war with near complete impunity. Men in Pakistan, South Africa, Peru, Russia, and Uzbekistan beat women in the home at astounding rates, while these governments alternatively refuse to intervene to protect women and punish their batterers or do so haphazardly and in ways that make women feel culpable for the violence. As a direct result of inequalities found in their countries of origin, women from Ukraine, Moldova, Nigeria, the Dominican Republic, Burma, and Thailand are bought and sold, trafficked to work in forced prostitution, with insufficient government attention to protect their rights and punish the traffickers. In Guatemala, South Africa, and Mexico, women's ability to enter and remain in the work force is obstructed by private employers who use women's reproductive status to exclude them from work and by discriminatory employment laws or discriminatory enforcement of the law. In the U.S., students discriminate against and attack girls in school who are lesbian, bi-sexual, or transgendered, or do not conform to male standards of female behavior. Women in Morocco, Jordan, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia face government-sponsored discrimination that renders them unequal before the law - including discriminatory family codes that take away women's legal authority and place it in the hands of male family members - and restricts women's participation in public life Women working
There have been a lot of chages in our social life in the last decades
.many more women working ,of course ,has the lifestyle of many families
Working children Many people are worried whether a carrer women can properly care for the children the advantage of women working women and men are equal and should also have the right have a job women should hlep in the devlopment of theircountry carrer mot her are usually educated and so can help their family the disadvantage of carrer women : women find ut difficult to take very good care of children while working out side they usually nturn home tired often a day 's work outside the also have to deal with the house work the are left with litter time to care for their childern . thes affect a lot the whole family ,and may cause problems for children at schol ....e bc. .finally i say that at taking good care children of women /mothers alonne man/father should also share this responsibility with their wives life is getting very expensive and women to help their family Child labour is one of the problems that many countries face, there are various causes that drive children to work some of them drop out of school in order to help their poor or sick parents others have to work because they are orphans. In addiction some parents are ignorant they think education is a waste of time. Working children face a tough life; in factories and mines they work in bad conditions no fresh air, long hours they may be injured by machines they are also deprived of education and childhood Old at tewenty
T
he story of women in sports is like the story of women in many other
activities. First they were ignored, and then gradually became
accepted. Now they are just taken for granted as part of any sporting
events. T ake gymnastics, for instance. When women first took part in the Olympic Games in 1928, they were not allowed to do gymnastics. Women’s gymnastics was then thought ‘indecent’. T he first woman to attract attention to this sport was a Russian girl called Olga Korbut. In the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich she amazed everybody and won a gold medal. The next girl who surprised the whole sporting world was the Romanian gymnast Nadia Comaneci. In the 1976 Olympic Games she won the overall title. She was then 14. Girls’ popularity in this sport was here to stay. H owever, if these girls get glory at such an early, they pay for it. They work hard. What’s more, they give their lives, quite often from the age of seven, to the sport. They are considered ‘old’ at the age of twenty. P erhaps you are wondering what they do when they ‘retire’. For some, fame continues. Olga Korbut, for instance, became a film star and married a Rock musician. Others fall back into obscurity and have to adapt to a new way of life. W hen asked in an interview whether she regretted her career, Nelli Kim, an ‘old’ gymnast answered, “No. For the rest of your life you always remember the wonderful sensation of flying through the air, after a good routine on the bars. It really is a moment of perfection.” Smoking
When your parents were young, people could buy cigarettes and smoke
pretty much anywhere - even in hospitals! Ads for cigarettes were all
over the place. Today we're more aware about how bad smoking is for our
health. Smoking is restricted or banned in almost all public places and
cigarette companies are no longer allowed to advertise on buses or
trains, billboards, TV, and in many magazines. Almost everyone knows that smoking causes cancer, emphysema, and heart disease; that it can shorten your life by 14 years or more; and that the habit can cost a smoker thousands of dollars a year. So how come people are still lighting up! Education Education encompasses teaching and learning specific skills, and also
something less tangible but more profound: the imparting of knowledge,
good judgement and wisdom. Education has as one of its fundamental
goals the imparting of culture from generation to generation (see
socialization). Education means 'to draw out', facilitating realisation
of self-potential and latent talents of an individual. It is an
application of pedagogy, a body of theoretical and applied research
relating to teaching and learning and draws on many disciplines such as
psychology, philosophy, computer science, linguistics, neuroscience,
sociology and anthropology. Languages
A language is a system used to facilitate communication among higher
animals and/or computers. This article is about the fundamental
features typically found in nearly all natural human languages. For
information about artificial languages specifically for computers,
please see instead machine code. Higher animals believed to employ
audible language only, without symbols, include, but are not limited
to, dolphins and whales. For information about this subject, please see
"Animal communication" instead English
World science is dominated today by a small number of languages, but
English which is probably is the most popular global language of
science and of modern technology that because many reason: first it is
international language and the majority of country used it as their
home language, In addition to that you can understand what happen in
the world, in the other hand you can understand the new technology,
moreover we see that the people that speak more than two language have
a chance to get a better job than the other people who can speak just
one. And also it is very important to student who want finish their
Hight study in university.
A minority or subordinate group is a sociological group that does not
constitute a politically dominant plurality of the total population of
a given society. A sociological minority is not necessarily a numerical
minority — it may include any group that is disadvantaged with respect
to a dominant group in terms of social status, education, employment,
wealth and political power. To avoid confusion, some writers prefer the
terms "subordinate group" and "dominant group" rather than "minority"
and "majority". In socioeconomics, the term "minority"
typically refers to a socially subordinate ethnic group (understood in
terms of language, nationality, religion and/or culture). Other
minority groups include people with disabilities, "economic minorities"
(working poor or unemployed), "age minorities" (who are younger or
older than a typical working age) and sexual minorities (whose sexual
orientation or gender identity differs from the sociological norm).
The term "minority group" often occurs alongside a discourse of civil
rights and collective rights which gained prominence in the 20th
century. Members of minority groups are subject to differential
treatment in the society in which they live. This discrimination may be
directly based on an individual's perceived membership of a minority
group, without consideration of that individual's personal achievement.
It may also occur indirectly, due to social structures that are not
equally accessible to all. Activists campaigning on a range of issues
may use the language of minority rights, including student rights,
consumer rights and animal rights. In recent years, some members of
social groups traditionally perceived as dominant have attempted to
present themselves as an oppressed minority, such as white,
middle-class heterosexual males. Studies have consistently shown
a correlation between negative attitudes or prejudice toward minorities
and social conservatism (as well as the converse, positive attitutes
and social progressivism).[2] Minority groups in history, include Jews
under Nazi Germany and African Americans in the Jim Crow period
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Recherche personnalisée
Tags: bac, baccalaureat, terminale, science, anglais, writing, maroc, pollution,families,education, racism, tourism, television, working, human rights, development, cinema, emigration, leisure time, internet, business Television Nowdays ,TV viewers have a wide choice of channels .More and more people have got satellite TV not all of them are satisfied with it . satellite TV has both advantages and drawbaks . whats is de advantages and drawbaks of TV,? -satellite TV brings the whole world into your home there a variety of programmes to choose fromit helps people improve foreigs languages and there are lots of entertaining ...educating programmes. You may not feel bored. -and the drawbaks of satellite TV : People spend too mush time watching TV and they become passive and lazy there are too many channels and it is often dificulet to choose the right programme and the people watch foreign TV channels and not their national TV . Thy don't know what is happening in their country ,they might forget about their own culture and problem Children don't do their homework ,don't read enough . -satellite TV like any other technology is means to an end people should be selective and watch interesting programmes only. Television Television has became part of our every day life .what are its advantages and disadvantages On the one hand, TV has became the most influential means of the mass media because it has both sound and picture .it's also the most popular source of information education and international , in brief TV brings the whole word to us. One the other hand TV develops passive and lazy viewers .it also prevents communication between the members of the family besides students don't their homwork and may became aggressive when they watch films of violence. Cinema For the first twenty years of motion picture history most silent films were short--only a few minutes in length. At first a novelty, and then increasingly an art form and literary form, silent films reached greater complexity and length in the early 1910's. The films on the list above represent the greatest achievements of the silent era, which ended--after years of experimentation--in 1929 when a means of recording sound that would be synchronous with the recorded image was discovered. Few silent films were made in the 1930s, with the exception of Charlie Chaplin, whose character of the Tramp perfected expressive physical moves in many short films in the 1910's and 1920s. When the silent era ended, Chaplin refused to go along with sound; instead, he maintained the melodramatic Tramp as his mainstay in City Lights (1931) and Modern Times (1936). The trademarks of Chaplin's Tramp were his ill-fitting suit, floppy over-sized shoes and a bowler hat, and his ever-present cane. A memorable image is Chaplin's Tramp shuffling off, penguin-like, into the sunset and spinning his cane whimsically as he exits. He represented the "little guy," the underdog, someone who used wit and whimsy to defeat his adversaries. Eisenstein's contribution to the development of cinema rested primarily in his theory of editing, or montage, which focused on the collision of opposites in order to create a new entity. One of the greatest achievements in editing is the Odessa Steps sequence, in his film Potemkin (1925). Eisenstein intercut between shots of townspeople trapped on the steps by Czarist troops, and shots of the troops firing down upon the crowd. Members of the crowd became individual characters to viewers as the montage continued. Within the editing track the fate of these individuals was played out. A mother picks up her dead child and confronts the troops. Then she is shot. A student looks on in terror and then flees--his fate uncertain. An old woman prays to be spared, but she is killed by a soldier who slashes her face with his saber. When a woman holding her baby carriage is killed, she falls to the steps, and the carriage begins a precipitous decline--shots of the baby crying are intercut with wide shots of the carriage rolling down the steps. To Eisenstein, each individual shot contributed an energy within the editing track that yielded far more than the sum total of shots. In other words, the "combination" of shots through editing created a new entity, based on the expressive emotional energy unleashed through the editing process. Terrorism
Terrorism is a term used to describe violence or other harmful acts.
Terrorism expert Walter Laqueur in 1999 has counted over 100
definitions and concludes that the "only general characteristic
generally agreed upon is that terrorism involves violence and the
threat of violence". Most definitions of terrorism include only those
acts which are intended to create fear or "terror", are perpetrated for
an ideological goal (as opposed to a "madman" attack), and deliberately
target "non-combatants". Leisure time Recreation is very important for one health whoever we are we need leisure activities because they enable us our minds and bodies If we go on working without a break we'll get bord and exchasted Therfore we should spend our free time on the things we like doing much as listing to music and pratising sport in this way we'll have energy to rasume our studies and warking OK sany I present you this object of the how can air pollution hurt my health. Air pollution can effect our health in many ways with a both short-term effects different groups of individuals are effected by air pollution in different ways .some individualsare much more sensitive to pollutants than are others. young children and elderly people after suffer môre from effects of air pollution.poeple with health problems such asthma .heart and lung disease may olso suffer more when the air is poolluted the extent to wich in individual is harmed by air pollution usualy depends on the total to the damaging chimicals i.e the duration of exposure and the concentration of the chimicals must be taken into account..this s the end of pragraph i wish to benefit it ok Rap in Morocco
Known
Arab societies .. great social transformations of the way to dress,
language and music minor, the latter known for a profound
transformation in the structure here in Morocco. Years ago there was
Umm Kulthum and sisters in the Middle and "Beatles" and the other in
the west .. And no one heard something called "Rabbi" .. And now each
city task by the way has turned into a "comfort dance" and "Hip Hop."
"Allah Kaen" months a bridge in Morocco, started from Meknes and then
to the rest of the cities .. If followed a march this group since
incorporation, we find that it began - eg other teams - singing
vocabulary "Albdaeh" .. and the market talk, but after that started and
appeared on the television market and publicity, turned to singing,
"sharply less" .. Loser "His tongue Alsulait also describes himself, no
one is safe from the" Staemah ".. by the government to the parliament
.. to .. Islamists to others is not known. People say that they want to
live and have a family of "Rabbi", and that he is not afraid and does
not acquit anyone .. and songs that can not hear in the "House"
oversupplied Albdaeh .. vary between talk the curriculum vitae .. and
love for his country .. and an affront to its enemies .. and of course
the ever-present talk begin. It is noted that the last Owl "west of
death" or "Moroccans to death became a trademark task in Morocco ..
"Losers" to defend himself after facing charges of using words begin :
"that convey the pulse of the street .. and that something will come
from Him." , Considers itself the representative of the song of youth
and finds that the future of "bridge" .. A few months ago, Moroccan
officials : "Rabbi is the future of Moroccan song," saying this was a
storm of opposition from those who are still Etarbon songs "languages"
and regarded Rabbi outsider Ttaghavina .. and "incompatible with
morality." Rabbi entered politics from the door wide : months before
hosting Youth Socialist Union Party in Morocco Magti Rabbi Tawfiq Hazb
known "Balkhasr" so Yahya evening attended by senior officials of the
party : with songs that contain insults and dictionary "under the
belt". Opponents of the party said that the Socialist Union "exploited
rap to attract young people after its failed to do so." Professor Abdul
Ghani Mendip professor of sociology at the University of Mohammad
Alhams is that of Rabbi "comes within the framework of social
transformation which Arafa Morocco." Hence, we must Ntani in sentencing
and study the issue in a scientific and rational use away from the
emotions. And among the finds that the phenomenon of Rabbi alien
Ttaghavina and therefore must be cured .. zeolite, and the shift from
the view that natural community .. And among the finds that the Rabbi
is the future .. and the song of Moroccan considers summer cloud will
pass soon ... Among all those views we have the right to ask : Does the
fact created alternatives for youth to Governance. Internet The Internet is a worldwide, publicly accessible network of interconnected computer networks that transmit data by packet switching using the standard Internet Protocol (IP). It is a "network of networks" that consists of millions of smaller domestic, academic, business, and government networks, which together carry various information and services, such as electronic mail, online chat, file transfer, and the interlinked web pages and other documents of the world wide web. The USSR's launch of Sputnik spurred the United States to create the Advanced Research Projects Agency, known as ARPA, in February 1958 to regain a technological lead.[1][2] ARPA created the Information Processing Technology Office (IPTO) to further the research of the Semi Automatic Ground Environment (SAGE) program, which had networked country-wide radar systems together for the first time. J. C. R. Licklider was selected to head the IPTO, and saw universal networking as a potential unifying human revolution. Licklider had moved from the Psycho-Acoustic Laboratory at Harvard University to MIT in 1950, after becoming interested in information technology. At MIT, he served on a committee that established Lincoln Laboratory and worked on the SAGE project. In 1957 he became a Vice President at BBN, where he bought the first production PDP-1 computer and conducted the first public demonstration of time-sharing. At the IPTO, Licklider recruited Lawrence Roberts to head a project to implement a network, and Roberts based the technology on the work of Paul Baran who had written an exhaustive study for the U.S. Air Force that recommended packet switching (as opposed to circuit switching) to make a network highly robust and survivable. After much work, the first node went live at UCLA on October 29, 1969 on what would be called the ARPANET, one of the "eve" networks of today's Internet. Following on from this, the British Post Office, Western Union International and Tymnet collaborated to create the first international packet switched network, referred to as the International Packet Switched Service (IPSS), in 1978. This network grew from Europe and the US to cover Canada, Hong Kong and Australia by 1981. The first TCP/IP-wide area network was operational by January 1, 1983, when the United States' National Science Foundation (NSF) constructed a university network backbone that would later become the NSFNet. It was then followed by the opening of the network to commercial interests in 1985. Important, separate networks that offered gateways into, then later merged with, the NSFNet include Usenet, BITNET and the various commercial and educational networks, such as X.25, Compuserve and JANET. Telenet (later called Sprintnet) was a large privately-funded national computer network with free dial-up access in cities throughout the U.S. that had been in operation since the 1970s. This network eventually merged with the others in the 1990s as the TCP/IP protocol became increasingly popular. The ability of TCP/IP to work over these pre-existing communication networks, especially the international X.25 IPSS network, allowed for a great ease of growth. Use of the term "Internet" to describe a single global TCP/IP network originated around this time. A revolution A revolution (from Late Latin revolutio which means "a turn around") is a significant change that usually occurs in a relatively short period of time. Variously defined revolutions have been happening throughout human history. They vary in terms of numbers of their participants (revolutionaries), means employed by them, duration, motivating ideology and many other aspects. They may result in a socio-political change in the socio-political institutions, or a major change in a culture or economy. Scholarly debates about what is and what is not a revolution center around several issues. Early study of revolutions primarily analyzed events in European history from psychological perspective[citation needed], soon however new theories were offered using explanations for more global events and using works from other social sciences such as sociology and political sciences. Several generations of scholarly thought have generated many competing theories on revolutions, gradually increasing our understanding of this complex phenomenon |
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