Answer:
A. Revenue and expenses involved in running a business
Explanation:
A financial statement can be defined as a written report used by financial experts or accountants to quantitatively describes the financial health of a company. Under the financial statements is a cash-flow statement, which is used to record the cash inflow and cash equivalents leaving a business firm.
Cash flow statement, also known as the statement of cash flows, contains financial information about operating, financial and investing activities.
Operating activities in the statement of cash-flow of a business firm gives a detailed description of the out-flow and in-flow of cash from liabilities and current assets account. Thus, all the net income or cash from all operational business activities of a company is recorded as operating activities.
Hence, operating activities can be defined as revenue and expenses involved in running a business.
Some examples of operating activities are cash paid as an expense for merchandise, cash revenue generated from the sales of finished goods etc.
Commons
“How did Faulkner pull it off?” is a question many a fledgling writer has asked themselves while struggling through a period of apprenticeship like that novelist John Barth describes in his 1999 talk "My Faulkner." Barth “reorchestrated” his literary heroes, he says, “in search of my writerly self... downloading my innumerable predecessors as only an insatiable green apprentice can.” Surely a great many writers can relate when Barth says, “it was Faulkner at his most involuted and incantatory who most enchanted me.” For many a writer, the Faulknerian sentence is an irresistible labyrinth. His syntax has a way of weaving itself into the unconscious, emerging as fair to middling imitation.
While studying at Johns Hopkins University, Barth found himself writing about his native Eastern Shore Maryland in a pastiche style of “middle Faulkner and late Joyce.” He may have won some praise from a visiting young William Styron, “but the finished opus didn’t fly—for one thing, because Faulkner intimately knew his Snopses and Compsons and Sartorises, as I did not know my made-up denizens of the Maryland marsh.” The advice to write only what you know may not be worth much as a universal commandment. But studying the way that Faulkner wrote when he turned to the subjects he knew best provides an object lesson on how powerful a literary resource intimacy can be
B d c a a b
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The underlined words are a metaphor as they compare Fredo to a creature without using like or as.