You’ll find what you need in this book - some advanced algebraic topics, but also the necessary basics, too. You can also find plenty of connections — the ways different algebraic topics connect with each other and the ways the algebra connects with other areas of mathematics. After all, the many other math areas drive Algebra II. Algebra is the passport to studying calculus, trigonometry, number theory, geometry, and all sorts of good mathematics. Algebra is basic, and the algebra you find here will help you grow your skills and knowledge so you can do well in math courses and possibly pursue other math topics.
• For beginner to advanced, as well as professional and business users • Tools for speedy and accurate translation of any text on your computer • Over 80,000 words and phrases and more than 120,000 translations • Can be used with any other computer application to translate words and phrases • Crosswords, Statistics, Shooting Gallery, AudioPad • More than 80,000 words and 120,000 translations • Can be used with any other computer application • Listens for the correct pronunciation of words • Records and graphs the user's progress • Crosswords and other learning exercises
This book outlines second language acquisition, the study of the way in which people learn a language other than their mother tongue. It is designed to make the essentials of this rapidly expanding area accessible to readers encountering it for the first time.
As the title of the series suggests, this is an introduction only and not for people who are already well-versed in second language acquistion theory. This book was really written for those wanting a launching point to further reading or just a quick overview of the main concepts, brief historical developments and some of the terminology.
Added by: Natalis | Karma: 180.04 | Fiction literature | 4 September 2007
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The Greek myths we are familiar with today are the product of generations of storytelling. Many were adaptations of stories that the Greeks gleaned from other cultures. Before about 800 B.C., when the Greek alphabet was developed, myths were passed down from one generation to the next by word of mouth. It was also through oral storytelling that myths and legends traveled from one part of Greece to the next, as well as to other parts of the world. However, after 800 B.C., stories began to be written down, including most of the tales that we now recognize as the basic core of Greek mythology.
U*X*L Encyclopedia of Landforms and Other Geologic Features
Volumes 1, 2, 3.
Focuses on the physical and geological aspects, structure, and features of 48 of the earth's landforms - what they are, how they look, how they were created, how they change over time, and major geological events associated with them.