Kamis, 21 April 2011

questions durung job inteview

About ten questions during job interviews !!!

1. Why did you decide to apply for a job in this company?

2. How good is your english ?

3. If you get a job that you did not expect, what would you do?

4. Why did you quit your job ?

5. Tell me how much of salary you expect to earn ?

6. How many hours do you expect me to work?

7. Are you interested in a full-time or part time position?

8. In your opinion, what factors most determine the success of a person?

9. If there is transfer of responsibilities to the job you hold, how do you respond?

10. When can you start ?

Well,thank you for coming/thank you for your interest.

LOVE

LOVE

Love is an emotion of strong affection and personal attachment. In philosophical context, love is a virtue representing all of human kindness, compassion, and affection. Love may also be described as actions towards others (or oneself) based on compassion. Or as actions towards others based on affection. Love never asked, he always gives, love brings misery, but never bear a grudge, never take revenge. Where there is love there is life, when hatred leads to extinction. ~ Mahatma Gandhi. Love can turn bitter into sweet, switch dust gold, cloudy to clear, sick are healed, the prison into the lake, pain becomes pleasure, and anger into mercy. That's love, a strong feeling that there is in a person.

Bringing the beauty in every step of life, all done out of love, the result would be satisfactory. Love grows from the heart and the various ways to express it, Love is one of the unique source of strength in human beings. He became the driving force your heart and soul that will generate the attitudes, actions and behavior. When we love someone so much then maybe we are going to hurt, do everything they can and attempt to get something that we love is not a good way or action. To love and be loved is beautiful but it is felt as the words we often hear "Love somebody just modest." Love is like a sweet chocolate and when in tongue felt very soft. Love does not expect compensation, the love is sincere, pure love and love is not something to be imposed, but love is present and grows from the heart.

In English, the word love can refer to a variety of different feelings, states, and attitudes, ranging from generic pleasure ("I loved that meal") to intense interpersonal attraction ("I love my partner"). "Love" can also refer specifically to the passionate desire and intimacy of romantic love. to the sexual love of eros (cf. Greek words for love), to the emotional closeness of familial love, or to the platonic love that defines friendship, to the profound oneness or devotion of religious love. This diversity of uses and meanings, combined with the complexity of the feelings involved, makes love unusually difficult to consistently define, even compared to other emotional states.Love in its various forms acts as a major facilitator of interpersonal relationships and, owing to its central psychological importance, is one of the most common themes in the creative arts.

Selasa, 19 April 2011

tugas Passive Voice

PASSIVE VOICE

1. Simple present tense S + to be +V3

Active Voice : this store sells only children’s clothing.

Passive Voice : Only children’s is sold in this time shop.

2. Present Continuous tense S+ to be+ being+V3

Active Voice :the manupacture is advertising this product in all the newspaper

Passive Voice : this product is being advertising by the manufacturers in all thr newspaper.

3. Simple Past tense S +was/were+V3

Active Voice : buyer returned a lot of these items

Passive Voice : A lot of these items were returned ( by buyers).


4. Present perpect S+ Has/have+been+V3

Active voice : the agent has stopped the distribution of the merchandise

Passive Voice : the distribution of the merchandise has been stopped by the agent.

5. Future Tense S+Modal+be +V3

Active Voice : Only customers will use this facility.

Passive Voice : this facility will be used by customers only

Senin, 11 April 2011

TAX

Tax

To tax (from the Latin taxo; "I estimate") is to impose a financial charge or other levy upon a taxpayer (an individual or legal entity) by a state or the functional equivalent of a state such that failure to pay is punishable by law.

Taxes are also imposed by many subnational entities. Taxes consist of direct tax or indirect tax, and may be paid in money or as its labour equivalent (often but not always unpaid labour). A tax may be defined as a "pecuniary burden laid upon individuals or property owners to support the government a payment exacted by legislative authority."A tax "is not a voluntary payment or donation, but an enforced contribution, exacted pursuant to legislative authority" and is "any contribution imposed by government whether under the name of toll, tribute, tallage, gabel, impost, duty, custom, excise, subsidy, aid, supply, or other name."

The legal definition and the economic definition of taxes differ in that economists do not consider many transfers to governments to be taxes. For example, some transfers to the public sector are comparable to prices. Examples include tuition at public universities and fees for utilities provided by local governments. Governments also obtain resources by creating money (e.g., printing bills and minting coins), through voluntary gifts (e.g., contributions to public universities and museums), by imposing penalties (e.g., traffic fines), by borrowing, and by confiscating wealth. From the view of economists, a tax is a non-penal, yet compulsory transfer of resources from the private to the public sector levied on a basis of predetermined criteria and without reference to specific benefit received.

In modern taxation systems, taxes are levied in money; but, in-kind and corvée taxation are characteristic of traditional or pre-capitalist states and their functional equivalents. The method of taxation and the government expenditure of taxes raised is often highly debated in politics and economics. Tax collection is performed by a government agency such as Canada Revenue Agency, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) in the United States, or Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs (HMRC) in the UK. When taxes are not fully paid, civil penalties (such as fines or forfeiture) or criminal penalties (such as incarceration) may be imposed on the non-paying entity or individual.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tax