Answer:
Dear friend
How are you? I am well. In your last letter you wanted to know my school. The name of my school is (name) It is in (city, location). There are one thousand students and twenty teachers. There are 30 rooms in the school. seventeen rooms are for classes, one room is for the teachers and the other is for the Head Teacher. The results of the school are very good. All the teachers of our school are very friendly and helpful. They are high qualified teachers. They teach us with pleasure. They love us like their own children. There is a big play ground in front of the school. I love my school very much.
No more today. Take care of yourself. With the best regard to your parents.
Your loving friend
Name
<em>Hope </em><em>this </em><em>will </em><em>help </em><em>you </em><em>if </em><em>not </em><em>then </em><em>a</em><em>d</em><em>vance </em><em>sorry </em><em>!</em><em> </em>
This is False.
Each note card should feature a single idea, so as not to have ideas mix up and ultimately confuse the researcher, and in turn the readers of such a research.
Answer:
Ever since my awakening i've never felt better.
Answer:
384 rupees
Explanation:
1- Take the selling price and the profit percentage. Which are 480 and 20%.
2- Calculate the profit by <em>total</em><em>×</em><em>percentage</em><em>÷</em><em>100</em><em> </em>so <em>480</em><em>×</em><em>0</em><em>.</em><em>2</em><em>=</em><em> </em><em>96</em>
<em>3</em><em>-</em><em> </em><em>Subtract</em><em> </em>the profit from the selling price for cost price. <em>480-96= 384</em>
Synthesis is the opposite of analysis. When you analyze, you break a whole into its parts and examine how the parts relate to one another in order to judge the quality of the whole. When you synthesize, you start with different, unrelated parts, and search out relationships in order to put the parts together to make a new whole. You synthesize automatically when you read, as you relate “new” text information to previous knowledge and create the new “whole” of your knowledge in a field. Synthesis becomes more of a conscious act when you write, since you have to actively select pieces of information that make sense together. As The American Heritage Dictionary states, synthesis means “the combining of separate elements or substances to form a coherent whole.”
The concept of a “coherent whole” is essential to synthesis. When you synthesize in writing, you examine different types of information (ideas, examples, statistics, etc., from different sources) and different themes (perspectives and concepts) from different sources with the purpose of blending them together to help explain one main idea. So you have to look for relationships 1) among the sources’ themes and 2) between these themes and your own ideas in order to blend all of the pieces to make a coherent whole.
The concept of a “coherent whole” is important in terms of language, too. Once you examine content and choose the parts to synthesize, you need to express those parts in your own language in order to create a coherent whole in terms of writing style.
Synthesis is like combining different ingredients to make a stew. If you choose and combine carefully, with the end result (supporting your main idea) in mind, the ingredients will be both separate and well-blended, with all ingredients contributing as they should to the final taste.
View the following video for a basic definition of, and introduction to, the concept of synthesis.