2777 résultats pour "butea"
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Biographie Messi
Lors de son deuxième match avec l'Infantil B (l'équipe de jeunes du Barça), il se fracture le péroné qui l'éloigne du terrain pour trois mois. En 2001, c'est un litige avec son ancien club Newell's Old Boys qui l'éloigne des terrains de février à juin25. Messi poursuit cependant sa formation et brûle très vite les étapes des équipes de jeunes. À 16 ans et 145 jours, le 16 novembre 2003, il participe à son premier match avec l'équipe première du FC Barcelone en amical face au FC Porto pour l'inau...
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"Une activité inutile est-elle pour autant sans valeur ?"
à susciter un intérêt pour quelqu’un, à lui apporter un bien quelconque, aussi minime soit-il. Par exemple, cette voiture a de la valeur (marchande) parce qu’elle est l’objet d’une demande sur le marché de l’automobile c’est-à-dire qu’il se trouve des personnes voyant un intérêt dans sa possession. Si personne ne désire l’acheter parce que sa mécanique est déglinguée ou parce que sa couleur est immonde, sa valeur pourr...
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LE RUGBY
1) PRESENTATION DE L'ACTIVITE
a.
entre lui et la ligne de but adverse. Cela conditionne fondamentalement les stratégies d’attaque et de défense. La troisième caractéristique propre à ce sport est que la balle est ovale, rendant se réception et sa passation plus difficile. d. problèmes fondamentaux Il s’agit pour l’enfant : - de s’adapter à des règles -de reconnaître partenaires et défenseurs -d’agir et réagir au sein d’un groupe -de prendre des décisions dans l’action et de faire des choix -de se construire des habiletés spéc...
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THE RIGHT TO DIE
When people talk about euthanasia (1), they always insist on the right to live and say that cases like this young boy's are very unusual. But sooner or later we bave got to realise tbat we are produclng so-called unusual cases by the hundreds. Of course no-one bas the right to take another's life. But our hospitals are already full of old people who are carefully being kept balf alive, although we know that they wiU never be nor...
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Analyse chanson Mirrors
SHORT ANALYSIS AND WHY DID I CHOOSE IT: This song was written by Justin Randall Timberlake . He is an American pop musician, composer, presenter and actor. He is also very famous and known all around the world for his songs and the song I just read. The song Mirrors was written in honor of Justin Timberlake’s grandparents for their celebration of 63 years of marriage, and that is why the music video is very special to him. The song is about loved ones being a reflection of one and other, t...
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Carneades
these works - all of which are lost. Carneades was persuasive, but he was also elusive; and his pupils disagreed on how to interpret him: his successor Clitomachus, who wrote voluminously about his master, confessed that 'he could never understand what Carneades believed' (Cicero, Academics II 139 ); and Metrodorus claimed that 'everyone has misunderstood Carneades' (Philodemus, History of the Academy XXVI 8-10 ). Also like Arcesilaus - and Socrates - before him, Carneades argued ag...
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TPE sur le mensonge
effets de ces variables sur leurs activités cardiovasculaire et respiratoire, plus particulièrement comment celles-ci changeaient sous l'effet de certains stimulants. Avant la fin du XIXe siècle, aucun appareil de mesure pour la détection du mensonge n'avait encore été utilisé. Ce n'est qu'en 1895 que l'instrument scientifique sera pour la première fois utilisé dans le but de mesurer les répo...
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Après avoir fait soit un résumé soit une analyse du texte suivant commentez-en l'idée qui vous semble essentielle.
nombre de connaisseurs incorruptibles dont le goût avait jadis force de loi : à Athènes, Florence ou Amsterdam cesgroupes favorisaient la création artistique. Mais le mal ne provient pas seulement des conditions extérieures : lesartistes eux-mêmes sont atteints ; ils manquent d'une unité de but, et, divisés contre eux-mêmes, ils ont sanscesse besoin de systèmes éphémères. Est-ce à dire qu'il faille imiter les artistes du passé? Valéry ne va pas jusque-là mais affirme que leurs méthodes et leur...
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Qu'appelle-t-on un devoir ? A quels devoirs sommes-nous soumis ?
c. Cas probléma tiq ues Il existe plusieur s sor tes de devo irs : les devo irs liés à une profess ion, au fait d'ê tre parent, citoyen, ou tout simplement parce qu'on est soumis aux lois natur el les (mang er, dormir , etc.) . Cer tains parfois s'opposent entre eux : le devo ir de secret professionnel pour un psy chiatre, ou du secr et de la conf ession chez un prêtre les oblig ent-ils à ga rder pour eux l'ave u d'un crime ? Qu'est-ce qui est le plus...
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Duhamel affirme ici que le cinéma n’est qu’un passe-temps d’illettrés qui ne demande aucun effort et ne soulève aucune question.
jugé sur les quelques films ayant été fait dans le seul but de faire de l'argent et qu'il faut voir au-delà afin de juger le cinéma dans son ensemble. Plus qu'une oeuvre d'art, le cinéma est aujourd'hui un moyen de faire entendre sa voix et d'être entendu. C'est également un bon moyen de critiquer une dictature par exemple. Persepolis qui présente l'évolution de l'Iran en dessin animé. Un film peut exprimer quelque chose qui, souvent mis de côtés par la société, permet au reste du monde de dé...
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Le but de l'artiste est-il de communiquer sa conception de la réalité ?
s'emparer de ses modes de fonctionnement, de ses habitudes pour lui donner une autre signification. Il peut servir àmagnifier le quotidien et à la rendre plus supportable. L'artiste n'aurait plus vocation à exprimer un ailleurs, às'extraire volontairement du monde. Pour certains, l'art contemporain aurait perdu sa dignité et son intérêt enprenant ce virage important. Mais avant, il faut comprendre le mode de fonctionnement de l'art contemporain. Lespremières œuvres de Marcel Ducha...
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Oral : Les signes dans les sacrements
· Le DON : qui ne dépend pas du sujet qui reçoit le sacrement C'est une expression de la gratuité de Dieu · La RECEPTION : qui dépend du sujet C'est l'expression de la liberté de l'homme. Le sacrement joue un triple rôle : · Il sanctifie · Il édifie au corps du Christ (relation pas uniquement personnelle mais but ecclésial) Il permet de rendre un culte à Dieu, de lui rendre grâce. Le sacrement des malades ou l'onction des malades...
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From Gulliver's Travels - anthology.
break my Bonds; but again, when I felt the Smart of their Arrows upon my Face and Hands, which were all in Blisters, and many of the Darts still sticking in them;and observing likewise that the Number of my Enemies encreased; I gave Tokens to let them know that they might do with me what they pleased. Upon this, theHurgo and his Train withdrew, with much Civility and chearful Countenances. Soon after I heard a general Shout, with frequent Repetitions of the Words, Peplom Selan, and I felt gre...
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Encyclopedia of Philosophy: Alexander of Aphrodisias
possessing life, or, more shortly, of an organic body, and regards the soul of a living creature as its form. But it iscontroversial how this is to be understood. Some have interpreted Aristotle's notion of soul as a functionalist one;but this view has been criticized on the grounds that it does not do justice to the close connection in Aristotlebetween the performance of a given function and the particular arrangement needed for it. This close connectionbetween form and matter in Aristotle's th...
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Comment le théâtre permet-il une représentation du pouvoir, et dans quel but ?
Corpus :- Caligula d'Albert Camus- Angelo tyran de Padoue de Victor Hugo- Ubu Roi d'Alfred Jarry- Britanicus de Jean Racine Comment le théâtre permet-il de représenter les relations de pouvoir ? Le théâtre a de tout temps été représentatif de la société, au niveau des moeurs, de la culture, de la religion, ou de la politique parexemple. Son but étant de divertir le public tout en faisant passer un message: une remise en question de la religion, ou des idées enfaveur d'un système politique....
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Etude de la Lettre à Ménécée, Epicure.
En outre, La morale Epicurienne n'est en aucun cas un ascétisme, si elle prône de vivre de peu, c'est ne pas ensouffrir dans le cas d'un revers de fortune. D'ailleurs cette privation relative n'a pas d'autre but que la santé ducorps ou l'hygiène mentale.Enfin, dans la dernière partie du texte, la notion de destin est développée. Epicure rejette en effet la conception dudestin des physiciens. Ces derniers défendaient l'idée d'un déterminisme universel, que l'homme subissait lui-même,et qui ne la...
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Encyclopedia of Philosophy: THE SCHOOL OF PARMENIDES
this sense of ‘being' from its use as a verbal noun, and to avoid the strangeness of the literal ‘the being' in English, it has been traditional to dignify Parmenides' topic with a capital ‘B'. We will follow this convention, whereby ‘Being' means whatever is engaged in being, and ‘being' is the verbal noun equivalent to the infinitive ‘to be'.Very well; but if that is what Being is, in order to make out what Parmenides is talking about we must also know what being is, that is to say, what...
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Excerpt from A Tale of Two Cities - anthology.
“Good day, citizeness.” “Good day, citizen.” This mode of address was now prescribed by decree. It had been established voluntarily some time ago, among the more thorough patriots; but, was now law foreverybody. “ Walking here again, citizeness?” “You see me, citizen!” The wood-sawyer, who was a little man with a redundancy of gesture (he had once been a mender of roads), cast a glance at the prison, pointed at the prison, andputting his ten fingers before his face to represe...
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Artistic expression
various types of neural network. Although classical and connectionist AI are often described as utterly distinctparadigms, research in both these approaches commenced because of this paper. Early connectionist work wasfurther encouraged by McCulloch and Pitts in a paper of 1947. They pointed out that the brain is a parallel-processing device, not a sequential one. Moreover, it can function acceptably even when some cells misfire or die,or when the input signal is 'noisy'. The perf...
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Nick Nickleby
Mark Twain
Chapitre I (en version originale)
There once lived, in
of plate in his mouth, Mr Godfrey Nickleby could, at first, scarcely believe the tidings thus conveyed to him. On examination, however, they turned out to be strictly correct. The amiable old gentleman, it seemed, had intended to leave the whole to the Royal Humane Society, and had indeed executed a will to that effect; but the Institution, having been unfortunate enough, a few months before, to save the life of a poor relation to whom he paid a weekly allowance of three shillings and sixpence,...
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Encyclopedia of Philosophy: THE THEORY OF IDEAS of PLATO
and that only a concrete individual can be a human being? (D) Classes. Attributes serve as principles according to which objects can be collected into classes: objects whichpossess the attribute of humanity, for instance, can be grouped into the class of human beings. In some waysclasses seem closer than attributes to Platonic Ideas: participation in an Idea can be understood without too muchdifficulty as membership of a class. Classes, like attributes, and unlike paradigms and concrete univers...
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Stevenson: From Treasure Island - anthology.
air in front of him: ‘Will any kind friend inform a poor blind man, who has lost the precious sight of his eyes in the gracious defence of his native country, England, and God bless KingGeorge!—where or in what part of this country he may now be?’ ‘You are at the “Admiral Benbow,” Black Hill Cove, my good man,’ said I. ‘I hear a voice,’ said he—‘a young voice. Will you give me your hand, my kind young friend, and lead me in?’ I held out my hand, and the horrible, soft-spoken, eye...
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Alice's Adventures in Wonderland - anthology.
“Do you mean that you think you can find out the answer to it?” said the March Hare. “Exactly so,” said Alice. “Then you should say what you mean,” the March Hare went on. “I do,” Alice hastily replied; “at least—at least I mean what I say—that's the same thing, you know.” “Not the same thing a bit!” said the Hatter. “Why, you might just as well say that ‘I see what I eat’ is the same thing as “I eat what I see’!” “You might just as well say,” added the March Hare, “that ‘I l...
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From Hamlet - anthology.
Bring with thee airs from heaven or blasts from hell,Be thy intents wicked or charitable,Thou com'st in such a questionable shapeThat I will speak to thee. I'll call thee Hamlet,King, father, royal Dane. O, answer me!Let me not burst in ignorance, but tellWhy thy canonized bones, hearséd in death,Have burst their cerements; why the sepulchreWherein we saw thee quietly interredHath oped his ponderous and marble jawsTo cast thee up again. What may this meanThat thou, dead corse, again in complete...
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THAT
LONE.
MY FEELINGS They areannouncing flightsoverthespeakers. Wearenot listening. Theydonot matter tous, because weare not going anywhere. I miss youalready, Oskar.Imissed youeven when Iwas with you.That's beenmyproblem. Imiss what Ialready have, and Isurround myselfwiththings thataremissing. Every timeIput inanew page, Ilook atyour grandfather. Iam sorelieved tosee hisface. Itmakes mefeel safe. His shoulders arepinched. Hisspine iscurved. InDresden hewas agiant. I'mglad thathishands arestill rough....
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Excerpt from Twelfth Night - anthology.
OLIVIA. What mean'st thou by that, Malvolio? MALVOLIO. “Some are born great—” OLIVIA. Ha? MALVOLIO. “Some achieve greatness—” OLIVIA. What sayst thou? MALVOLIO. “And some have greatness thrust upon them.” OLIVIA. Heaven restore thee! MALVOLIO. “Remember who commended thy yellow stockings—” OLIVIA. Thy yellow stockings? MALVOLIO. “—and wished to see thee cross-gartered.” OLIVIA. Cross-gartered? MALVOLIO. “Go to, thou art made if thou desir'st to be so.” OLIVIA. Am I maid! MALVOLIO. “If not, let m...
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Encyclopedia of Philosophy: Aesthetic attitude
there is such a thing as the aesthetic attitude, it resists definition; and third, the claim that the aesthetic attitudeis a myth. 3 Characterizing the aesthetic attitude A recognition of truth, beauty and goodness as the principal concerns of the human mind has given rise to the idea that the aesthetic attitude must be distinguished from, onthe one hand, cognitive attitudes, and on the other, practical ones. Whereas a cognitive attitude towards anobject is concerned with the acquisit...
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some screws, a pair of rusty scissors, a toy car, a pen, a key ring, broken glasses for someone with incredibly bad eyes.
anything Iwant. Myfavorite bookis A Brief History ofTime, even though Ihaven't actually finished it,because themath is incredibly hardandMom isn'tgood athelping me.One ofmy favorite partsisthe beginning ofthe first chapter, where Stephen Hawking tellsabout afamous scientist whowasgiving alecture abouthowtheearth orbits thesun, andthesun orbits thesolar system, andwhatever. Thenawoman inthe back ofthe room raised herhand andsaid, "What youhave told usisrubbish. Theworld isreally aflat plate suppo...
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Comedy
Socrates suffered in the comedy of Aristophanes. Throughout history, opposition to comedy and laughter has been strongest in societies which emphasize physical restraint, decorum and conformity. Many medieval monastic orders had statutes forbidding laughter. The Puritan and Victorian eras saw many condemnations of comedy and laughter. The more authoritarian the regime, the greater its suppression of comedy. Hitler even set up ‘joke courts' to punish those who made fun of his regime - one Berl...
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From Bulfinch's Mythology: Apollo and Daphne - anthology.
know no decay.' The nymph, now changed into a Laurel tree, bowed its head in grateful acknowledgment. That Apollo should be the god both of music and poetry will not appear strange, but that medicine should also be assigned to his province, may. The [18th-centuryScottish] poet [John] Armstrong, himself a physician, thus accounts for it: 'Music exalts each joy, allays each grief, Expels diseases, softens every pain;And hence the wise of ancient days adoredOne power of physic, melody, and son...
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Arthurian Legend
I
INTRODUCTION
King Arthur
Legend and lore surround the life of Arthur, a medieval king of the Britons.
Merlin and ArthurIn the tales of Arthurian legend, Merlin is an aged magician who helps bring King Arthur to power. Some authors alsodescribe Merlin as the young king’s tutor.Corbis Arthur is conceived when King Uther Pendragon falls in love with a married woman, Ygraine, and arranges for the magician Merlin to transform him into the likeness ofYgraine's husband. The husband, Gorlois, dies in battle, and Arthur's parents marry soon thereafter. Arthur Receiving ExcaliburAccording to legend, soon...
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From Walden - anthology.
instant? We should live in all the ages of the world in an hour; ay, in all the worlds of the ages. History, Poetry, Mythology!—I know of no reading of another'sexperience so startling and informing as this would be. The greater part of what my neighbors call good I believe in my soul to be bad, and if I repent of any thing, it is very likely to be my good behavior. What demonpossessed me that I behaved so well? You may say the wisest thing you can old man,—you who have lived seventy years,...
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Excerpt from The Pickwick Papers - anthology.
“Two or three veeks,” replied the man. “Weeks!” said Mr. Pickwick in astonishment—and out came the note-book again. “He lives at Pentonwil when he's at home,” observed the driver, coolly, “but we seldom takes him home, on account of his veakness.” “On account of his weakness!” reiterated the perplexed Mr. Pickwick. “He always falls down when he's took out o' the cab,” continued the driver, “but when he's in it, we bears him up werry tight, and takes him in werry short, so as heca...
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Pourquoi les temps passés suscitent-ils encore les passions ?
Les démagogues le savent bien, qui ravivent des passions anciennes pour susciter des passions présentes. 2. Cependant, la prise de conscience de ce lien inconscient n'éteint pas pour autant les passions que peuventsusciter les temps passés. En effet, même si la cause en est radicalement opposée (puisque la conscience, lalucidité exprime un regard porté sur le passé et non la soumission passive à son influence ou son poids déterminant),les temps passés demeurent passionnants par leur...
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Excerpt from The Tempest - anthology.
When he comes back; you demi-puppets thatBy moonshine do the green, sour ringlets make,Whereof the ewe not bites; and you whose pastimeIs to make midnight mushrumps, that rejoiceTo hear the solemn curfew, by whose aid—Weak masters though ye be—I have bedimmedThe noontide sun, called forth the mutinous winds,And 'twixt the green sea and the azured vaultSet roaring war; to the dread rattling thunderHave I given fire, and rifted Jove's stout oakWith his own bolt; the strong-based promontoryHave I m...
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I did not know if the baby was making me sick or if your grandfather was.
For himself? I pulled thebook fromhim.Itwas wetwith tears running downthepages, asifthe book itselfwere crying. Hehid hisface in his hands. Letme see you cry,Itold him. I do not want tohurt you, hesaid byshaking hishead lefttoright. It hurts mewhen youdonot want tohurt me,Itold him. Letme see you cry. He lowered hishands. Onone cheek itsaid YESbackward. Onone cheek itsaid NObackward. Hewas stilllooking down. Now thetears didnot run down hischeeks, butfellfrom hiseyes tothe ground. Letme see you...
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brushing past me?
trying tofind theone onwhich shewas born, herfirst love, when shelast saw herparents, andIwas looking forAnna, too, Isearched andsearched, Igot apaper cutonmy forefinger andbled alittle flower ontothepage onwhich Ishould have seenherkissing somebody, butthis was allIsaw: I wanted tocry but Ididn't cry,Iprobably shouldhavecried, Ishould havedrowned usthere inthe room, ended our suffering, theywould havefound usfloating face-down intwo thousand whitepages, orburied underthesalt ofmy evaporated tea...
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locke-montesquieu
I shall leave the question of Montesquieu's influence for another day. My purpose here is to give an account of the argument for religious toleration in the Persian Letters . But before I celebrate the virtues of Montesquieu, I’m afraid I have a few unpleasant things to say about Locke, whose treatment of the subject seems to me to be generally overrated. It’s a common observation that Locke's treatment of toleration is unhappily limited. His subject is "mutual toleration among Christ...
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From Bulfinch's Mythology: The Trojan War - anthology.
As in a dream. Dimly I could descryThe stern black-bearded kings, with wolfish eyes,Waiting to see me die. 'The tall masts quivered as they lay afloat,The temples and the people and the shore;One drew a sharp knife through my tender throatSlowly,—and—nothing more.' The wind now proving fair the fleet made sail and brought the forces to the coast of Troy. The Trojans came to oppose their landing, and at the first onset Protesilaus[mythological king of Phylace, in Thessaly] fell by the hand of...
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recherch method
2 Chapter I - Research Question Research consist to investigate a given problem in order to solve it. But before to investigate, we need t o find out the problem. Without issue, investigation is not able to take place. That’s why it is important to find out the issue, the true one . An d for that, we need to follow some steps to choose the appropriate one. The first step is the interest . Before to choose a research question, it is primordial to know what w...
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champ magnétique
By agreement, we call « north magnetic pole » the place where goes out the magnetic field and « south magnetic pole » the place where enters the magnetic field. Scientists found that the magnetic field enters in the north hemisphere and goes out in the south hemisphere. So, the north magnetic pole located in Canada is actually the south magnetic pole. However, because he is situated near the geographic north, we call it North Pole magnetic. Evolution of the Earth's magnetic field : Since the sev...
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Genghis Khan
I
INTRODUCTION
Genghis Khan (1167?
died in August 1227, in his summer quarters in the district of Qingshui south of the Liupan Shan (Liupan Mountains) in Gansu, China. IV THE MONGOL FORCES Genghis Khan unleashed a seemingly invincible military force. Although usually outnumbered, his forces prevailed on the battlefield through absolute discipline, a well-understood chain of command, superior mobility, and innovative military tactics. The Mongol forces were organized into several formations of 10,000 horse-mounted soldiers, the...
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Genghis Khan.
died in August 1227, in his summer quarters in the district of Qingshui south of the Liupan Shan (Liupan Mountains) in Gansu, China. IV THE MONGOL FORCES Genghis Khan unleashed a seemingly invincible military force. Although usually outnumbered, his forces prevailed on the battlefield through absolute discipline, a well-understood chain of command, superior mobility, and innovative military tactics. The Mongol forces were organized into several formations of 10,000 horse-mounted soldiers, the...
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Genghis Khan - History.
died in August 1227, in his summer quarters in the district of Qingshui south of the Liupan Shan (Liupan Mountains) in Gansu, China. IV THE MONGOL FORCES Genghis Khan unleashed a seemingly invincible military force. Although usually outnumbered, his forces prevailed on the battlefield through absolute discipline, a well-understood chain of command, superior mobility, and innovative military tactics. The Mongol forces were organized into several formations of 10,000 horse-mounted soldiers, the...
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I understood him.
HAPPINESS, HAPPINESS INTERVIEWER. Canyoudescribe theevents ofthat morning? TOMOYASU. Ileft home withmydaughter, Masako.Shewas onher way towork. Iwas going tosee afriend. Anair-raid warning wasissued. Itold Masako Iwas going home. Shesaid, "I'mgoing tothe office." Idid chores andwaited forthe warning tobe lifted. I folded thebedding. Irearranged thecloset. Icleaned thewindows withawet rag. There wasaflash. Myfirst thought was that itwas theflash from acamera. Thatsounds soridiculous now.Itpierc...
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le bonheur
D. La sublimation________________________________________________________ 11 1. Platon________________________________________________________________________ 11 2. Nietzsche______________________________________________________________________ 12 3. Freud_________________________________________________________________________ 13 II. Bonheur et temps________________________________________________________ 14 A. Le bonheur se distingue du plaisir par sa durée_______________________________ 14 B....
- Le profit est il le but recherché par toute forme d'échange ?
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Saskatoon - Geography.
were suspended after being charged with dumping two indigenous men at the outskirts of the city in the middle of the winter. They froze to death. The city requested aspecial Royal Canadian Mounted Police task force to investigate the matter. VII HISTORY Indigenous peoples inhabited the Saskatoon area for more than 5,000 years before white settlers arrived. The original settlement was designed in 1882 to be theadministrative center of a temperance colony led by Ontario Methodists. The city grew...
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From Bulfinch's Mythology: Charlemagne - anthology.
The titles of some of Archbishop Turpin's chapters will show the nature of his history. They are these: 'Of the Walls of Pampeluna, that fell of themselves.' 'Of theWar of the holy Facundus, where the Spears grew.' (Certain of the Christians fixed their spears, in the evening, erect in the ground, before the castle; and found them,in the morning, covered with bark and branches.) 'How the Sun stood still for Three Days, and the Slaughter of Four Thousand Saracens.' Turpin's history has perhap...
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common law v equity
were named sheriffs. The Lords performed judicial functions and perceived the tax. They were itinerant judges and watched on the occasion of their judicial tour that royal decrees were observed but also that the peace of the kingdom was maintained. On returning to the Big Council(Advise), these Lords were involved in the legislative decisions which belonged to king. The first specialized court was the Court of Exchequer who already...
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