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Ask QuestionPosted by Tripti Saini 5 years, 4 months ago
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Posted by Tripti Saini 5 years, 4 months ago
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Posted by Sakshi Gupta 5 years, 4 months ago
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Posted by Sakshi Gupta 5 years, 4 months ago
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Yogita Ingle 5 years, 4 months ago
Aram is acting as the moral center of the story. He is the person who suspects about the stealing of horse.
He also tells Mourad about the inquiry conducted by John Byro. He doesn’t create any dispute & followed the conduct of the society.
This might be the reason that he was never able to find his way with animals.
Posted by Rounak Soni 5 years, 4 months ago
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Gaurav Seth 5 years, 4 months ago
(i) Creditors: for determining the credit worthiness of the organization.
(ii) Tax Authourities: for determining the credibility of the tax returns filed on behalf of the company.
(iii) Investors: for analyzing the feasibility of investing in the company. Investors want to make sure they can earn a reasonable return on their investment before they commit any financial resources to the company.
(iv) Customers: for knowing the financial position of its suppliers which is necessary for them to maintain a stable source of supply in the long term.
(v) Regulatory Authorities: for ensuring that the company's disclosure of accounting information is in accordance with the rules and regulations set in order to protect the interests of the stakeholders who rely on such information in forming their decisions.
Posted by Nancy Dewangan 5 years, 4 months ago
- 2 answers
Sparsh Tyagi 5 years, 4 months ago
Yogita Ingle 5 years, 4 months ago
A fictitious assets is not an actual assets.It is just the not write off the losses of the business happened due to some event of busines.These are not transfer to P&L becz they follow the going concern principle of accounting. It is believe that these losses will occur on the affairs of business which provide the benefits for a few years.So,these will be written off with proportionate amount in the coming years of the business..e.g, preliminary expenses,discount on issue of debentures.and so on.
Posted by Tarun Kumar 5 years, 4 months ago
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Posted by Divya Mane 5 years, 4 months ago
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Yogita Ingle 5 years, 4 months ago
This poem symbolizes the ''HARDSHIPS IN LIFE''. It is an afternoon in the month of september and there is silence. Suddenly a goldfinch appears and the silence breaks into sound of twitching of wings and chirping.
Mother goldfinch has brought food for her babies, the engine of the bird's family. Movement of goldfinch is so smooth. She is working to provide nutrition to the family.
In the end, goldfinch again flies in the sky leaving the laburnum again into silence.
Posted by . . 5 years, 4 months ago
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Gaurav Seth 5 years, 4 months ago
In the conquered provinces, a new administrative structure was imposed. The administration was headed by governors and tribal chieftains. The central treasury got its revenue from taxes paid by Muslims as well as its share of the booty from raids. The soldiers (mostly Bedouins), lived in camp cities at the edge of the desert. This helped the soldiers to remain within reach of their natural habitat as well as the caliph’s command. The ruling class and soldiers received shares of booty and monthly payments. The non-Muslim population retained their rights to property and religious practices on payment of taxes (kharaj and jiziya). Jews and Christians were declared protected subjects of the state and given a large measure of autonomy in their communal affairs.
The ruling class of the early Islamic state comprised almost entirely the Quraysh of Mecca. The third caliph, Uthman (644-56); who too was a Quraysh, packed his administration with his own men. This intensified the conflict with other tribesmen. Opposition in Iraq and Egypt, along with opposition in Medina, led to the assassination of Uthman.
Posted by Bharti Yadav 5 years, 4 months ago
- 2 answers
Yogita Ingle 5 years, 4 months ago
There are three types of muscle fibers:
- Red/Fast (slow twitch or type I fibers)
- Red/Slow (fast oxidative or type IIa fibers)
- White/Fast (fast glycolytic or type IIb fibers)
Posted by . . 5 years, 4 months ago
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Gaurav Seth 5 years, 4 months ago
After Muhammad’s death, many tribes broke away from the Islamic state. Some even raised their own prophets to establish communities modeled on the umma. Abu Bakr, the first caliph, suppressed the revolts by a series of campaigns. Umar, the second caliph, shaped the umma’s policy of expansion of power. It was not possible to maintain the umma out of the modest income from trade and taxes. So, the caliph and his military commanders mustered their tribal strength to conquer the lands belonging to the Byzantine Empire in the west and the Sasanian Empire in the east.
On the eve of the Arab invasions, these two empires had declined in strength due to religious conflicts and revolts by the aristocracy. In three successful campaigns (637-42), the Arabs brought Syria, Iraq, Iran and Egypt under the control of Medina. The success of the Arabs was contributed by military strategy, religious fervor and the weakness of the opposition. The third caliph, Uthman, launched further campaigns and extended the control to Central Asia. Within a decade of the death of Muhammad, the Arab-Islamic state controlled the vast territory between the Nile and the Oxus.
Posted by . . 5 years, 4 months ago
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Meghna Thapar 5 years, 4 months ago
Muslims believe that the Quran, the central religious text of Islam, was revealed to Muhammad by God, and that Muhammad was sent to restore Islam, which they believe to be the unaltered original monotheistic faith of Adam, Abraham, Moses, Jesus, and other prophets. Muslims believe that God is the only true reality and sole source of all creation. Everything including its creatures are just a derivative reality created out of love and mercy by God's command, "..."Be," and it is." and that the purpose of existence is to worship or to know God. Belief in the Oneness of God: Muslims believe that God is the creator of all things, and that God is all-powerful and all-knowing. God has no offspring, no race, no gender, no body, and is unaffected by the characteristics of human life.
Posted by Tusharsingh Rawat 5 years, 4 months ago
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Posted by . . 5 years, 4 months ago
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Posted by . . 5 years, 4 months ago
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Posted by Shubham Kumar 5 years, 4 months ago
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Gaurav Seth 5 years, 4 months ago
The goldfinch came to laburnum tree to build a nest on it so that she can feed her young ones. As soon as she arrived on the tree with her family, the tree became lively. The chitterings of the young ones and their movement brought life in the tree. The arrival of the goldfinch brought a lot of positive changes in the tree. With the coming of the bird, the tree started to live and prosper again.
Posted by Ishita G 5 years, 4 months ago
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Meghna Thapar 5 years, 4 months ago
A Chinese painter does not want the viewer to choose a single viewpoint. His landscape is not a ‘real’ one, and you can enter it from any point and then travel in it. The artist creates a path for the viewer’s eyes to travel up and down, then back again, in a leisurely movement. However, a European painter wants the viewer to borrow his eyes and look at a particular landscape exactly as he saw it, from a specific angle. His painting is very much realistic and he expects the viewer to understand it by just looking at it.
Posted by Chahat Patel 5 years, 4 months ago
- 1 answers
Gaurav Seth 5 years, 4 months ago
The story ‘Ranga’s Marriage’ takes us to those times when there were few people in villages in India who knew English. The village accountant was the first one who had enough courage to send his son to Bangalore to study. Those days people didn’t speak in English in the village. Nor did they bring English words while talking in Kannada. To support this, the narrator gives an instance. Rama Rao’s son bought a bundle of firewood. The woman asked for four pice, the price of firewood. The boy told her that he did not have any ‘change’. The poor woman did not understand the English word ‘change’. She went away muttering to herself.
However, English was considered to be a ‘priceless commodity’. That was why Ranga’s home coming in the village was a great event. The people wanted to have a look of the boy who had gone to Bangalore to study English. Many people believed that those who received education in English lost their caste. Ranga was still wearing the sacred thread, ‘the janewara’. He had not lost his caste and culture.
The attitude of the narrator to English is quite positive. He considers English to be ‘a priceless commodity’. But he wants to show that English doesn’t have any adverse influence on the religious and cultural practices of the people. Ranga wears the sacred thread and bends low for ‘namaskara’ to his elders.
Posted by Moon Raj 5 years, 4 months ago
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Posted by Aryan Kumar 5 years, 4 months ago
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Posted by Nehal Yadav 5 years, 4 months ago
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Gaurav Seth 5 years, 4 months ago
Let Time period =T
Mass of the bob = m
Acceleration due to gravity = g
Length of string = L
Let
⇒a=0 ⇒ Time period of oscillation is independent of mass of the bob
-2b=1
⇒b=-
b+c = 0
- + c =0
c=
Giving values to a,b and c in first equation
The real expression for Time period is
Posted by Jaiky Babu Mandal 5 years, 4 months ago
- 1 answers
Gaurav Seth 5 years, 4 months ago
"the sea, which appears to have changed less. Washed their terribly transient feet."
Human life is transient; it is here today and gone tomorrow. But, the sea remains the same. In these lines, the poet says that the sea has changed little over the years while the poet's mother has been dead for years now.
Posted by Lovekesh Singh 5 years, 4 months ago
- 5 answers
Posted by Prince Arora 5 years, 4 months ago
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Gaurav Seth 5 years, 4 months ago
Given,
Hight of Hall( H) = 25 m
Let ball is thrown with speed 40m/s at an angle ∅ with horizontal .
We know,
H = u²sin²∅/2g
25= (40)² × sin²∅/2× 10
25 = 80 × sin²∅
Sin²∅ = 25/80
Sin∅ = 5/4√5
Cos∅ = √55/4√5
Now, horizontal range = u²sin2∅/g
= (40)²× 2sin∅×cos∅/g
= 160 × 2 × 5/4√5 × √55/4√5
= 20√55 m
Posted by Abhishek Pandey 5 years, 4 months ago
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Posted by Krishna Agrawal 5 years, 4 months ago
- 3 answers
Gaurav Seth 5 years, 4 months ago
Degrees to Radian Formula
To convert degree to radian, we can use the same formula as given in the above section.
Degree x π/180 = Radian
Let us see some examples:
Example: Convert 15 degrees to radians.
Solution: Using the formula,
15 x π/180 = π/12
Example: Convert 330 degrees to radians.
Solution: Using the formula,
330 x π/180 = 11π/6
<th>Angle in Degrees</th> <th>Angle in Radians</th>| 0° | 0 |
| 30° | π/6 = 0.524Rad |
| 45° | π/4 = 0.785Rad |
| 60° | π/3 = 1.047Rad |
| 90° | π/2 = 1.571Rad |
Posted by Vandana Panchal 5 years, 4 months ago
- 1 answers
Gaurav Seth 5 years, 4 months ago
Margo Minco has very aptly and logically titled this short story ‘The Address’. The narrator and her mother were victims of the war. The upheaval forced them to be wanderers. They had no permanent address worth the name. All the ‘nice things’ were at No. 46, Marconi Street. They aroused nostalgic feelings of former times. But their true owner was no more in the world. The narrator resolved to forget them and also the address where they lay.

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Yogita Ingle 5 years, 4 months ago
Age eleven is so important for the poet because at this age he would be able to mark the difference between what is a fact and what is a fiction. At the age of eleven, the poet realizes that his childhood has gone. He has become much rational at this stage of his life. He has learned many new concepts and known about the facts of the world. The poet also feels scared and is worried because he thinks that with the end of his childhood, he has lost his innocence and purity of thoughts.
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