Pick up trash plant trees and keep the rivers clean
Loren, the new manager, is the <u><em>antithesis </em></u>of compassion; just yesterday, she fired two people because they were late to work once this week. Corporate headquarters, upset with declining sales, appointed Loren to replace a[n] <u><em>impotent </em></u>manager who had been spotted on the golf course during work hours one-too-many times. Loren's many changes and <u><em>emendation</em></u>(s) to company guidelines caused a[n] <u><em>maelstrom </em></u>in both the warehouse and the salesroom. Employees faced evaluations and new instructions that drove many to resign; however, it was part of Loren's plan. The people who quit, she reasoned, were just <u><em>impediment </em></u>to meeting the expected monthly profit margin. Loren spent the first two weeks familiarizing herself with the <u><em>labyrinth </em></u>of shelves and palettes in the warehouse. Shreds of textiles littered parts of the packaging area; some were hefty snippets of wool, and others were <u><em>diaphanous </em></u>scraps of silk that hovered in the gust created by passing forklifts. She occasionally stopped to introduce herself to the workers, but she ceased her introductions after noticing the regular look of <u><em>chagrin </em></u>on workers' faces as they scrambled to look busy or stumbled over the proper responses to her questions. After the first round of resignations-and, firings, most of the workers were intimidated by Loren's <u><em>bestial </em></u>management techniques.
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Answer:
Explanation:
Parts of an email message
An email message consists of the following general components:
Headers
The message headers contain information concerning the sender and recipients. The exact content of mail headers can vary depending on the email system that generated the message. Generally, headers contain the following information:
Subject. Subject is a description of the topic of the message and displays in most email systems that list email messages individually. A subject line could be something like "2010 company mission statement" or, if your spam filtering application is too lenient, "Lose weight fast!!! Ask me how."
Sender (From). This is the sender's Internet email address. It is usually presumed to be the same as the Reply-to address, unless a different one is provided.
Date and time received (On). The date and time the message was received.
Reply-to. This is the Internet email address that will become the recipient of your reply if you click the Reply button.
Recipient (To:). First/last name of email recipient, as configured by the sender.
Recipient email address. The Internet mail address of the recipient, or where the message was actually sent.
Attachments. Files that are attached to the message.
Body
The body of a message contains text that is the actual content, such as "Employees who are eligible for the new health care program should contact their supervisors by next Friday if they want to switch." The message body also may include signatures or automatically generated text that is inserted by the sender's email system.