Literature Analysis: Short Story Comprehension Tests

I Variant

  • 1. The story “Hunting for a Job” is mainly about: B) searching for employment
  • 2. The boy in “A Day’s Wait” became frightened because he: C) misunderstood his temperature
  • 3. The main character in “A Dog and Three Dollars” offered a reward of: C) three dollars
  • 4. The story “The Scholarship” teaches readers to be: C) determined and responsible
  • 5. The story “The Green Door” is mainly about: B) an unexpected adventure
  • 6. The mother in “Brave Mother” tried to protect her:
Read More

English Phonology and Phonetics: Principles and Practice

Phonology and Phonetics: Understanding Speech Sounds

Phonology studies the abstract and functional role of sounds in a language, whereas phonetics studies the actual production, transmission, and perception of speech sounds. The basic unit in phonology is the phoneme, the smallest distinctive sound unit capable of changing meaning. If one phoneme changes, the meaning changes (e.g., price/prize, full/fool). A minimal pair consists of two words differing in only one phoneme, while a minimal set contains

Read More

Stock Valuation, Market Mechanics, and Risk Management

Understanding Stock Valuation

A stock is worth the present value of its expected future income. Using the dividend growth model, that future income is primarily future dividends. The formula is: Stock Value = Present Value of Future Dividends.

Calculating Total Return

A stock provides returns in two ways:

  • Dividend Yield: Cash paid by the company while you own the stock.
  • Capital Gains Yield: Profit earned if the stock price increases.

Total Return = Dividend Yield + Capital Gains Yield

Example: If the beginning

Read More

Global English Varieties: Evolution, Structure, and Status

North America

  • US: Max native speakers globally; EFL model; 80% urban; >50% population in NE (Great Lakes/St. Lawrence). Demographic center moved SW (St. Louis, MO).
  • General American (GA): Idealized standard, neutral, used in media.
  • Canada (CA): Floating spelling (BrE/AmE); French co-official (1/3 L1, concentrated in Quebec).

Britain & Ireland

  • Dialects: High historical diversity due to rural isolation; modern “dialect levelling” homogenizes urban speech.
  • RP (Received Pronunciation): Sociolect (upper
Read More

Med chem

ANTI-ARRHYTHMIC DRUGS It is the improper beating of the heart, whether irregular, too fast, or too slow.

Normal range of heart beat: 60–100 bpm (normally about 72 bpm).

It occurs when electric impulses in the heart do not work properly.

Also occurs due to other heart diseases such as myocardial ischemic disease, etc.

Causes of Arrhythmia

Bradycardia (Reduced Automaticity)

↑ Parasympathetic system Sleeping Disease (Heart disease) Other drugs such as Beta blockers, antiarrhythmic drugs, etc. Conduction

Read More

The Age of Reason and the Birth of American Literature

The Age of Reason: Enlightenment in America

The Age of Reason—the European Enlightenment—established reason, scientific observation, and natural law as the foundations of truth. Enlightenment thinkers believed in progress, arguing that human life could improve through knowledge. They defended natural rights (life, liberty, property) and the separation of powers, rejecting absolutism. These ideas shaped the intellectual climate of the American colonies.

In North America, Enlightenment thought spread

Read More

Essential Health Concepts: Viruses, Family Planning, and Nutrition

Understanding Coronaviruses

A coronavirus is not just one single bug; it is actually a large family of viruses. They get their name because under a microscope, they look like they are wearing a spiked crown—“corona” means crown in Latin. While many coronaviruses only cause mild illnesses like the common cold, a few rare types can jump from animals to humans and cause severe respiratory infections.

Key Types of Coronaviruses

Most of the time, humans contract mild “community” coronaviruses that cause

Read More

Different btn wind in high pressure zone and low pressure zone

1. ASTHMA

Diagnosis (Adults)

  • First-line tests:
    • Blood eosinophils OR FeNO
  • Diagnostic thresholds:
    • FeNO ≥ 50 ppb OR raised eosinophils → asthma diagnosed
  • If unclear:
    • Bronchodilator reversibility (BDR)
      • ↑ FEV1 ≥ 12%
  • If still unclear:
    • PEF variability (2 weeks)
  • If still suspected but tests negative:
    • Bronchial challenge test (specialist)

Severity (Acute Asthma)

  • Severe:
    • PEFR 33–50%
    • RR > 25
    • Pulse > 110
    • Unable to complete sentences
  • Life-threatening:
    • PEFR < 33%
    • Confusion
    • Exhaustion
    • Cyanosis
    • Silent chest
    • Normal or
Read More

Database Normalization and Management Principles

Database Normalization and 3rd Normal Form

Normalization is the process of organizing data in a database to reduce redundancy and improve data integrity. It divides large tables into smaller related tables.

Objectives of Normalization

  • Remove duplicate data.
  • Eliminate insertion anomalies.
  • Eliminate deletion anomalies.
  • Eliminate update anomalies.
  • Improve data consistency.

3rd Normal Form (3NF)

A table is in 3NF if:

  • It is already in 2NF.
  • No transitive dependency exists.
  • Non-key attributes depend only on the primary
Read More

Natural Language Processing: Core Concepts and Phases

1. Introduction to Natural Language Processing (NLP)

Definition of NLP

Natural Language Processing (NLP) is a branch of Artificial Intelligence and Computational Linguistics that enables computers to understand, interpret, generate, and interact with human languages.

Applications of NLP

  • Machine Translation (e.g., translating English to Hindi)
  • Chatbots and Virtual Assistants
  • Speech Recognition
  • Sentiment Analysis
  • Information Retrieval (Search Engines)
  • Text Summarization
  • Question Answering Systems
  • Spam Detection
  • Text
Read More