More than 165 flash cards for US Constitutional Law. Economical, authoritative with legal citations for your mobile phone or kindle. Clear, detailed answers. Useful for law exams and bar review. eBook format for study on the go: mobile phone, subway, text to speech for commute. About the author: Fulbright scholar and former research aid at Harvard Law School, Dr. Eric Engle has earned six graduate degrees in law from three countries (USA, France, Germany) and has taught law in France, Germany, Estonia, Russia, Ukraine, and Bosnia. Passed New York bar on first attempt. Scores of law review publications available for free at SSRN. Law books at: http://amazon.com/author/quizmaster Free law search engines at http://mindworks.altervista.org Know your rights: study quizmaster.
IS THAT RING A PRESENT OR A CONTRACT? This affordable text covers the law of property briefly but comprehensively. It is presented in the form of more than 200 questions and answers, like flashcards, to review law. This quiz book series can be used for traditional self-study or in combination with trivia games and at bar trivia nights. Take the quiz book, get a friend or a couple and go to the bar and quiz each other over a beer or coffee. This quiz book is also suitable for similar social gatherings, e.g. SBA meetings, debating union, moot court. The idea is to make the study of law more FUN and SOCIAL to liven up the study and make it memorable.
***Includes Practice Test Questions*** TCOLE Test Secrets helps you ace the Texas Commission on Law Enforcement Test without weeks and months of endless studying. Our comprehensive TCOLE Test Secrets study guide is written by our exam experts, who painstakingly researched every topic and concept that you need to know to ace your test. Our original research reveals specific weaknesses that you can exploit to increase your exam score more than you've ever imagined. TCOLE Test Secrets includes: The 5 Secret Keys to TCOLE Exam Success: Time is Your Greatest Enemy, Guessing is Not Guesswork, Practice Smarter, Not Harder, Prepare, Don't Procrastinate, Test Yourself; A comprehensive General Strategy review including: Make Predictions, Answer the Question, Benchmark, Valid Information, Avoid Fact Traps, Milk the Question, The Trap of Familiarity, Eliminate Answers, Tough Questions, Brainstorm, Read Carefully, Face Value, Prefixes, Hedge Phrases, Switchback Words, New Information, Time Management, Contextual Clues, Don't Panic, Pace Yourself, Answer Selection, Check Your Work, Beware of Directly Quoted Answers, Slang, Extreme Statements, Answer Choice Families; A comprehensive Content review including: Law Enforcement Officers, Safe Exercise Programs, Cardiovascular Training, Strength Training, Anaerobic Training, Role of Fats, Basic Nutrients, Types of Stress, Managing Stress, Traumatic Event, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Symptoms of Drug Abuse, Alcohol Abuse, Commission Rules, Community Policing, Law Enforcement Code Of Ethics, Texas Penal Code, Federal Criminal Law, Prejudice, Cross-Cultural Conflict Resolution, Right to A Jury, Waiver of Rights, Habeas Corpus, Jeopardy, Liberties of Speech, Family Violence Reports, Public Intoxication, Subpoenas, Autopsy, Probable Cause, Lawful Searches, First-Degree Felonies, Exceptional Sentences, Criminal Conspiracy, and much more...
YOU Can read Chinese! This book breaks down Chinese characters into their pictographic, phonetic, and semantic elements. Presented as digital flash cards for easy memorization! Free preview lets you see for yourself! Over 2000 different Chinese characters provides the building blocks for basic Chinese literacy. Learn to read a new language! Impress your colleagues, friends, and family! Learn the language spoken by over a billion people and the worlds fastest rising economic and political power. The worlds oldest writing system, the world's first civilization, and the world's most popular language are unlocked for YOU in this simple entertaining book which is keyed as character sequences following the Shuangfa Method for Chinese literacy pioneered in Bai Shuangfa's (白双发) "Hanzi Gong." 汉字宫.Learn more at: http: //amazon.com/author/quizmaster
The Fourth Edition revision of The Law of Banking and Financial Institutions brings exciting renovations to a classic casebook. Comprehensive updating is just the beginning. The authors have expanded the old structure to include more coverage of nonbank financial institutions, such as insurance companies and mutual funds. Other topics have been reorganized to reflect modern trends. Visual aids¿virtual windows, for visual learners¿have been added to clarify concepts and reinforce text. And finally, engaging problem exercises have been added to create a more dynamic learning environment. Tried-and-true features of The Law of Banking and Financial Institutions: clear, concise explanations that simplify and clarify a complex field of law lively and interesting note material and provocative discussion questions careful selection and judicious editing of cases fun problem sets, at graduating levels of difficulty, that reinforce concepts and give students practice applying law to specific facts critical analysis of the unifying features of each topic from an economic perspective complete, up-to-date, and detailed Teacher's Manual Featured in the Fourth Edition: coverage of nonbank financial institutions, such as insurance companies and mutual funds expanded and updated treatment of bank/nonbank combinations under the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act unified organization of financial institutions, rather than focusing on depository institutions separately generous use of tables to clarify concepts and promote understanding additional problem sets that illustrate the application of the specific rules in each chapter, with answers in the Teacher's Manual If you haven't seen the Fourth Edition, you haven't seen The Law of Banking and Financial Institutions. Come take a look at the expanded coverage, updated organization, problem sets, examples, and visual aids that constitute an important renovation of this classic edifice.
The core use of language is in face-to-face conversation. This is characterized by rapid turn-taking. This turn-taking poses a number central puzzles for the psychology of language. Consider, for example, that in large corpora the gap between turns is on the order of 100 to 300 ms, but the latencies involved in language production require minimally between 600 ms (for a single word) or 1500 ms (for as simple sentence). This implies that participants in conversation are predicting the ends of the incoming turn and preparing in advance. But how is this done? What aspects of this prediction are done when? What happens when the prediction is wrong? What stops participants coming in too early? If the system is running on prediction, why is there consistently a mode of 100 to 300 ms in response time? The timing puzzle raises further puzzles: it seems that comprehension must run parallel with the preparation for production, but it has been presumed that there are strict cognitive limitations on more than one central process running at a time. How is this bottleneck overcome? Far from being 'easy' as some psychologists have suggested, conversation may be one of the most demanding cognitive tasks in our everyday lives. Further questions naturally arise: how do children learn to master this demanding task, and what is the developmental trajectory in this domain? Research shows that aspects of turn-taking, such as its timing, are remarkably stable across languages and cultures, but the word order of languages varies enormously. How then does prediction of the incoming turn work when the verb (often the informational nugget in a clause) is at the end? Conversely, how can production work fast enough in languages that have the verb at the beginning, thereby requiring early planning of the whole clause? What happens when one changes modality, as in sign languages – with the loss of channel constraints is turn-taking much freer? And what about face-to-face communication amongst hearing individuals – do gestures, gaze, and other body behaviors facilitate turn-taking? One can also ask the phylogenetic question: how did such a system evolve? There seem to be parallels (analogies) in duetting bird species, and in a variety of monkey species, but there is little evidence of anything like this among the great apes. All this constitutes a neglected set of problems at the heart of the psychology of language and of the language sciences. This Research Topic contributes to advancing our understanding of these problems by summarizing recent work from psycholinguists, developmental psychologists, students of dialog and conversation analysis, linguists, phoneticians, and comparative ethologists.
Under the supertech Coalition government, Fortune's colonists are enslaved to harvest the highly valuable brain-enhancing drug Yolk, often losing their sanity and lives in the process. The population is dying off and the planet is becoming a police state whose only purpose is to harvest Yolk. But a revolution is in the air, fueled by an unlikely band of rebels: Anna Landborn, a brilliant, sociopathic child, and her quiet, lethally gifted sister, Magali; Runaway Joel, a virtuous military pilot turned tormented smuggler; Milar Whitecliff, a tattooed, chess-playing fugitive full of hatred and heart; Doberman, a simple robot in the throes of a startling transformation; and Tatiana Eyre, a captured Coalition soldier torn between loyalty and love. As their paths and fates collide, the battle to spark a full-scale uprising is violently challenged by the Nephyrs, the government's elite army of sadistic, near-indestructible cyborgs. But the prophecies of a mad soothsayer have foretold the coming of a hero destined to turn the tide--and the fight for freedom is just beginning. Revised edition: Previously published as Outer Bounds: Fortune's Rising, this edition of Fortune's Rising includes editorial revisions.
"Learn About the United States" is intended to help permanent residents gain a deeper understanding of U.S. history and government as they prepare to become citizens. The product presents 96 short lessons, based on the sample questions from which the civics portion of the naturalization test is drawn. An audio CD that allows students to listen to the questions, answers, and civics lessons read aloud is also included. For immigrants preparing to naturalize, the chance to learn more about the history and government of the United States will make their journey toward citizenship a more meaningful one.
#1 INTERNATIONAL BESTSELLER • A timeless, structure-bending classic that explores how actions of individual lives impact the past, present and future—from a postmodern visionary and one of the leading voices in fiction Featuring a new afterword by David Mitchell and a new introduction by Gabrielle Zevin, author of Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow One of the New York Times’s 100 Best Books of the 21st Century • Shortlisted for the International Booker Prize Cloud Atlas begins in 1850 with Adam Ewing, an American notary voyaging from the Chatham Isles to his home in California. Ewing is befriended by a physician, Dr. Goose, who begins to treat him for a rare species of brain parasite. The novel careens, with dazzling virtuosity, to Belgium in 1931, to the West Coast in the 1970s, to an inglorious present-day England, to a Korean superstate of the near future where neocapitalism has run amok, and, finally, to a postapocalyptic Iron Age Hawaii in the last days of history. But the story doesn’t end even there. The novel boomerangs back through centuries and space, returning by the same route, in reverse, to its starting point. Along the way, David Mitchell reveals how his disparate characters connect, how their fates intertwine, and how their souls drift across time like clouds across the sky. As wild as a video game, as mysterious as a Zen koan, Cloud Atlas is an unforgettable tour de force that, like its incomparable author, has transcended its cult classic status to become a worldwide phenomenon.