Not too sure about this one but maybe it shows the value of education in Korea.
I do notice how competitive it is to earn a college degree in Korea, students stay up all night studying every single second to score even one point better in their entrance exams, something like SAT in the US, so they can get into the college they want to.
The better college you go to, the better job you get. Now that’s common sense but the value of that is different from the US. There’s the “American Dream” in the US where anyone can become rich if they put their mind to it and luck rolls on, in most Asian countries academic history/resume is what determines their life.
Sorry that was a bit all over the place but hopefully you got something from it
Answer:
C) Too many rules spoiled the early competitive spirit of the UFC.
Explanation:
the question is asking for a rebuttal meaning the opposite of something.
Answer: Typically SPOUSE singular is signed using the sign for HUSBAND (if it is a male spouse) or WIFE (if it is a female spouse). However, this sign can be used to mean a gender-neutral version of SPOUSE. For example, if someone asks a group the question, "Do you have a spouse?"
Explanation:
what up anyway im kinda bored.
also can i have ur gender. please
The winner of the 1720 world cup isBrazil
Answer: King Frog
Explanation:
Smith describes a village brought to chaos by two invaders, and the pointless courage that the women showed by confronting them to protect their daughters despite not being able to stop the two men from retaliating and coming back over and over again. It´s said that there´s always a boy that confronts one of the invaders, showing the same kind of pointless courage. In her town, that boy was a fourteen-year-old who was called King Frog because he used to say that the most powerful in the village was a big ugly toad able to scare even the little boy´s father.